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Small Kitchen? Several Budget-Friendly Remodeling Ideas

Getting Top-Tier Remodel Outcomes For Bottom-Dollar Prices
Remodeling your kitchen can represent a very profitable upgrade for your home—but if you’re not careful, things can get costly. Hiring contractors is expensive, so are certain remodel materials. Completely redoing the kitchen can be really expensive. Even more considerable is the size of your kitchen. You may not have a lot of space to work with.

If you’re going to get the best results, you’ll want to be strategic about it. The good news is, a smaller kitchen can absorb more value through less associated cost in terms of remodel or refurbishment. Following, we’ll briefly explore a few budget-friendly remodeling ideas for your small kitchen to help stimulate your imagination.

  1. Wall Stripes Break Up Blank Space


    A lick of paint can do a lot for a home or a room. Walls get stained with smoke or age over time. Sometimes the only thing a room or the exterior on a house needs is a little paint. With a tiny kitchen, think about adding a few stripes via paint. The difference in color tone breaks up a blank wall and adds mental processing to the observer’s mind.

Just as pictures, windows, paintings, and pieces of art break up sightlines, a striped or checkered wall design in your kitchen produces the same outcome. When there’s a lot to look at in a small space, it begins to feel a lot larger than it is. Plus, painting the kitchen is a very inexpensive way to upgrade it, and if you don’t like the outcome, just paint over it.

Budget-Friendly Remodeling Ideas

Small Kitchen? Several Budget-Friendly Remodeling Ideas

 

  1. Using Surplus And Shipping Errors For Deals


    Surplus inventory at places like Home Depot provides you with exceptional deals in materials. Similarly, homeowners sometimes order materials they later decide not to use, and those through whom they ordered the materials still have to move those items. Accordingly, you can get a discount.

This is especially true with paint: often a seller will have buyers who don’t like how a certain hue turns out after mixing. They have no choice but to either give it away or sell it extremely cheaply; beyond that, mismatched paints are garbage. Well, shop around; see what items nobody wants for remodeling, and consider whether you can repurpose them.

 

  1. The RTA Approach


    One space maximizing option is RTA cabinetry. RTA stands for Ready To Assemble. RTA cabinets are purchased online to fit specific measurements as pertain to your kitchen. Then those options are shipped to your home.

You can find some fine RTA options from Best Online Cabinets; if you haven’t looked into this, it can be more cost-effective than unique builds otherwise necessary in small kitchens. Essentially, you get the style and craftsmanship of traditional cabinets for a reduced cost.

  1. Mirrored Backsplash Options And Foliage


    As pictures, paint schemes, and windows break up space in a room, so do mirrors. If you can make three of the four walls in your tiny kitchen mirrored, that will make even the tiniest space feel huge. Barring that, it may be worthwhile to consider a mirrored backsplash. This is less costly than totally mirroring the space, and maybe your best option.

Essentially, your backsplash is that area behind the sink which is usually made of some sort of tile. You can get mirrored options relatively affordably. Some are more expensive than others, but what you pay in mirrored backsplash tiling you make up in expanded home value. A mirrored backsplash looks especially interesting; if you’ve never considered this, you might.

  1. Going The DIY Route And Repairing Over Replacing


    For any kitchen, small or large, one of your best money-saving tactics will be going the DIY route for remodeling. Granted, Do It Yourself options tend to take a bit longer than contractors—but then again, that depends on the contractors, doesn’t it? Sometimes going the DIY route will actually result in a job that gets done faster, and with a greater overall quality.

Plus, you’re only out the time it takes you to get the work done, and the associated materials. With contractors, you’re out time, materials, and the fee of those working for you; which can be $30 to $85 per hour, depending on the sort of work you’re hiring a contractor to do. They’ll usually factor in materials as they go, and sometimes initial estimates expand over time.

Also, instead of totally replacing appliances, cabinets, refrigerators, or other items of your kitchen, you might refurbish them. Maybe the cabinets just need new doors or hinges, rather than total replacement. Factor this strategy in.

 

Upgrading Your Kitchen And Home Value Simultaneously


Your kitchen will cost you a lot of money to remodel totally even if it’s a small kitchen. However, with a little strategic effort, you can save money and get big results.

Go the DIY route as it’s realistically possible to, repair over replacing things, look into mirrored options, consider the RTA approach, shop surplus, and consider things like wall stripes to spice up an area.

These are just a few ideas to get you going; when all is said and done, you may think of something unique. Just because your kitchen is small doesn’t mean it has to feel that way or cost you an arm and a leg to upgrade.

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