Some home renovations recoup nearly 190% of their cost at resale. Others recoup less than 40%. The difference isn’t random — it follows patterns documented yearly in Remodeling Magazine’s Cost vs. Value Report. This calculator uses 2024 national-average ROI percentages for 30+ common renovation projects, applied to your specific cost and home value. The verdict: which projects pay you back, which are personal-enjoyment investments, and which destroy value.
Home Renovation ROI Calculator
Estimate resale value increase by project type, based on Remodeling Magazine 2024 Cost vs. Value data.
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Renovation ROI by project type (2024 national avg)
ROI estimates from Remodeling Magazine’s 2024 Cost vs. Value Report. Regional variations of ±15% are common. Resale value depends on local market conditions, comparable home upgrades, and condition. Not financial advice.
The big picture: exterior > kitchen > bath > addition
The 2024 Remodeling Magazine data tells a consistent story:
- Exterior curb-appeal upgrades win: garage doors, entry doors, stone veneer, paint, landscaping — all recoup 80-190% of cost.
- Minor kitchen and bath remodels do well: 70-95% ROI for midrange refreshes.
- Major remodels and additions lose money: upscale kitchen at $158K recoups only 38%. Master suite addition at $165K recoups 35%.
The pattern: buyers reward visible “wow” updates but discount expensive customizations. If you’re remodeling for resale value, prioritize what people see first.
The top 10 ROI renovations (2024)
| Project | National avg ROI | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Garage door replacement | 193.9% | Massive visual impact, low cost |
| Entry door replacement (steel) | 188.1% | First-impression upgrade, $2,355 avg cost |
| Manufactured stone veneer | 153.2% | Dramatic curb appeal makeover |
| Hardwood floor refinish | 147% | Buyers love hardwood; cheap to refresh |
| New hardwood floors | 118% | Highly desired flooring |
| Interior paint | 107% | Cheapest way to “look like a different house” |
| Minor kitchen remodel (midrange) | 96.1% | Refacing cabinets + countertops |
| Siding replacement (fiber cement) | 88.5% | Lasts 30+ years, low maintenance |
| Deck addition (wood) | 82.9% | Outdoor living is in demand |
| Siding replacement (vinyl) | 80.2% | Affordable curb appeal |
The 10 worst ROI projects
| Project | National avg ROI | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Master suite addition (midrange) | 35.0% | Cost too high, buyer doesn’t fully pay for it |
| Major kitchen remodel (upscale) | 38.0% | $158K+ — buyers won’t pay $158K extra |
| Bathroom remodel (upscale) | 45.2% | Same problem as upscale kitchens |
| Roof replacement (metal) | 48.1% | Metal roofs are premium; not all buyers pay up |
| Family room addition | 50.0% | Adding sq ft costs more than it’s worth at resale |
| Heat pump (efficiency upgrade) | 45.0% | Mechanical upgrades don’t show |
| Solar PV installation | 50.0% | But personal savings + tax credits change math |
| Smart home tech | 50.0% | Tech becomes outdated; buyers don’t always value |
| Hardscape / patio | 55.5% | Nice but not transformative |
| Landscaping (midrange) | 55.0% | Goes back to “average” within a few years |
Three buckets to think in
Not every renovation is — or should be — an investment. Three reasons to renovate:
1. Resale investment
You’re planning to sell in 1-3 years and want to maximize your sale price. Pick from the top 10 list above. Garage doors, entry doors, paint, landscaping, minor kitchen refresh. These pay back fully or near-fully.
2. Personal enjoyment with reasonable payback
You’ll live here 5-15 years and want better-suited spaces, but you don’t want to lose your shirt. Midrange kitchen remodel, deck addition, basement finish, bathroom remodel. 50-75% ROI. You enjoy the project AND don’t fully lose the investment at sale.
3. Personal enjoyment, low ROI
Major additions, upscale anything, very custom features. You’ll get under 50 cents on the dollar back. Only do these if you’ll genuinely use them for 10+ years. A $165K master suite addition that recoups 35% costs you $107K net — but if you’ll use it for 15 years, that’s $7K/year for a better life. Sometimes that’s a fine trade.
What about energy efficiency upgrades?
Solar, heat pumps, and EV chargers all show 45-65% ROI on the resale value alone. But the resale ROI isn’t the full story — these upgrades also reduce your monthly bills while you live there, often paying back their cost via utility savings before you even sell.
A $19,000 solar system with 50% resale ROI means you’ll recoup $9,500 at sale. But if it also saves $1,500/year on electricity for 5 years before you sell, that’s another $7,500 in your pocket. Total return: $17,000 of $19,000 = 89%, dramatically better than the resale-only number.
Use our solar payback calculator to model the operating savings; this calculator handles the resale piece.
Common pitfalls
Over-improving for your neighborhood
If neighborhood homes sell for $400K and you put $80K into making your home a $500K property, buyers may not pay the premium because comps don’t support it. Cap your improvements at roughly 5-15% of home value per project.
Going trendy
Crazy colors, custom built-ins, very specific decor — appeal narrowly. They limit buyer interest. Neutral and classic always wins for resale.
DIY when you shouldn’t
A DIY bathroom that looks DIY (caulk lines, mismatched grout, off-square tiles) actively hurts resale. Either DIY well or pay a pro. Mediocre DIY is the worst of both worlds.
Permits and code
Unpermitted work shows up in title search and inspection. Buyers discount accordingly — sometimes refusing the deal. Always pull permits on structural, electrical, plumbing, or addition work.
Regional variation
Cost vs. Value reports show ±15-25% variation between regions on the same project. Pacific Coast and Northeast regions typically see higher ROI on most projects; South Atlantic and East South Central regions see lower. Your actual market may differ from the national average — talk to a local real estate agent for area-specific guidance.
Related calculators and reading
- Solar Payback Calculator — solar’s full ROI including utility savings
- Home Affordability Calculator — how much should you spend on the home and renovations combined?
- Rent vs Buy Calculator — sometimes the answer to a renovation question is “should you have bought this home at all?”
- HELOC vs Cash-Out Refinance Calculator — how to finance a renovation
ROI percentages from Remodeling Magazine’s 2024 Cost vs. Value Report. Regional variation ±15% common. Local market conditions and comparable home upgrades affect actual resale value. Not financial advice.