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Money board question - best way to get $50,000 - $75,000 to remodel house?

Posted on 9/10/24 at 3:43 pm
Posted by DarthRebel
Tier Five is Alive
Member since Feb 2013
24464 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 3:43 pm
Wife wants to remodel downstairs and I want to re-do the complete yard. Numbers are just a random guess, however the items -

Outside
- Re-sod entire yard, front and back
- Gut all flowerbeds and change look
- Expand flower beds in backyard
- Plant two mature trees
- repair/replace/expand irrigation

Inside
- Replace all carpet, tile and hardwoods with new hardwoods.
- Paint
- Kitchen makeover. Cabinets, appliances, sink, lighting.
- Replace living room furniture and kitchen furniture

What are best options financially that are not taking it out of stock accounts or financing items separately?

Owe around $90,000 on house, leaving ~$600,000 in equity and plan to remain for 10 more years.
Posted by Teddy Ruxpin
Member since Oct 2006
40519 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 4:03 pm to
quote:

Kitchen makeover. Cabinets, appliances, sink, lighting


Won't this be about $40 to $50,000 by itself? Especially if you go with something expensive like quartzite.
Posted by WhiskeyThrottle
Weatherford Tx
Member since Nov 2017
6875 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 4:08 pm to
Damn bro. Usually it's cheaper to keep her, but this might be an exception.

If you're on board with it, I think a collateralized loan (HELOC) is going to be your cheapest finance option. That's a ridiculously expensive list to do all in one swoop. Personally I'd try to conquer one, maybe two of those a year for the next few years.
Posted by WillieD
Lafayette/BR
Member since Apr 2014
2951 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 4:14 pm to
You’re looking at $150k+ for that.
Whatever you do go with a reputable gc
Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
94577 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 4:20 pm to
quote:

What are best options financially that are not taking it out of stock accounts or financing items separately?



Side hustle.

Posted by Rize
Spring Texas
Member since Sep 2011
18548 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 4:34 pm to
You’re way low.
Posted by TheOcean
#honeyfriedchicken
Member since Aug 2004
45064 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 4:55 pm to
Posted by NaturalBeam
Member since Sep 2007
14722 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 4:56 pm to
If you get all that done for only 50-75k, I'd sell quick. Real quick.
Posted by BabyTac
Austin, TX
Member since Jun 2008
15560 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 5:03 pm to
Do it all yourself. Learn some things along the way and have pride in your possessions.

Save up, do it, and pay for it in stages. Don’t get a loan.
This post was edited on 9/10/24 at 5:05 pm
Posted by Cdawg
TigerFred's Living Room
Member since Sep 2003
61395 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 5:27 pm to
quote:

- Re-sod entire yard, front and back
- Gut all flowerbeds and change look
- Expand flower beds in backyard
- Plant two mature trees
- repair/replace/expand irrigation

Modest surburban home is 25k conservatively for just that.

quote:

- Replace all carpet, tile and hardwoods with new hardwoods.

need some sf numbers. $20sf for new installation without demo cost. say 1200sf bottom. maybe you can get it in at 20k
quote:

- Paint

all rooms? 5k
quote:

- Kitchen makeover. Cabinets, appliances, sink, lighting.

60-75k

quote:

Replace living room furniture and kitchen furniture

just budget 20-25k


150k is a conservative start.
This post was edited on 9/10/24 at 5:29 pm
Posted by lsuconnman
Baton rouge
Member since Feb 2007
4394 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 5:48 pm to
As someone else said, why do that list at once? Besides half the items are movables you can probably do interest free. I’d stagger the project in stages over 18-24 months with a HELOC in case I found myself overextended.
Posted by saderade
America's City
Member since Jul 2005
26212 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 6:52 pm to
quote:

As someone else said, why do that list at once? Besides half the items are movables you can probably do interest free. I’d stagger the project in stages over 18-24 months with a HELOC in case I found myself overextended.
This is exactly what I would do. Interest rates are pretty high to do this all at one time.
Posted by Penn
Jax Beach
Member since Jan 2008
23632 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 7:11 pm to
HELOC, and it’s not even close
Posted by BestBanker
Member since Nov 2011
18868 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 7:58 pm to
Heloc.
Posted by DarthRebel
Tier Five is Alive
Member since Feb 2013
24464 posts
Posted on 9/10/24 at 9:45 pm to
Thanks for the input, it appears my guess of cost is way low

I know some people that will keep the outside on the lower side, but the remodel looks to be more costly. I had a friend get their downstairs re-done, and it was great. It was about $60,000, however that was right before covid.

The outside and inside can go at different times, might need to examine that.
Posted by trux83LSU
brandon, ms
Member since Dec 2006
2674 posts
Posted on 9/11/24 at 8:14 am to
I just got an estimate on my bathroom remodel yesterday. We were thinking around 20 and it ended up being 35. We had them quote some stuff in the kitchen as well which would be an additional 15. The kitchen was new range, new cabinet doors only, strip and paint cabinets, build a vent hood, new backsplash and moving microwave to in cabinet.
Posted by CougarBait
on catnip in a cougar's den
Member since Jun 2007
2019 posts
Posted on 9/11/24 at 8:38 am to
That’s a 150-175k project. Make some money and save until you can afford it and pay cash
Posted by DarthRebel
Tier Five is Alive
Member since Feb 2013
24464 posts
Posted on 9/11/24 at 10:08 am to
quote:

Make some money and save until you can afford it and pay cash


We technically could do that, however to me that seems not sound and why I posted the question here. We are not retired or close to it, and that takes a lot of money out of the market. Stock account is sitting at 30% growth for year now, after the September dip. Taking $150,000 out would be losing earnings as well.

My instinct was HELOC, and that seems to be verified by others. My underestimating the cost, that is on me :(. Will probably go with HELOC and push improvements out over a couple years. This house was $250,000 20 years ago, it is hard to wrap my head around sometimes a remodel of the downstairs would be north of $100,000.
Posted by dewster
Chicago
Member since Aug 2006
26331 posts
Posted on 9/11/24 at 2:57 pm to
quote:

Modest surburban home is 25k conservatively for just that.


You are correct but the bigger landscaping projects are the type of stuff you don’t want to do on your own if you are over 40. We paid a company to rip out the old landscaping, cut down a couple of trees, and instal new landscaping, lighting, and irrigation for about $19k. But that was 2022.

To the OP: Pay attention to rates right now. I would divide this up into smaller projects and pay as you go. What you are talking about is not only expensive but extremely invasive and disruptive to anyone living in the house if it’s done all at once.
This post was edited on 9/11/24 at 3:04 pm
Posted by b-rab2
N. Louisiana
Member since Dec 2005
12799 posts
Posted on 9/11/24 at 3:38 pm to
quote:

Outside
- Re-sod entire yard, front and back
- Gut all flowerbeds and change look
- Expand flower beds in backyard
- Plant two mature trees
- repair/replace/expand irrigation


Let's talk about this.. how big is the yard and what do you want to resod with?

All of those items, you can do, and can do for pretty cheap. That's all just labor. I'm sure you have a friend or two that loves yards and flower beds.. get them to help you over the next year. the irrigation is pretty simple as well just time consuming
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