Kitchen Renovation Cost in Toronto: The Real 2026 Guide
What a kitchen renovation actually costs across Toronto and the GTA this year, broken down by size, finish level and component, with the hidden costs, the return on investment, and a free estimator. Independent and plain-spoken, because we are not a contractor.

Budget refreshes start near $15,000, and high-end or custom kitchens run $55,000 to $90,000 or more. Across the GTA that works out to roughly $150 to $400 per square foot, with cabinetry and labour making up more than half of the total.
If you have searched this question, you have probably seen numbers all over the map, from $12,000 to $100,000. That is not because anyone is wrong. It is because a kitchen renovation is not one thing. The figure depends on your kitchen's size, whether you keep the layout, the finishes you choose, and the condition of the home behind the walls. This guide turns that vague range into something you can actually plan around: real 2026 GTA prices by size, by finish level, and by line item, plus the costs most guides leave out.
RenoRevamp is an independent renovation resource for Greater Toronto Area homeowners. We do not sell renovations, so the numbers here are not a quote and there is no pitch attached. They are grounded in current market pricing and public data, and we link our sources throughout. A kitchen is usually one part of a bigger project, so it is worth seeing the full home renovation cost guide and our GTA renovation pricing guide, which prices every space in one place.
Key takeaways
- Most Toronto kitchen renovations land between $30,000 and $55,000 in 2026.
- Cabinetry (about 30 to 40 percent) and labour (about 20 to 35 percent) are the two biggest costs.
- Keeping your existing layout is the single biggest way to save real money.
- Budget a 10 to 20 percent contingency, especially in older homes.
- Kitchens return roughly 75 to 100 percent of their cost at resale, among the highest of any renovation.
How much does a kitchen renovation cost in Toronto?
For 2026, a full kitchen renovation in Toronto and the GTA typically runs $30,000 to $55,000. A light refresh can be done for $15,000 to $30,000, while a high-end or custom kitchen with layout changes lands at $55,000 to $90,000, and luxury projects pass $100,000. Toronto is the most expensive city in Canada to build in, so national averages and older guides understate what you should expect today.
The clearest way to think about it is by finish level. Each level keeps roughly the same structure of work. What changes is the materials, the cabinetry and the labour hours.
Kitchen renovation cost by size
Size is one of the biggest drivers, but not in the way people expect. A small kitchen is not cheap per square foot, because the expensive parts (plumbing, electrical, counters and appliances) are packed into a tight space. Here is how it tends to break down in the GTA.
| Kitchen size | Square feet | Typical 2026 cost | Per square foot |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small / galley | Under 100 | $15,000 to $30,000 | $150 to $300 |
| Medium | 100 to 175 | $30,000 to $55,000 | $200 to $350 |
| Large | 200 and up | $55,000 to $90,000+ | $250 to $450+ |
A note on per-square-foot pricingUse it to sanity check a quote, not to build a budget. Two kitchens of the same size can differ by $30,000 based on finishes alone. A real number needs a defined scope.
Where the money actually goes
Understanding the split helps you decide where to spend and where to save. For a typical mid-range Toronto kitchen, the budget breaks down roughly like this.
| Component | Share of budget | Cost range (mid kitchen) |
|---|---|---|
| Cabinetry | 30 to 40% | $8,000 to $25,000 |
| Labour and trades | 20 to 35% | $9,000 to $18,000 |
| Countertops | 10 to 15% | $3,000 to $9,500 |
| Appliances | 10 to 20% | $3,000 to $12,000 |
| Flooring | 5 to 10% | $2,000 to $6,000 |
| Backsplash and tile | 3 to 5% | $1,500 to $3,000 |
| Lighting and electrical | 5 to 10% | $2,000 to $5,000 |
| Plumbing | 3 to 8% | $1,000 to $3,500 |
| Design and permits | 5 to 15% | $1,500 to $8,000 |
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Cabinets: the biggest single line item
Cabinetry usually swallows 30 to 40 percent of a kitchen budget, so this is the decision that moves your total the most. There are four common routes in the GTA.
- Flat-pack (such as IKEA): $4,000 to $9,000. Excellent value, limited sizing, popular for condos and rentals.
- Stock cabinets: $3,000 to $10,000. Mass-produced standard sizes and finishes.
- Semi-custom: $8,000 to $20,000. Adjustable sizes and finishes, the most common choice for owner-occupied homes.
- Full custom: $15,000 and up. Built to your exact space, any material, the premium tier.
If your current cabinet boxes are sound, refacing (new doors and fronts on existing boxes) costs roughly $5,000 to $12,000 and can look close to new for a fraction of replacement.
Countertops, appliances, flooring and the rest
Countertops
Expect $3,000 to $9,500 installed. Laminate is the budget option, quartz is the GTA favourite for durability and looks, and natural stone such as granite or marble sits at the top.
Appliances
A budget package (fridge, range, dishwasher, microwave) runs $3,000 to $6,000. Mid-range stainless and Energy Star sits at $6,000 to $12,000, and high-end or built-in packages reach $12,000 to $25,000 or more.
Flooring, backsplash and lighting
Flooring typically adds $2,000 to $6,000 depending on material, a tiled backsplash runs $1,500 to $3,000, and updated lighting plus any electrical work is usually $2,000 to $5,000.
Labour, designer and contractor fees
Labour and trades make up 20 to 35 percent of a typical kitchen, and more once you add specialised work. Toronto's skilled trades charge premium rates because demand is high and the city's requirements are strict.
- General contractor or project management: often 10 to 20 percent of the total, which covers scheduling, coordination and accountability.
- Kitchen designer: 10 to 20 percent of the project if you use one, or a flat design fee.
- Licensed electrician and plumber: billed within the trades, essential for code-compliant, insured work.
A higher quote is often just the quote that included the permits, insurance and finish allowances the cheaper one left out.
Condo vs house kitchens in Toronto
Condo kitchens are smaller, which helps, but they carry their own costs. Buildings restrict work hours, require elevator bookings and deposits, and limit how much you can change plumbing or venting. Protecting common areas and moving materials up a tower adds labour. A condo kitchen often lands in the $20,000 to $45,000 range, while a detached-home kitchen has more room to grow at both the budget and high end.
Do you need a permit for a kitchen renovation?
It depends on the scope. A cosmetic update does not need one, but the moment you change systems or structure, you do.
- Permit usually needed: moving or adding plumbing or electrical, relocating the sink or appliances, removing a wall, or any structural change.
- Permit usually not needed: painting, refacing cabinets, swapping a like-for-like fixture in the same spot, or replacing flooring.
Toronto permit fees scale with construction value and often land in the few hundred to low thousands of dollars, with all-in costs (including designer drawings) commonly $2,000 to $4,500. As of February 2026, applications are submitted digitally through the City's ePlans portal. Always confirm requirements on the City of Toronto Building Permits page before you start. Unpermitted work can stall a future sale and void insurance.
Hidden costs people forget
These are the items that turn a $45,000 budget into a $55,000 spend. None are unusual. They are simply left off the headline quote.
- Older-home surprises: knob-and-tube wiring, galvanized plumbing or asbestos can add $2,000 to $20,000 once walls open up.
- Demolition and disposal: $1,000 to $3,000 for bins and debris removal.
- Temporary kitchen: eating out or a makeshift setup during a multi-week project.
- HST: 13 percent on labour and materials, sometimes quoted separately.
- Contingency: hold back 10 to 20 percent. This is the line that keeps you on budget.
Spending 100 percent of your budget on the visible scope and leaving nothing for surprises. In older Toronto homes, something almost always turns up behind the cabinets.
What is happening to prices in 2026
Renovation costs rose sharply through 2021 and 2022, then cooled to a steadier climb. They are still rising, just no longer surging. Statistics Canada reported residential construction costs up about 3 percent year over year through 2025, with skilled-trades shortages and the 2025 Canadian counter-tariffs on steel, aluminium and appliances keeping pressure on. For kitchens specifically, that shows up most in cabinetry hardware, appliances and metal fixtures.
Source: Statistics Canada, Building Construction Price Index, Q4 2025. The practical takeaway: do not wait for prices to fall, because the data does not support a dip. Lock your scope and quote instead.
Is a kitchen renovation worth it?
For resale, yes, more than almost any other room. The Appraisal Institute of Canada consistently ranks the kitchen as the top return-on-investment renovation, recovering roughly 75 to 100 percent of its cost at resale, with the bathroom close behind. A dated kitchen is also one of the first things buyers discount, so the value is partly in not losing offers.
The caution is over-improving. A $90,000 kitchen in a $500,000 home rarely appraises for what it cost. A good rule is to keep total renovation spend to roughly 10 to 15 percent of your home's value unless you are in a premium pocket.
Return figures reflect Appraisal Institute of Canada guidance, summarised by CIBC and National Bank.
How to save without cutting corners
- Keep the layout. Leaving plumbing and walls in place removes the most expensive line items.
- Reface, do not replace, if your cabinet boxes are solid.
- Choose quartz over natural stone and semi-custom over full custom for most of the look at less cost.
- Mix tiers: splurge on the counters and one statement element, save on the rest.
- Do the soft work yourself, such as demolition, painting and final cleanup.
- Book off-season, as winter and shoulder months can ease pricing.
Get three quotes on identical scope and confirm each one carries insurance, WSIB and a written warranty. The mid-priced, fully insured quote is usually the cheapest project once you count redo work and callbacks.
How to budget your kitchen renovation
- Set a number you are comfortable with, then hold back 15 percent of it as contingency from day one.
- Decide your finish level (budget, mid-range or high-end) and let it guide every material choice.
- Lock the layout and scope before demolition. Mid-project changes are where budgets break.
- Get at least three quotes on the same written scope so you are comparing like for like.
- Confirm insurance, WSIB and a workmanship warranty in writing before you sign.
- Plan for HST and the hidden costs above so the final number holds no surprises.
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Kitchen renovation cost FAQs
How much does a small kitchen renovation cost in Toronto?
What is the most expensive part of a kitchen renovation?
How long does a kitchen renovation take?
Do I need a permit to renovate my kitchen in Toronto?
Is an IKEA kitchen cheaper, and is it any good?
Will a kitchen renovation add value to my home?
Are these prices a quote?
Keep planning
Sources
- City of Toronto, Building Permits (permit requirements and fees)
- Statistics Canada, Building Construction Price Index, Q4 2025 (cost trend)
- CIBC and National Bank (renovation ROI, citing the Appraisal Institute of Canada)
About RenoRevamp
RenoRevamp is an independent renovation-planning resource for Greater Toronto Area homeowners. We publish GTA-specific cost guides grounded in public data and current market pricing, and we are not a contractor. Figures are 2026 planning ranges, not a quote. Questions or a correction? Email info@renorevamp.com.