A laundry room is the cheapest wet room to remodel and the one most likely to surprise you on price — because the cost has almost nothing to do with what it looks like and almost everything to do with what is already in the wall. Two laundry rooms with identical cabinets and finishes can cost five thousand dollars apart, decided entirely by whether the plumbing and the 240-volt dryer circuit already sit where you want the machines.
That is the trap in a laundry budget. Homeowners price the room by the cabinets, the countertop, and the sink they can picture, and miss that the real variable is the rough-in behind them. A refresh that keeps the machines where they are is a small job; a laundry that moves, expands, or appears somewhere new is a plumbing and electrical project wearing a cabinet's clothes.
A laundry room's price is decided by whether the plumbing and the 240-volt circuit already sit where you want the machines.
What follows are the real 2026 cost ranges, what actually drives the number, where the money goes trade by trade, and why a moved or added laundry costs multiples of a refresh. The goal is a number you can trust before you talk to anyone.
How much does a laundry room remodel cost in 2026
Laundry remodel cost is best read by scope tier. National 2026 cost data from sources like HomeGuide and Fixr puts a full laundry remodel at roughly $6,000 to $17,000, averaging around $11,000, with the tiers breaking down like this:
- Basic refresh: roughly $1,500 to $5,000. Paint, new flooring, updated lighting, and new machines, with the existing plumbing and electrical left in place. The cheapest tier because nothing behind the wall moves — it is a cosmetic update, not a remodel of the systems.
- Mid-range remodel: roughly $5,000 to $15,000. New cabinetry, a laminate or stone countertop, a utility sink, new flooring, and updated lighting, all on the existing machine locations. Most homeowners land here, paying around $7,000 for a small room with mid-range upper and lower cabinets and a new countertop.
- Full remodel, relocation, or addition: roughly $12,000 and up. A laundry that is moved to a new location, expanded, or added where none existed — which means new plumbing, a new 240-volt circuit, new venting, and often a new floor drain or pan. This tier is a different project, and the cost reflects it.
At roughly $115 to $250 per square foot, with most mid-range remodels near $200, the laundry sits below a kitchen or bathroom per project but not per square foot. The tier you fall into is decided almost entirely by one question: do the machines stay where they are, or do they move?
Get your laundry number before you call a contractor
The free Renovation Cost Calculator gives you a trade-by-trade estimate in under 5 minutes — before your first trade conversation. It turns the wide range into a number for your laundry, so the first bid has something to be measured against.
What drives the price of a laundry room remodel
Four things move the number, and the biggest one is invisible.
Whether the machines move. The single largest driver. Keeping the washer and dryer where they are means the plumbing, drain, vent, and 240-volt circuit already exist — the cheapest laundry you can build. Moving them, or adding a laundry somewhere new, means running new supply and drain lines, a new dryer circuit, and new venting to the outside, which is most of the gap between a $4,000 refresh and a $15,000 project.
Cabinetry and countertop. The visible cost. Stock cabinets and a laminate countertop are budget; custom cabinetry and a stone counter move the number up the same way they do in a kitchen, just over a smaller footprint. This is the tier most homeowners think of as "the remodel."
The utility sink and faucet. Adding a laundry sink where there was none means a new drain and supply connection, not just the fixture. It is a small item with a plumbing cost behind it, which is why it sits closer to the "moving the machines" driver than to a finish.
Ventilation and code work. The dryer must vent to the outside, and a long or poorly routed vent run, a new exterior vent, or a second-floor laundry requiring a drain pan and overflow protection all add cost that is invisible in the finished room but mandatory under code.
Where the money actually goes in a laundry remodel
A laundry remodel is a stack of trades, and seeing the breakdown is what lets you read a bid instead of staring at a total. On a typical mid-range remodel the rough allocation looks like this:
- Cabinetry and countertop — roughly 25 to 35 percent. The largest visible line, sensitive to the stock-versus-custom decision, the same as in a kitchen.
- Labor and installation — roughly 20 to 25 percent. The general contractor and subs. Demolition and prep alone often run around 20 percent of the budget on a fuller remodel.
- Plumbing — roughly 10 to 20 percent. Connecting or relocating the washer box, supply, and drain, and adding a utility sink. This balloons the moment a fixture moves.
- Electrical — roughly 10 to 15 percent. The 240-volt dryer circuit, new outlets, and lighting. A new dedicated circuit is its own line, and adding one where none exists is a real cost.
- Flooring and finishes — roughly 10 to 15 percent. Water-resistant flooring, paint, and trim — the visible layer over the systems work.
- Permits and ventilation — the remainder. Permits commonly run several hundred to over a thousand dollars, and the dryer venting and any required drain pan sit here.
The value of the breakdown is that a bid with a single number cannot be evaluated, while one that itemizes each line can be compared and questioned. A laundry bid that does not separate the plumbing and electrical from the finishes is hiding exactly the line that decides whether you are in the $5,000 tier or the $15,000 one. How to read every line of that document — the allowances, the exclusions, and the change-order clause — is set out in how to read a remodel estimate.
Budget a contingency of 10 to 20 percent, especially on an older home or a relocation.
Opening the wall on a laundry frequently reveals the same surprises a bathroom does — old supply lines, a drain that does not meet code, or wiring that cannot carry a modern dryer. A contingency turns those into planned lines rather than a stalled project.
Why moving or adding a laundry costs so much more
Because a laundry is a wet room with a heavy electrical load, and both of those have to follow you when the machines move. A washer needs hot and cold supply and a drain; a dryer needs a 240-volt circuit and a vent to the outside. When the laundry stays put, all of that already exists and the remodel is finishes. When it moves — to a mudroom, a closet, an upstairs hallway — every one of those systems has to be run new to the location, often through finished walls and floors.
An upstairs or interior laundry adds more: a drain pan and overflow sensor to protect the rooms below from a leak, and sometimes a sound and structural allowance for machines on a framed floor rather than a slab. None of this is visible in the finished room, which is exactly why a relocation surprises homeowners who priced the cabinets and forgot the systems. The same trade-by-trade discipline applied to a wet room is in the bathroom remodel cost guide, and the sequence these trades run in is in the 12 phases of a home remodel.
How to set a laundry budget that holds
A budget holds when it is built from the trades up, not from a finish board down. Start by answering the one question that sets the tier: are the machines staying where they are, or moving? That answer tells you whether you are budgeting a refresh or a plumbing-and-electrical project, and it is the difference between two numbers thousands of dollars apart. The failures that follow when that question is skipped are catalogued in the laundry room remodel mistakes guide.
Then estimate each line — cabinetry, countertop, plumbing, electrical, flooring, permits, and venting — rather than a single hoped-for number, and add the contingency. Decide which costs are choices you can flex, like the cabinetry tier and the counter material, and which are fixed, like the dryer circuit and the vent. A laundry done as part of a larger project follows the same method; if a kitchen is in the same remodel, the kitchen remodel cost guide applies it to the next room.
Where the number comes from
A reliable laundry budget is the output of the early phases of The 12-Phase System — Property Blueprint Co.'s framework for running a remodel from the first bid conversation to substantial completion without paying the change-order premium the unprepared homeowner pays. The budget is validated against the trades, protected by a clear scope that separates the systems work from the finishes, and defended by the contingency. Industry data from the National Association of Home Builders and the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard consistently shows remodels run over budget because the work was underdefined — and in a laundry, the underdefined work is almost always the plumbing and the circuit.
Knowing the national range is the starting point. Turning it into a number your laundry actually costs — one that prices the systems behind the finishes — is the operational work the planning phases do, before a contractor sets the price for you.
See The Laundry Renovation Blueprint
Every phase of a laundry remodel, with the systems to scope, the budget to validate, and the bid breakdown to demand — before the first contractor is called.
If the cost baseline is the right first step, use the free Renovation Cost Calculator — a trade-by-trade estimate for the specific laundry, in under 5 minutes, before any contractor has bid.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a laundry room remodel cost in 2026?
A full laundry remodel runs roughly $6,000 to $17,000, averaging around $11,000. A basic refresh that keeps the machines in place runs $1,500 to $5,000, a mid-range remodel with new cabinets and a countertop runs $5,000 to $15,000 with most paying around $7,000, and a relocation or addition starts around $12,000. The tier is decided mostly by whether the washer and dryer stay where they are or move.
Why is moving a laundry room so expensive?
Because a laundry is a wet room with a heavy electrical load, and both have to follow the machines. Moving the laundry means running new hot and cold supply, a new drain, a new 240-volt dryer circuit, and new venting to the location, often through finished walls and floors. An upstairs or interior laundry also needs a drain pan and overflow protection. All of it is invisible in the finished room and most of the cost difference from a refresh.
Do I need a permit to remodel a laundry room?
For a cosmetic refresh that only swaps finishes and machines in place, often not. The moment you move plumbing, add a circuit, or relocate or add a laundry, a permit and inspections are generally required, with permit fees commonly running several hundred to over a thousand dollars. Requirements vary by jurisdiction, so confirm with your local building department before work starts.
What is the most expensive part of a laundry remodel?
Either the cabinetry and countertop, on a refresh, or the plumbing and electrical, on a relocation. On a finishes-only remodel the cabinets are the largest line at roughly a quarter to a third of the budget. On a moved or added laundry, the systems work — new supply, drain, dryer circuit, and venting — becomes the largest cost and the reason the project jumps tiers.
Does a dryer need a special outlet?
An electric dryer needs a dedicated 240-volt circuit and outlet, which is different from the standard 120-volt outlets elsewhere in the room. If the laundry already has one, a remodel uses it; if you are adding or moving the laundry, a new 240-volt circuit has to be run from the panel, which is its own line item. A gas dryer still needs a 120-volt outlet plus a gas line and the same venting.
How can I keep a laundry remodel on budget?
Answer the staying-or-moving question first, because it sets the tier and the number. Then build the budget from the trades up, get a bid that separates the plumbing and electrical from the finishes so you can see the real driver, carry a 10 to 20 percent contingency for what an opened wall reveals, and flex the cabinetry and counter rather than the systems. The systems are fixed costs; the finishes are where the budget moves.