A kitchen is the most decision-dense room in a house, and a renovation runs or stalls on whether those decisions are made in the right order. Units, worktop, hob, oven, taps, sink, splashback, lighting, flooring, electrics, and plumbing all have to agree with one another, and each depends on a decision made before it. Miss the order and the project does not fail dramatically — it drifts, decision by decision, into delays and extra cost.
A checklist is what turns that decision density into a sequence you can run. It is not a list of tasks for the builder; it is the order of decisions for you, the homeowner, so that every choice is made before the trade who needs it arrives. The prepared homeowner is not the one who works hardest on site — it is the one who finished the checklist before the site work started.
A kitchen renovation is not built on site. It is decided at the planning table, in an order, before a single unit is fitted.
What follows is the full kitchen renovation checklist for a UK home, in the order each decision has to happen, with the Building Regulations checks that catch homeowners out and the points where the rules change across the four UK nations.
Why a kitchen renovation needs a checklist
Because a kitchen has more interdependent decisions than any other room, and the dependencies are not obvious until one is missed. The worktop cannot be templated until the units are fitted; the units cannot be ordered until the layout is locked; the layout cannot be locked until the appliances are chosen, because their dimensions set the unit openings. Pull any decision out of order and everything downstream of it has to be reworked.
The checklist exists to make those dependencies visible before they cost money. A homeowner working from a checklist knows the appliance choice comes before the units, the units before the worktop template, the first fix before the plastering. A homeowner working without one discovers each dependency the moment a trade is standing in the kitchen asking a question that should have been answered weeks earlier. The budgeting side of the same discipline is in the kitchen renovation cost guide.
The kitchen renovation checklist, in order
Every UK kitchen renovation moves through these stages in this order. Each one produces a decision or a document the next stage depends on.
- Write the brief. Document how the kitchen is actually used, the must-haves, and the constraints, before any showroom visit. The brief is what every later decision is measured against.
- Set and validate the budget. Build a realistic number from the trades up, including VAT and a 10 to 20 percent contingency, rather than an aspirational figure. A validated budget is what tells you whether a quote is fair.
- Measure and plan the layout. Set the unit runs, the appliance positions, and the working triangle between hob, sink, and fridge. The layout decides everything that follows, so it is locked before anything is ordered.
- Choose and specify everything. Lock the units, worktop material, hob, oven, taps, sink, splashback, flooring, and lighting before quotes go out, so every fitter prices the same kitchen. Appliances are chosen here because their sizes set the unit openings.
- Check the Building Regulations requirements. Confirm what notifiable work the project involves — electrical work under Part P, the extractor under Part F, gas under Part J, and Building Control if a wall is coming out — and who has to sign it off. (Detailed below.)
- Get and compare quotes. Issue the written specification to several fitters and compare the quotes line by line, not on the headline number. Reading a quote properly is what separates the genuinely cheaper fitter from the one who left work out.
- Review and sign the contract. Agree the scope, the stage payments tied to milestones, the start and finish dates, and what counts as practical completion, in writing, before any deposit is paid.
- Order the long-lead items. Order units and appliances early; the worktop is templated only after the units are fitted, so it is ordered to follow them. Long-lead items ordered late are what stall an otherwise ready kitchen.
- Strip out and first fix. Remove the old kitchen, then run the first-fix plumbing and electrics to the new layout and plaster the walls. This is the buried work the rest of the kitchen is built over.
- Fit units, worktop, and splashback. Install the units, then template and fit the worktop, then the splashback. The order is fixed because each is measured to the one before.
- Second fix and connect. Connect the electrics and plumbing, fit the taps, hob, oven, extractor, and lighting, and test everything, with the RCD protection and Part P sign-off in place.
- Snag and sign off. Walk the kitchen against a snagging list, have every defect corrected before the final stage payment, and collect the certificates — the Part P electrical certificate and any Building Regulations completion paperwork.
Get your kitchen cost baseline first
The free Renovation Cost Calculator gives you a trade-by-trade estimate in under 5 minutes — before your first trade conversation. The number it produces is what every later decision on the checklist is measured against.
The decisions that have to come first
Three decisions sit at the front of the checklist because everything else depends on them, and getting them late is the most common cause of a kitchen running over. The first is the appliances: their dimensions set the unit openings, so an oven or fridge chosen after the units are ordered may not fit the space left for it. The second is the layout, which cannot be locked until the appliances are chosen and which the units are built to. The third is the full specification, because every fitter has to price the same kitchen for the quotes to be comparable.
Get those three locked before quotes go out and the rest of the checklist runs cleanly. Leave any of them open and the project pays for it twice — once in the rework when the decision finally lands, and again in the stage payments for trades standing idle while it does. The errors that flow from a late or missing specification are set out in the kitchen renovation mistakes guide.
Appliances before units. Units before the worktop template. Specification before quotes. First fix before plaster.
Almost every avoidable kitchen overrun is one of these four dependencies run backwards. The checklist is, at heart, just these orderings applied down the whole project — decide the thing the next trade needs before that trade arrives, every time.
The Building Regulations checks most homeowners miss
A kitchen renovation almost always involves notifiable work under the Building Regulations, and the requirements differ across the four UK nations — which is exactly where homeowners get caught. Electrical work in a kitchen is notifiable under Part P in England and Wales and must be done by a registered competent person or signed off by Building Control. A gas hob must be fitted by a Gas Safe registered engineer. The extractor and ventilation fall under Part F, and removing a wall brings in Building Control and usually a structural engineer.
The nation you live in changes the framework. England and Wales work to the Approved Documents and notify through LABC or a competent-person scheme; Scotland works to the Scottish Building Standards and may require a building warrant; Northern Ireland has its own Building Regulations. The work is broadly the same, but who signs it off, what is notifiable, and what paperwork you need at the end differ by nation. Confirming the right route for your nation before work starts is the check that keeps the kitchen sellable and insurable later, and the full sequence sits inside the 12 phases of a renovation.
Where the checklist comes from
The checklist above is the kitchen expression of The 12-Phase System — Property Blueprint Co.'s framework for running a renovation from the first quote conversation to practical completion without paying the variation premium the unprepared homeowner pays. Each item on the checklist is a decision the system locks before the trade who needs it arrives, so the kitchen is built once, in order, to a budget that holds.
What sits inside each item — the exact specification questions, the Building Regulations route for your nation, the stage-payment milestones, the snagging checks — is what separates a homeowner who has a checklist from one who can actually run it. A kitchen is the most decision-dense room in the house, and the checklist is what turns that density from a source of overruns into a sequence you control. Industry guidance from the Federation of Master Builders consistently makes the same point: the projects that finish on budget are the ones that were fully specified before they started.
See The Kitchen Renovation Blueprint
Every decision in order, with the specification to lock, the Building Regulations route for your nation, and the snagging checks to run — plus a Country Watch covering England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland.
If the cost baseline is the right first step, use the free Renovation Cost Calculator — a trade-by-trade estimate for the specific kitchen, in under 5 minutes, before any fitter has quoted.
Frequently asked questions
What is the correct order for a kitchen renovation?
Write the brief, set and validate the budget, plan the layout, choose and specify everything, check the Building Regulations requirements, get and compare quotes, sign the contract, order the long-lead items, strip out and first fix, fit units and worktop, second fix and connect, then snag and sign off. Each stage produces a decision or document the next one depends on, which is why the order cannot be shuffled to suit the calendar.
Do I need Building Regulations approval for a kitchen renovation in the UK?
Usually for parts of it. Electrical work is notifiable under Part P in England and Wales and must be done by a registered competent person or signed off by Building Control; a gas hob needs a Gas Safe registered engineer; the extractor falls under Part F; and removing a wall brings in Building Control. Scotland works to the Scottish Building Standards and may need a building warrant, and Northern Ireland has its own regulations, so confirm the route for your nation before work starts.
What should I decide before getting kitchen quotes?
The appliances, the layout, and the full specification — units, worktop, hob, oven, taps, sink, splashback, flooring, and lighting. The appliances come first because their dimensions set the unit openings, the layout is locked to them, and the specification has to be complete so every fitter prices the same kitchen. Quotes obtained before these are decided cannot be compared and almost always grow once the decisions land.
Why is the worktop fitted after the units?
Because it is templated to the fitted units, not to the plans. The worktop fabricator measures the actual installed units to make the worktop fit precisely, which is why the worktop is ordered to follow the units rather than alongside them. Trying to order the worktop early, before the units are in, risks a poor fit and a remake.
How long does a kitchen renovation take in the UK?
The on-site fit is typically two to four weeks for a standard kitchen, but the full timeline door to door is longer once design, specification, quoting, and the lead times on units and appliances are counted — often eight to twelve weeks. The planning weeks before the fit are what most homeowners underestimate, and running the checklist is what keeps them from stretching.
What certificates should I receive at the end of a kitchen renovation?
At minimum, the Part P electrical certificate for the notifiable electrical work, the Gas Safe paperwork for any gas appliance, and any Building Regulations completion certificate for the work that required it. These are what prove the kitchen was done to the regulations, and you will need them when you sell the home or make an insurance claim, so collect them before the final stage payment.