The Laundry Room Remodel Checklist for US Homes: What to Do Before the Finishes

Modern American laundry room with a side-by-side washer and dryer, navy cabinetry, brass hardware and a folding countertop

Last updated: 15 June 2026 · By Mossy Tariq, Founder — Property Blueprint Co.

A laundry room remodel checklist that starts with paint colors and cabinet finishes is a checklist written backwards. The laundry is the one small room in the house where plumbing, a 240-volt circuit and a vent to the outside all have to land in exactly the right place before a single finish goes on the wall. Get those wrong and the prettiest laundry in the neighborhood floods the room below it, trips a breaker, or grows mold behind the drywall.

This laundry room remodel checklist runs in the order the work actually happens: budget first, then the rough-in items a contractor and the inspector both care about, then layout, then the finishes. The homeowner who works in this order walks into the project knowing what the contractor knows, instead of discovering it as a change order halfway through.

A laundry remodel fails in the walls, not the finishes — the vent run, the dryer circuit and the drain decide everything.

None of this is complicated once it is laid out in sequence. The trouble is that most homeowners only see the room they want and not the systems that make it work, which is exactly the gap a contractor prices into the job.

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Why a laundry room remodel is harder than it looks

A laundry packs more building systems into a small footprint than almost any room in the house. It needs hot and cold water supply, a drain, a vent for the dryer that exits the building, a dedicated 240-volt circuit for an electric dryer, ground-fault protection on the receptacles, and enough ventilation to handle the moisture two appliances throw off. A bedroom of the same size has none of that.

That density is why the laundry punishes a finishes-first approach. Move the washer to the other wall because it looks better and you have just relocated a drain, a vent and a circuit — three trades, not a design tweak. The decisions that decide whether the room works are made in the walls, before the backer board and tile, and they are nearly impossible to change cheaply once the room is closed up. Understanding what those decisions cost is the first step, which is why pinning down a real laundry room remodel cost comes before any showroom visit.

What does a laundry room remodel cost in 2026

US cost data for 2025 and 2026 puts a typical laundry room remodel in a wide band depending on scope. HomeGuide reports a range of roughly $4,000 to $12,000 with a typical project near $7,000 for a modest room, while Angi places the average closer to $11,000 with a $6,000 to $17,000 spread. A cosmetic refresh of paint and appliances can land near $1,500, and a full build-out with relocated plumbing and custom cabinetry can pass $30,000. On a per-square-foot basis the work runs roughly $115 to $250.

The line items that move the number are cabinetry at about $100 to $300 per linear foot installed, countertop at $50 to $150 per square foot, a utility sink at $330 to $1,350 installed, and plumbing to relocate washer hookups at $500 to $2,000. The items homeowners forget to budget are the ones in the walls: a contractor will price the dryer vent run, the 240-volt circuit and any GFCI breaker work at standard trade labor rates, and those are precisely the items that a thin estimate leaves out and a change order adds back. Reading the estimate for what it excludes is the same discipline as reading any remodel estimate.

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What has to happen before the finishes go in

This is the part of the checklist that the inspector signs off and the homeowner never sees once the walls are closed. Each item below has a code basis, and each one is far cheaper to get right in the rough-in than to fix after tile.

  1. Run the dryer vent within code length. The International Residential Code (IRC M1502) caps a dryer exhaust at 35 feet, and you subtract about 2.5 feet for every 45-degree bend and 5 feet for every 90-degree bend. A long, kinked or crushed vent chokes airflow and becomes a lint-fire hazard, so the vent path is a layout decision, not an afterthought.
  2. Set a dedicated 240-volt, 30-amp circuit for an electric dryer. A standard electric dryer needs its own 30-amp, 240-volt circuit on 10-gauge copper wire. Undersizing it fails inspection and starves the appliance.
  3. Protect the laundry receptacles with GFCI. Since the 2020 National Electrical Code (NEC 210.8), receptacles in a dwelling laundry area require ground-fault protection, and that now reaches the 240-volt dryer outlet through a two-pole GFCI breaker. It is one of the most commonly missed items in older homes.
  4. Plan a drain pan and water-hammer arrestors for the washer. A drain pan piped to a drain is standard practice and is often required by local code for upper-floor laundries, and arrestors on the washer supply (per the plumbing code) stop the fast-closing valve from hammering the pipes.
  5. Confirm ventilation and a waterproof floor. The room needs to clear the moisture two appliances produce, especially in an enclosed closet, and the floor should be a waterproof surface such as luxury vinyl plank or sealed tile so a leak is a mop-up rather than a subfloor replacement.

Confirm every one of these before the drywall goes up, because each is a wall-open item. The IRC exhaust provisions and your local electrical inspector are the authorities here, not the appliance brochure.

Stacked or side-by-side: which layout fits the room

The layout decision is driven by the footprint, not the look. A stacked washer and dryer occupies roughly 27 inches of width but needs 74 to 80 inches of height and clearance above, which makes it the right call for a closet or a narrow room. A side-by-side pair needs roughly 54 to 60 inches of width with gaps for ventilation and vibration, but it gives you easier access without bending, a continuous folding counter on top, and the ability to replace one appliance without disturbing the other.

Whichever you choose, ventilation is non-negotiable in an enclosed space. A stacked pair in a sealed closet without make-up air and an exterior dryer vent will trap heat and moisture and grow mold. The ENERGY STAR appliance criteria are worth checking at this stage too, because a certified washer and dryer set materially lowers the running cost of the finished room.

The three items inspectors fail laundries on

If you verify only three things before the walls close, verify the vent, the circuit and the drain.

An over-length or kinked dryer vent, a missing or undersized 240-volt GFCI circuit, and a washer with no drain pan or arrestors are the three items that fail inspection and flood floors. Every finish decision can wait. These cannot.

Which laundry remodel mistakes cost the most

The expensive laundry mistakes are almost all rough-in mistakes. The over-length or crushed dryer vent is the most dangerous, because it is both an efficiency loss and a fire risk, and it is buried in the wall by the time it shows. Skipping a washer drain pan on an upper-floor laundry is the most destructive, because a single burst hose floods every room below. An undersized or non-GFCI dryer circuit fails inspection and forces the wall back open. Poor ventilation in an enclosed closet is the quiet one, surfacing as mold months later.

What these share is that they are invisible at the finishes stage and ruinous afterward. They are the core of the avoidable laundry remodel mistakes that turn a tidy budget into a tear-out. The checklist exists to surface them while the walls are still open and the fix is still cheap.

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Where the laundry remodel sits in the sequence

A laundry remodel is a small project that runs the same path as a large one. In The 12-Phase System, the layout and the rough-in items are decided at the design and specification phase, before any contractor quotes, so every bid prices the same vent path, the same circuit and the same drain. The rough-in work and its inspection then sit as a hold point partway through the build — the drywall does not go up until the plumbing and electrical rough-in has passed, the same way a bathroom does not get tiled until waterproofing is signed off.

That sequence is what keeps a small room from becoming a big problem. A laundry that compresses the twelve phases into two weeks still moves through every one of them, and the same logic that governs the full 12 phases of a home remodel governs the laundry. Decide the systems early, inspect them before close-up, and the finishes become the easy final step they were always supposed to be.

Run the laundry from one system

The checklist is one piece of a twelve-phase project. The Laundry Renovation Blueprint carries the rough-in checklist, the inspection hold points and the trade-by-trade sequence so the room is planned once, in the right order, and nothing gets buried in the wall by mistake.

See The Laundry Renovation Blueprint →

If the cost baseline is the right first step, use the free Renovation Cost Calculator for a trade-by-trade estimate of the specific laundry, in under 5 minutes, before any contractor has bid.

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Frequently asked questions

How much does a laundry room remodel cost in the US?

US cost data for 2025 and 2026 puts a typical laundry room remodel around 4,000 to 12,000 dollars, with a typical project near 7,000 for a modest room and an average closer to 11,000 once cabinetry and relocated plumbing are included. A cosmetic refresh can be near 1,500 dollars, and a full build-out with relocated plumbing and custom cabinetry can pass 30,000. On a per-square-foot basis the work runs roughly 115 to 250 dollars.

How long can a dryer vent be by code?

The International Residential Code (IRC M1502) caps a dryer exhaust duct at 35 feet, and you subtract about 2.5 feet for every 45-degree bend and 5 feet for every 90-degree bend. An over-length, kinked or crushed vent restricts airflow, reduces efficiency and is a lint-fire hazard, so the vent path should be planned as part of the layout.

Does a laundry room need a GFCI for the dryer?

Since the 2020 National Electrical Code (NEC 210.8), receptacles in a dwelling laundry area require ground-fault protection, and that requirement now reaches the 240-volt electric dryer outlet through a two-pole GFCI breaker. An electric dryer also needs its own dedicated 30-amp, 240-volt circuit on 10-gauge copper wire. Both are commonly missed in older homes and will fail inspection.

Do I need a drain pan under a washing machine?

A drain pan piped to a drain is standard best practice and is frequently required by local code for upper-floor laundry installations, where a burst hose would flood the rooms below. Water-hammer arrestors on the washer supply lines are also called for under the plumbing code to stop the fast-closing valve from hammering the pipes. Confirm the requirement with your local code before close-up.

Is a stacked or side-by-side washer and dryer better?

A stacked pair occupies about 27 inches of width but needs 74 to 80 inches of height, making it suited to closets and narrow rooms. A side-by-side pair needs about 54 to 60 inches of width but gives easier access, a folding counter on top, and the ability to replace one appliance independently. Either way, an enclosed space needs ventilation and an exterior dryer vent to avoid moisture and mold.

What should I plan before the drywall goes up in a laundry?

Before close-up, confirm the dryer vent run is within code length, the dedicated 240-volt 30-amp dryer circuit is in and GFCI-protected, the washer has a drain pan and water-hammer arrestors, and the room has adequate ventilation. The floor should be a waterproof surface. These are wall-open items that are cheap to set in the rough-in and expensive to fix after tile.


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Common Questions

  • Each complete system includes four core files — The Renovation Blueprint (12-phase planning system), The Protection Guide (46 costly mistakes, 16 trade red flags, 12 blind spots), The Planning Toolkit (12 interactive working tools), and The Quick-Reference Card (double-sided printable A4 site reference). You also receive the Start Here Guide and free access to the Renovation Cost Calculator as bonuses. Every file is included. Nothing is sold separately.

  • Neither. The Renovation Blueprint is a complete self-managed planning system. It is not content you watch, and it is not coaching where someone advises you. It is a practical working system of documents and tools you use throughout your actual renovation — at your own pace, on your own timeline, without any sessions or schedules.

  • Yes — this was built specifically for first-time renovators. Every phase assumes you are starting from scratch. The system walks you through every decision in the right order, tells you what to ask every trade, and shows you what good work looks like before you sign off. You do not need prior experience. If you can manage people and professional accountability in a work context, you already have every skill this system requires.

  • Searching online gives you fragments — individual answers to individual questions with no system connecting them. The Renovation Blueprint gives you the complete sequence: every decision in the right order, every trade coordinated correctly, every red flag identified before it costs you. The information is not new. The system connecting it — delivered at the moment it is useful, not after the fact — is what no amount of Google research can provide.

  • The system is still valuable mid-renovation. Start with the phase that corresponds to where you currently are. The Protection Guide and Planning Toolkit are useful at any stage. The Quick-Reference Card is particularly valuable once you are on site.

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