Most kitchen renovation mistakes are not made on site. They are made weeks earlier, at the planning desk, by a homeowner who did not yet know which decisions were expensive. By the time the mistake shows up — a cabinet that does not fit the fridge, a wall opened on a wiring surprise, a quote that was missing half the job — the cheap moment to fix it has already passed. What is left is a variation invoice.
The mistakes below are the ones that cost Canadian homeowners the most, and the common thread is timing. Each is cheap to prevent and expensive to repair, and the gap between those two numbers is where a kitchen budget quietly disappears. Understanding them before you call a contractor is the single highest-return hour you can spend on the project.
A kitchen mistake costs ten dollars to prevent at the planning desk and ten thousand to fix once the trades are on site.
None of these require a trade background to avoid. They require knowing they exist, and making the decision the cheap way round — before the order is placed, the wall is opened, or the contract is signed.
Why kitchen mistakes are so expensive
A kitchen is the most decision-dense room in a house. Cabinetry, appliances, countertops, plumbing, electrical, and tiling all have to agree with one another, and they are installed in a fixed sequence where each trade depends on the one before. That sequence is what makes a mistake expensive: a decision changed late does not just cost its own price, it costs the rework of everything already built around the old decision.
Move an appliance after the cabinets are built and you are not paying for a different appliance — you are paying to rebuild the cabinet run around it. That is the mechanism behind almost every five-figure kitchen overrun. The mistake is rarely the choice itself; it is the timing of the choice, made after the point where it was still free to change.
The seven mistakes that cost the most
These are the seven that show up most often on Canadian kitchen projects, ordered roughly by how much they cost when they happen.
- Signing the lowest quote without comparing scope. The lowest quote is usually low because it includes the least — fewer allowances, cheaper assumed finishes, and work quietly left out that returns as a variation once you have signed. Two quotes that differ by $20,000 are almost never the same kitchen. The fix is a written scope handed to every contractor, so the quotes describe the same project and the numbers actually compare. Without it, the cheapest quote routinely becomes the most expensive kitchen.
- Ordering cabinets before the layout is final. Semi-custom and custom cabinetry carry long lead times and are built to a fixed plan. Change the layout after they are ordered and you forfeit deposits, pay for remakes, or force the trades to fit a new plan around old boxes. Lock the layout completely — every appliance position, every cabinet run — before a single cabinet is ordered.
- Choosing appliances after the cabinetry. Appliance dimensions dictate cabinet openings, not the other way round. A fridge or range chosen after the cabinets are built often does not fit the space left for it, and the cabinet run has to be modified or rebuilt. Select the exact appliance models first, then build the cabinetry to their measurements.
- Moving the plumbing "because the floor is open anyway." Relocating a sink or adding a line is far more expensive than connecting to plumbing where it already sits, and it often triggers a permit and inspection. Homeowners agree to it mid-build as a small change and discover it was a several-thousand-dollar one. Decide the layout — and price every fixture move — before demolition, not during it.
- Skipping the permit on electrical or plumbing work. New circuits, panel work, and moved plumbing generally require a permit and an inspection — electrical work through the provincial authority such as the Electrical Safety Authority in Ontario or Technical Safety BC. Unpermitted work is a liability that surfaces at resale, when an insurer investigates a claim, or when a buyer's inspector finds it, and the cost to retroactively open finished walls and certify the work dwarfs the original permit fee.
- Carrying no contingency for the condition behind the walls. Knob-and-tube or aluminum wiring that no longer meets the Canadian Electrical Code, plumbing that must be brought up to standard, or a rotted subfloor are discovered at demolition, and the repair is mandatory before work continues. A homeowner with a 10-to-20-percent contingency absorbs it as a planned line; a homeowner without one negotiates a crisis from weakness.
- Leaving HST, GST, and permit fees out of the budget. Sales tax applies to renovation labour and materials, so a $50,000 kitchen in Ontario carries about $6,500 in HST — plus building, plumbing, and electrical permit fees on top. Treating the construction estimate as the total, with tax and permits forgotten, is how a budget is over before the first cabinet arrives.
Price the kitchen before the mistakes can happen
The free Renovation Cost Calculator gives you a trade-by-trade estimate in under 5 minutes — before your first trade conversation. A real baseline is what lets you spot the quote that is missing scope and the budget that forgot the tax.
The mistake underneath all the others
Every mistake above is a version of the same one: making an expensive decision late, after the point where it was still cheap to change. The order of a kitchen renovation is not flexible. Cabinets follow the layout, countertops follow the cabinets, appliances size the cabinets, and the wiring and plumbing have to be right before any of it is closed in. A decision made out of that order is the most expensive decision in the project.
This is why the lowest quote, the early cabinet order, and the mid-build plumbing change all cost the same way. They are not separate errors — they are the same error wearing different clothes, and the fix for all of them is identical: make every decision in sequence, before the trade who depends on it arrives. The full sequence is laid out in the 12 phases of a renovation, and the budgeting side is in the kitchen renovation cost guide.
Before any kitchen decision, ask: can this still be changed for free after the next trade starts?
If the answer is no, it belongs at the planning desk, decided now. If the answer is yes, it can wait. Almost every five-figure kitchen mistake is a "no" that was treated like a "yes."
How a prepared homeowner avoids them
The prepared homeowner does not have better trades or a bigger budget. They have the decisions made in the right order, written down, before anyone is on site. The layout is locked before cabinets are ordered. The appliances are chosen before the cabinetry is built. The plumbing moves are priced before demolition. The scope is written before quotes go out. The contingency and the tax are in the budget from the first draft.
That preparation is the entire difference between a kitchen that finishes near its quoted price and one that does not. The mistakes are predictable, which means they are preventable — and preventing them is planning work done before the spending starts, not skill applied after it. If a bathroom or other room is part of the same project, the same discipline applies; the bathroom renovation cost guide carries it into the next room.
See The Kitchen Renovation Blueprint
Every decision in the order it has to be made, with the scope to write, the layout to lock, and the contingency to carry — plus a Province Watch that shows what changes where you live, 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 kitchen, in under 5 minutes, before any contractor has quoted.
Frequently asked questions
What is the most expensive kitchen renovation mistake?
Signing the lowest quote without comparing scope. The low quote is usually low because it includes the least, and the work it left out returns as a variation once you have signed — often a $10,000-plus swing on a standard kitchen. A written scope handed to every contractor, so the quotes describe the same project, is the single best protection against it.
Do I really need a permit for a kitchen renovation in Canada?
For cosmetic work that does not move plumbing or electrical, usually not. The moment you add circuits, do panel work, move plumbing, or remove a wall, a permit and inspection are generally required — electrical work through the provincial authority such as the Electrical Safety Authority in Ontario. Unpermitted work becomes a costly problem at resale or insurance time, so it is far cheaper to permit the work than to certify it retroactively.
How much contingency should I keep for a kitchen renovation?
Between 10 and 20 percent of the project cost. The condition behind the walls — knob-and-tube or aluminum wiring, out-of-code plumbing, a rotted subfloor — is discovered at demolition and the repair is mandatory. A contingency turns that surprise into a planned line item rather than a crisis you negotiate from weakness.
Why does moving an appliance after the cabinets cost so much?
Because appliance dimensions size the cabinet openings. Move the fridge or range after the cabinetry is built and the cabinet run has to be modified or rebuilt to fit it — you are not paying for a different appliance, you are paying to redo the carpentry around it. Selecting the exact appliance models before the cabinets are built avoids the entire cost.
Should I get the cheapest kitchen quote?
Only if it is the cheapest for the same scope. A low number with a vague scope is not a cheaper kitchen — it is a kitchen with work left out that will be charged later as variations. Compare quotes only after handing every contractor the same written definition of the project; then a low number is genuinely low, not just incompletely quoted.
Does GST or HST get added to a kitchen renovation?
Yes, on both labour and materials, at the rate for your province — 13 percent HST in Ontario, 5 percent GST plus provincial sales tax elsewhere, for example. On a $50,000 kitchen in Ontario that is roughly $6,500, which belongs in the budget from the start, alongside the building, plumbing, and electrical permit fees.