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Best Same Day Kitchen Remodeling in Columbus, OH

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160contractors

Typical cost in Columbus

$20,000–$75,000 / project

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160 contractors in Columbus

All Same Day Kitchen Remodeling Contractors160

Premium Kitchen Remodeling Columbus 60

5183 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Kitchen remodeling specialists with in-house design team. We create beautiful, functional kitchens with premium finishes and modern appli¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Premium Kitchen Remodeling Columbus 34

1852 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Full design-build kitchen remodeling. From concept to completion, we handle cabinetry, countertops, appliances, and all electrical/plumbi¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Columbus Design Build Kitchen 29

3669 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Award-winning kitchen remodeling company. We specialize in creating timeless, efficient kitchens that increase home value and daily enjoy¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Luxury Kitchens Columbus 92

8495 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Kitchen remodeling specialists with in-house design team. We create beautiful, functional kitchens with premium finishes and modern appli¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Modern Kitchens Columbus 11

6895 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Full design-build kitchen remodeling. From concept to completion, we handle cabinetry, countertops, appliances, and all electrical/plumbi¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Columbus Renovation Experts 56

1609 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Complete kitchen transformation services including layout design, custom cabinetry, countertop installation, and appliance integration.

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Modern Kitchens Columbus 53

7828 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Full design-build kitchen remodeling. From concept to completion, we handle cabinetry, countertops, appliances, and all electrical/plumbi¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Luxury Kitchens Columbus 105

5986 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Kitchen remodeling specialists with in-house design team. We create beautiful, functional kitchens with premium finishes and modern appli¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Premium Kitchen Remodeling Columbus 99

8607 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Award-winning kitchen remodeling company. We specialize in creating timeless, efficient kitchens that increase home value and daily enjoy¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Columbus Design Build Kitchen 59

669 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Kitchen remodeling specialists with in-house design team. We create beautiful, functional kitchens with premium finishes and modern appli¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Columbus Home Renovation Co. 42

2667 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Kitchen remodeling specialists with in-house design team. We create beautiful, functional kitchens with premium finishes and modern appli¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Columbus Design Build Kitchen 89

8076 Main Street, Columbus, OH

Custom kitchen renovations featuring quality materials and expert craftsmanship. We manage permits, design, and all trades on your timeli¦

Serves: 43085, 43201, 43202, 43203 +25 more

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Typical Same Day Kitchen Remodeling Cost in Columbus

For: full kitchen remodel in Columbus, OH

Budget Option
$8.8k
Starting price
Most Common
$26.4k
Average cost
Premium Service
$70.4k
High-end

What Affects the Price:

  • ¢Cabinet quality and layout changes
  • ¢Appliance upgrades and installation
  • ¢Columbus's freeze-thaw cycles, clay soils, and mid-size market keep costs near national average

Kitchen Remodeling Cost Guide — Columbus, OH

How Much Does a Kitchen Remodel Cost in Columbus, OH?

Columbus is one of the most affordable major-city kitchen remodeling markets in the Midwest — consistently 20–30% below Chicago and Indianapolis, and 40–50% below coastal cities. The city's booming population growth (Columbus is among the fastest-growing large cities in the U.S. by percentage since 2010) keeps demand for remodeling contractors high, but the labor market remains more competitive than coastal metros. Here is what Columbus homeowners are paying in 2024–2025.

Columbus Kitchen Remodeling Price Ranges

Project ScopeTypical Columbus Cost
Cosmetic refresh (paint, hardware, backsplash tile, light fixture)$4,000–$10,000
Partial remodel (new cabinets + counters, same layout)$18,000–$40,000
Full remodel (new layout, cabinets, counters, appliances, lighting)$35,000–$75,000
High-end gut renovation (custom cabinetry, stone, professional appliances)$65,000–$130,000
German Village / Victorian Village kitchen (historic context, all scopes)Add 20–30% premium
New construction kitchen (custom build, spec home)$45,000–$95,000
Investment property / OSU-area kitchen (functional remodel)$15,000–$35,000

Cost Per Linear Foot

Quality TierCost per Linear Foot
Stock cabinets + laminate/butcher block$400–$700
Semi-custom + quartz or granite$900–$1,600
Custom cabinetry + natural stone or engineered stone$1,800–$3,500+

What Drives Kitchen Remodeling Cost in Columbus

Columbus Division of Building and Zoning Services permits: The Columbus DBZS requires permits for kitchen remodels involving plumbing rough-in changes (drain or supply line relocation), new electrical circuits, structural work (wall removal), and HVAC/mechanical modifications. Residential permit fees in Columbus for a full kitchen remodel typically total $350–$900, considerably less than Chicago, Boston, or LA — Columbus does not inflate permit fees above cost recovery. Plan review for projects requiring structural engineering (load-bearing wall removal) adds 3–6 weeks.

Ohio plumbing licensing: Ohio does not require a state GC license, but all plumbing work in Ohio must be performed by an Ohio-licensed plumber under Ohio Revised Code Section 4740. Columbus additionally requires plumbing contractors to register with the city. Unlike Chicago or NYC, Ohio does not have a city-specific plumbing license separate from state — but the Ohio state license is mandatory. Verify Ohio plumber license at the Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board (OCILB). All electrical work requires an Ohio licensed electrician; verify at the Ohio State Board of Building Standards.

Columbus housing stock diversity: Columbus kitchen remodeling occurs across dramatically different housing types:

  • Clintonville — pre-1940 bungalows and Colonial Revival homes; cast iron drain stacks, galvanized supply lines, older electrical panels; often need sub-system upgrades during kitchen remodel adding $5,000–$15,000
  • German Village / Victorian Village — pre-1900 and early 1900s brick row houses; historic district requirements add design review delay and material restriction costs
  • Upper Arlington / Bexley — post-WWII ranch and Colonial homes; generally sound sub-systems; more straightforward kitchen remodel scope
  • Short North / Italian Village — gentrified urban housing; pre-1920 stock with remodeling history; mix of updated and original systems
  • New Albany / Dublin / Hilliard — post-1990 new construction; generally good systems; kitchen remodeling is cosmetic-to-mid-range scope

No Ohio state GC license requirement: Ohio is one of the few large states without a mandatory state general contractor license for residential construction. This means anyone can legally operate as a GC in Ohio without a state credential. Quality control falls entirely to city registration requirements and trade license verification. Columbus residents must be more diligent about verifying contractor legitimacy — verify with Columbus DBZS that the contractor is registered and has pulled permits on prior Columbus projects. The absence of state GC licensing is the #1 reason Columbus homeowners have problems with unlicensed kitchen remodeling contractors.

BLS Columbus MSA wage data: BLS Columbus OH MSA construction wages show carpenters at $29–$38/hr (SOC 47-2031), electricians at $38–$50/hr (SOC 47-2111), and plumbers at $35–$48/hr (SOC 47-2152) — approximately 15–25% below Chicago area trade wages, contributing to Columbus's affordability advantage.

Columbus Neighborhood Kitchen Cost Context

NeighborhoodFull Remodel RangeNotes
Bexley, Upper Arlington$45,000–$85,000Established suburbs; higher design expectations
German Village, Victorian Village$50,000–$100,000Historic district; premium for period-appropriate work
Clintonville$35,000–$70,000Pre-war housing; sub-system upgrade common
Short North, Italian Village$30,000–$65,000Urban infill; variable housing condition
Dublin, New Albany, Hilliard$30,000–$60,000Post-war to modern homes; straightforward scope
OSU area, Clintonville south$18,000–$40,000Investment/rental property market

Kitchen Remodeling FAQ — Columbus, OH

Why Hire a Licensed Contractor for Kitchen Remodeling in Columbus, OH

Ohio Licensing, Columbus Permits, and Housing Stock Risks — Kitchen Remodeling

Columbus is unusual among major U.S. cities: Ohio requires no state GC license for residential work. This makes the licensing landscape feel simpler, but it actually places more responsibility on homeowners to verify trade licenses and city registrations independently — because the GC credential that would normally screen for competence doesn't exist at the Ohio state level.

Ohio Trade Licensing — What's Required

Ohio plumbers — state license required: All plumbing work in Ohio must be performed by an Ohio-licensed plumber. License verification: Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board (OCILB). Ohio Revised Code Section 4740 governs plumbing licensing. Columbus additionally requires plumbing contractors to register with the city and pull plumbing permits for any rough-in work. Kitchen remodel plumbing scope typically includes: sink drain relocation, garbage disposal connection, dishwasher supply, ice maker supply line, and gas line for gas range (separate from kitchen plumbing but also requires a licensed plumber in Ohio).

Ohio electricians — state license required: Ohio licensed electrical contractor required for all new circuit installation, new outlet addition, and exhaust fan wiring. Verify at Ohio State Board of Building Standards. Columbus's Division of Electricity also requires electrical contractors to be registered with the city. New kitchen circuits (under-cabinet lighting, dishwasher dedicated circuit, refrigerator circuit, microwave circuit) require both state license and Columbus city permit.

Ohio has no state GC license: Unlike Illinois, Georgia, Massachusetts, California, or Florida — Ohio does not require general contractors performing residential kitchen remodeling to hold any state license. A Columbus residential GC needs only: (1) Columbus city contractor registration, (2) appropriate liability insurance, and (3) licensed subs for plumbing and electrical. The quality of Columbus kitchen remodeling contractors varies enormously because the state licensing bar that filters out incompetent or fraudulent operators in other states doesn't exist in Ohio.

Columbus DBZS — Permit Requirements

Columbus Division of Building and Zoning Services (DBZS) requires permits for kitchen remodeling scope:

  • Building permit — for structural modifications (load-bearing wall removal, header installation)
  • Plumbing permit — for any drain or supply rough-in change
  • Electrical permit — for new circuits, new outlets, panel additions
  • Mechanical permit — for HVAC modifications, range hood exterior duct penetration

Columbus requires that all permit applications include the license numbers of the licensed subs performing trade work. The contractor of record on a Columbus permit must be registered as a contractor with DBZS. Columbus does not issue a certificate of occupancy for kitchen remodels, but final permit sign-off (all trade inspections passed) creates a clear paper trail for resale and insurance purposes.

German Village Commission (GVC) — additional layer for historic district kitchens: If your home is within the German Village historic district, any kitchen remodeling that affects exterior appearance (new window, vent hood exterior penetration, satellite dish, chimney work) requires review and approval by the German Village Commission before DBZS permits are issued. Interior-only work (cabinets, counters, flooring) does not require GVC review. But the duct penetration for a new exterior-vented range hood almost always requires GVC application — budget 30–60 days for GVC review if applicable.

Lead Paint — Columbus Franklin County Priority Lead Hazard Areas

Columbus and Franklin County have one of the highest childhood lead poisoning rates in Ohio, concentrated in pre-1950 housing census tracts. The Franklin County Lead Hazard Reduction Program has designated Priority Lead Hazard Areas including Clintonville, Italian Village, Weinland Park, Franklinton, and Near East Side.

Any contractor disturbing more than 6 sq ft of painted surface in a pre-1978 Columbus home must be EPA RRP certified under 40 CFR Part 745. Kitchen demo in a Clintonville or German Village home almost certainly triggers EPA RRP requirements — painted cabinet removal, drywall demo, window casing replacement. Verify contractor RRP certification at EPA firm search. An uncertified contractor performing kitchen demo in a pre-1978 Columbus home creates lead exposure risk and EPA liability for both the contractor and, in some circumstances, the homeowner.

Cast Iron and Galvanized Pipe Assessment — Clintonville and German Village

Pre-1960 Columbus homes in Clintonville, German Village, Victorian Village, and Short North commonly have:

  • Cast iron drain laterals — 60–100+ years old; internal scale buildup, hairline cracks, root intrusion at joints. A kitchen drain relocation in a 1935 Clintonville bungalow requires a licensed Ohio plumber to assess the cast iron lateral condition — a borescope camera inspection ($150–$300) is standard practice before committing to a drain relocation scope that connects to a potentially compromised lateral
  • Galvanized supply lines — post-1950 galvanized shows internal corrosion; reduced flow, discolored water, and eventual pinhole failure are common. A kitchen remodel that relocates supply lines in a galvanized home should also include supply system assessment and potentially full kitchen supply line replacement in copper or PEX (add $800–$2,500 to plumbing scope)
  • Knob-and-tube wiring (pre-1940) — German Village and older Clintonville homes may have original knob-and-tube wiring serving kitchen circuits. K&T is not compatible with modern kitchen circuit loads (dishwasher, garbage disposal, microwave, refrigerator) and cannot be protected by AFCI breakers as required by Ohio's current adoption of NEC. A licensed Ohio electrician will require K&T replacement in any kitchen circuit upgrade scope

What to Verify Before Hiring in Columbus

  1. Ohio plumber license — verify at OCILB: com.ohio.gov/divi/cons/home
  2. Ohio electrical contractor license — verify at Ohio BBS: com.ohio.gov/divi/fire/bbs
  3. Columbus city contractor registration — verify at Columbus DBZS: columbus.gov/building-inspection
  4. EPA RRP certification (for pre-1978 homes) — verify at cfpub.epa.gov/flpp
  5. German Village Commission approval (if GV historic district) — confirm GVC application timeline before project start
  6. 3 Columbus-area references from kitchen remodels in the past 24 months
  7. Proof of general liability insurance — minimum $500K–$1M; request certificate of insurance naming you as additional insured

DIY vs. Professional Kitchen Remodeling in Columbus, OH

DIY vs. Professional Kitchen Remodeling in Columbus

Ohio's absence of a state GC license makes Columbus one of the most DIY-friendly major U.S. cities for residential kitchen remodeling in terms of regulatory framework. However, Columbus's pre-war housing stock presents technical risks that aren't obvious to first-time remodelers. Understanding where the real risks lie helps you maximize DIY savings without triggering expensive surprises.

Ohio DIY Legality — What Columbus Homeowners Can Self-Perform

Ohio has no specific homeowner-builder exemption law at the state level comparable to California B&P 7044. However, the practical regulatory situation in Columbus:

  • No Ohio state GC license required for anyone — so there's nothing to exempt a homeowner from, since contractors don't need one either
  • Columbus DBZS homeowner permits: Homeowners can pull their own building permits at DBZS for work on their primary residence — this is standard practice in Ohio
  • Licensed subs still required: Even when a homeowner pulls as their own GC, all plumbing and electrical work must be performed by Ohio licensed subs who can be named on the permit
  • Trade work cannot be self-performed: Ohio ORC Section 4740 requires a licensed plumber for all plumbing rough-in work — homeowner self-performance of plumbing is not permitted even on your own home. Ohio electrical law similarly requires licensed electrical contractors for all circuit work

In practice: A Columbus homeowner can legally demo their own kitchen, paint, install cabinets, install countertops, tile, and do most finish work without any license. They must hire an Ohio licensed plumber and electrician for any rough-in changes and new circuits. This is one of the most homeowner-DIY-favorable environments among major U.S. cities for the GC coordination layer.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FactorColumbus DIY HomeownerLicensed Columbus Kitchen Contractor
Ohio GC license required?No (none exists for residential)No
Columbus DBZS permit required?Same requirements — permits still neededYes — contractor or homeowner pulls
Ohio plumbing license required?Yes — must hire licensed subYes
Ohio electrical license required?Yes — must hire licensed subYes
Cabinet installation✅ DIY-feasible — strong savingsProfessional quality + warranty
Countertop installation✅ laminate/butcher block; stone requires fabricator deliveryProfessional for custom stone slab
Backsplash tile✅ DIY-feasible, moderate skillProfessional quality
Plumbing rough-in (drain relocation)Must hire Ohio licensed plumberIncluded with licensed subs
New electrical circuitsMust hire Ohio licensed electricianIncluded with licensed subs
Cast iron drain assessmentDIY risk — condition unknownOhio licensed plumber with camera inspection
German Village Commission reviewHomeowner can file — allow 60 daysExperienced contractor expedites process
EPA RRP (pre-1978 homes)Homeowner DIY can comply — proper protocol requiredEPA RRP certified firm
Labor savings (full remodel, DIY GC)$8,000–$20,000N/A
Timeline (DIY-coordinated)8–16 weeks5–10 weeks

Columbus-Specific DIY Risks

The pre-war hidden condition problem in Clintonville and German Village: This is the highest-probability DIY failure mode in Columbus. A homeowner demos an original Clintonville bungalow kitchen and finds: (1) galvanized supply lines solid with mineral deposits — water barely drips; (2) a cast iron drain lateral cracked at the main stack connection, visible only during demo; (3) original K&T wiring on the kitchen circuit with no ground. None of these conditions are visible before demo. A professional Columbus kitchen contractor budgets a contingency (typically 10–15% of project cost) for exactly this scenario and has standing relationships with Ohio licensed plumbers and electricians who can respond quickly to mid-project discoveries. A DIY homeowner who hits all three of these simultaneously suddenly needs to coordinate emergency licensed sub work, which costs more (premium for rush scheduling) and derails the project by 2–4 weeks.

German Village Commission timing: A homeowner who starts a German Village kitchen remodel without addressing GVC review for an exterior duct penetration will be stopped at the permit counter when the mechanical permit application surfaces the issue. GVC review cycles typically run 30–60 days. An experienced Columbus contractor with German Village project history knows to file the GVC application first — before DBZS permits — and designs the duct penetration to minimize GVC friction (typically preferred locations and materials are established by GVC precedent). A homeowner unfamiliar with the GVC process can add 60 days to a project timeline with an avoidable oversight.

Lead paint in pre-1978 Columbus kitchens: A Columbus homeowner who demos their own 1948 Clintonville kitchen without following EPA RRP protocols (plastic sheeting containment, HEPA vacuum, wet wipe procedures) risks significant lead dust exposure for their family and creates a reported condition if they later hire an EPA RRP contractor to finish work. Franklin County's childhood blood lead surveillance system tracks lead exposure incidents. For pre-1978 Columbus homes, following EPA RRP lead-safe work practice protocols is not optional — it's a federal requirement for the homeowner as well as contractors.

New kitchen circuit loads — Ohio NEC adoption: Ohio has adopted NEC 2017 (as of 2023 building code update). Modern kitchen circuit requirements include: minimum two 20-amp small appliance circuits (countertop outlets), dedicated dishwasher circuit, dedicated refrigerator circuit, dedicated microwave circuit, and AFCI protection on most bedroom and living area circuits. A 1960 Columbus home's original kitchen circuit is typically a single 15-amp circuit shared with other loads — completely insufficient for modern kitchen loads without full circuit upgrade by a licensed Ohio electrician. This is a permit-required scope item that affects budget planning.

When DIY Makes Sense in Columbus

  • Investment property or OSU-area rental kitchen: DIY demo + hired licensed subs for rough-in + DIY finish work — strong cost savings for functional remodels where design quality isn't the priority
  • Upper Arlington / Dublin / Hilliard mid-century ranch: Post-1960 homes with updated electrical and plumbing; DIY cabinet, countertop, and tile work can be substantial savings with manageable risk
  • Cosmetic refresh on any Columbus home: Paint, hardware, backsplash, faucet swap (no drain change) — no permits, strong DIY savings, manageable risk
  • Experienced Columbus homeowner with project management skills: Ohio's DIY GC framework allows active homeowners to save the GC coordination fee (typically 15–25% of project cost) by managing their own licensed subs

When to Hire a Professional in Columbus

  • Pre-1940 housing (Clintonville, German Village, Italian Village, Victorian Village): Too many potential hidden conditions requiring licensed sub response to manage solo
  • German Village historic district: GVC process, permit coordination, and period-appropriate material selection all benefit from contractor experience
  • Full gut renovation with layout change: Ohio licensed plumber + electrician coordination during rough-in inspections is complex to manage as a homeowner first-timer
  • Pre-1978 homes with lead paint scope: EPA RRP requirement is clear; a certified contractor carries the protocol automatically

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