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2026 Home Services
Cost Guide

What every homeowner should know before hiring a contractor — real cost ranges, regional pricing, 12 must-ask questions, and the red flags that should make you walk away.

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Contents

Hiring a contractor is one of the biggest financial decisions a homeowner makes. Yet most people go into it without a clear sense of what things should cost — leaving them vulnerable to overcharges, surprises, and regret. This guide breaks down average costs for the most common home services, explains what drives prices up or down, and gives you the questions you need to ask before signing anything.

Part 1: What Home Services Cost in 2026

All ranges reflect national averages. Costs vary by region, material quality, and project complexity.

Roofing

ServiceLowAverageHigh
Asphalt shingle replacement (1,500 sq ft)$5,500$8,500$14,000
Metal roof installation (1,500 sq ft)$10,000$16,000$27,000
Roof repair (minor leak/flashing)$300$750$1,500
Roof inspection$100$200$400
Gutter replacement (150 linear ft)$900$1,600$2,800

What drives cost up: Steep pitch, multi-story home, premium materials (slate, tile), tear-off of multiple layers.

What drives cost down: Simple gable roof, single-story, replace-over (one layer only), off-season scheduling (late fall).

Plumbing

ServiceLowAverageHigh
Water heater replacement (40 gal)$800$1,200$2,000
Tankless water heater install$1,500$2,500$4,500
Drain cleaning (main line)$150$350$600
Pipe repair (burst/leaking)$400$900$2,500
Full bathroom plumbing rough-in$1,500$3,500$6,500
Kitchen sink/faucet replacement$200$450$800

What drives cost up: Slab homes (pipes under concrete), older homes with galvanized pipes, emergency/after-hours calls, permit requirements.

What drives cost down: Accessible pipes, newer PEX plumbing, bundling multiple fixes in one visit.

HVAC (Heating, Ventilation & Air Conditioning)

ServiceLowAverageHigh
Central AC unit replacement (3-ton)$3,800$5,500$8,500
Furnace replacement (80k BTU)$2,500$4,000$7,000
Full HVAC system (AC + furnace)$6,500$10,000$16,000
Ductwork repair/sealing$500$1,200$2,500
Annual tune-up$80$150$250
Mini-split installation (1 zone)$2,000$3,500$5,500

What drives cost up: High-efficiency SEER ratings, new ductwork, multi-zone systems, old homes with poor existing ductwork.

What drives cost down: Maintenance plans, spring/fall installation (off-peak), rebates from utility companies, manufacturer promotions.

Pro tip: Check your utility company's website. Most offer $300–$1,200 rebates for qualifying high-efficiency HVAC upgrades.

Solar

ServiceLowAverageHigh
Residential solar installation (6kW)$12,000$18,000$26,000
After federal tax credit (30%)$8,400$12,600$18,200
Battery storage add-on (10kWh)$8,000$12,000$18,000
Panel cleaning/maintenance$100$200$400
System monitoring setup$0$200$500

Payback period: Typically 6–10 years depending on local electricity rates, sun exposure, and incentives.

What drives cost up: Complex roof geometry, shading issues requiring microinverters, battery backup addition, premium panel brands.

Important: Always get 3+ quotes for solar. Pricing varies dramatically between installers.

Part 2: Regional Cost Variations

Costs vary significantly by region. Use these multipliers as rough adjustments:

RegionCost Modifier
Northeast (NY, MA, CT, NJ)+20–35%
West Coast (CA, WA, OR)+15–30%
Mid-Atlantic (DC, MD, VA)+10–20%
Mountain West (CO, UT, AZ)+5–15%
Midwest (IL, OH, MI, MN)Baseline
South (TX, FL, GA, NC)-5–10%
Rural areas (any region)+10–20% (limited contractor competition)

Part 3: The 12 Questions to Ask Every Contractor

Before you sign a contract or hand over a deposit, get answers to all of these:

Licensing & Insurance

  1. Are you licensed to do this work in [your state/county]? Can I see your license number?
  2. Do you carry general liability insurance? What is the coverage amount?
  3. Do you carry workers' compensation insurance for your crew?

Experience & References

  1. How many projects like mine have you completed in the past 12 months?
  2. Can you provide 3 references from similar recent jobs I can call?
  3. Do you have photos of completed work I can review?

The Quote & Contract

  1. Is this quote fixed-price or time-and-materials? What could cause it to change?
  2. What exactly is included — and what is explicitly excluded?
  3. What is the payment schedule? (Never pay more than 10–30% upfront for large jobs)

Timeline & Crew

  1. Who will actually be doing the work — your employees or subcontractors?
  2. What is the realistic start date and expected completion date?
  3. How do you handle unexpected issues or change orders during the project?

Part 4: Red Flags — Walk Away If You See These

Part 5: How to Get the Best Price

  1. Get 3+ quotes — always, for any job over $500.
  2. Schedule off-season — roofing in winter, HVAC in spring/fall.
  3. Bundle work — combine projects to reduce mobilization costs.
  4. Ask about financing — many reputable contractors offer 0% or low-interest options.
  5. Check for rebates — utility, manufacturer, and state programs can cut 10–30% off HVAC and solar.
  6. Negotiate payment terms — a final holdback (10–15%) until punch-list completion keeps contractors motivated to finish strong.

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© 2026 ProCraft. Cost data from contractor surveys, industry reports, and project data. Actual costs vary by location and scope.