How to Budget Your Home Renovations
Home renovations are important works, even if undertaken for different reasons. For some, a home renovation is an opportunity to bring a house closer to their personal style and comfort; for others, renovations are remedial. Whichever the reason for your own renovation work, you will already be acutely aware of the significant costs that can be attached to such projects, particularly against the backdrop of a cost-of-living crisis. How might you approach budgeting for your next big home renovation in 2024?
Plan First…
In order to write up a good and comprehensive budget, you’ll first need to have a good – if not fully comprehensive – idea of what your renovation works will cost. This is where your research and logistical planning become especially important.
There will naturally be some changes to the initial plans you draw up, and the remit of your renovation project may change over time. Establishing the basics of your renovations, and the going rate for specific works, can go a long way to giving you a ballpark figure to shoot for.
…Then Budget
With this ballpark figure, you can now measure your own finances up against those required of your renovations. Most renovations are paid for out-of-pocket with savings, and this would be the lowest-risk avenue to take – but this also requires a careful and considered approach to saving.
For one, if you have short-term debts to your name, you will find it hard to balance repaying them and saving for renovations; indeed, your saving will be inefficient on account of the interest attached to said debts. Debt consolidation loan can bring these debt sources into one place, using your house as the security – thus making repayments easier and enabling you to start saving properly. Of course, you could ask for more than your debts amount to and use the remainder to fund larger works.
Find Deals
Some of your renovation work may be cheaper to do on a DIY basis, but there are some works that unavoidably require specialist intervention. Electrical and gas work should be carried out by registered engineers, if only to increase the safety of completed work. Hiring third parties, though, is costly. This is why searching around for the best possible deal can more than pay for itself.
Long-Term Value
Finally, an important consideration for your renovation planning is that of long-term value. Keeping short-term costs within budget will naturally – and rightfully – take precedence, but it is vital that you recognise the long-term impacts of the works you undertake.
Typically, renovations of any kind will add some monetary value to your home; if you think selling your home might be in your stars further down the line, a little more investment now could lead to greater returns then. Extensions and loft conversions can be costly to carry out, but their impact on your home’s value could vastly outstrip the initial costs involved.