Los Angeles · Kitchen Remodel Financing

Kitchen Remodel Financing in Los Angeles, CA

Educational, lender-neutral guide for Los Angeles, California homeowners weighing how to finance a kitchen remodel.

Home Improvement Calculator

Estimate how much you could access for a kitchen remodel under each program. Add your ZIP code for hyperlocal cost adjustment. Educational illustration only — not a quote.

Max loan size
$0
Cash available
$0
Est. monthly
$0

Compare all four programs at your numbers

ProgramMax accessEst. monthlyYear 1 costTerm

Illustrative only. Real LTV caps, rates, fees, and qualifying criteria vary by lender, property, occupancy, and credit profile. HomeWise does not originate loans. Compare offers from at least three licensed institutions.

The three programs

Three ways to tap your equity for a kitchen remodel

With meaningful equity, you generally have three realistic ways to fund the project — a cash-out refinance, a HELOC, or a home equity loan. Each lands differently on monthly payment, total cost, and flexibility.

The calculator above sizes each option to your home value and balance; the table below shows when each one fits.

ProgramMax accessBest forRate type
Cash-out RefinanceUp to 80% of home value (100% if VA-eligible)Large projects where you also want to reset the mortgage termFixed
HELOCUp to 90% combined LTV (credit-tiered)Phased projects where you draw funds as work progressesVariable (prime-tied)
Home Equity LoanUp to 90% combined LTV (credit-tiered)Firm contractor bid with one lump-sum paymentFixed

Get the complete kitchen remodel financing playbook — free

Step-by-step shopping checklist, what to ask each lender, closing-cost line items to negotiate, and how to compare three offers without hurting your credit. PDF emailed in seconds. No phone call.

Get your free Kitchen Remodel booklet →
Local snapshot

Los Angeles at a glance

County
Los Angeles County
Population
3,880,000
Median home value
$985,000
Effective property tax
1.25%
Wind/code notes
Los Angeles sits in a high wildfire-risk region: CAL FIRE and the Office of the State Fire Marshal map Fire Hazard Severity Zones (Moderate, High, and Very High) across the city's wildland-urban interface, and the January 2025 Palisades and Eaton fires underscored the exposure in hillside and canyon neighborhoods. Many high-risk homeowners who cannot secure standard coverage turn to the California FAIR Plan, the state's insurer of last resort, which provides basic fire coverage often paired with a separate wrap-around policy. The region is also seismically active, situated near several major faults, so buyers frequently weigh earthquake insurance (available through the California Earthquake Authority), which is typically sold separately from a standard homeowners policy. Flood risk is more localized - tied to rivers, flood-control channels, and post-fire debris flows - with FEMA flood maps determining where flood insurance is required.

Common remodel areas: Hollywood, Venice, Silver Lake, Downtown Los Angeles, Sherman Oaks.

Los Angeles is the second-largest city in the United States and the anchor of Los Angeles County, with a housing stock that ranges from dense urban condos and 1920s bungalows to hillside estates and San Fernando Valley ranch homes. Prices are among the highest in the nation - the citywide median sits near $1 million - so affordability, down payment size, and loan type are central questions for most buyers. Because so many homes exceed the conforming loan limit, jumbo financing is common here, and buyers also weigh California-specific costs such as wildfire and earthquake insurance. This guide explains the concepts - loan limits, property taxes, and homebuyer-assistance programs - that shape a Los Angeles home purchase.

Typical scope & cost

What Los Angeles kitchen remodels actually cost

Los Angeles cost guide: Entry-level ~$26,000 · Mid-range ~$58,500 · Premium ~$123,500.

Los Angeles projects run at ~130% of the U.S. national average for this category.

Project scopeWhat it typically includes
Cosmetic refresh ($20k-$30k)Cabinet refacing or paint, new counters (laminate or quartz), updated hardware, new sink/faucet, refinish or replace flooring, paint.
Mid-range remodel ($30k-$60k)New cabinets in same layout, quartz/granite counters, full appliance package, tile backsplash, new flooring, updated electrical and lighting.
Full reconfiguration ($60k-$120k+)Wall removal, layout change, custom cabinets, island, high-end appliances, structural beam if load-bearing, possible HVAC and electrical panel upgrades.
Resale value impact

What you get back at sale

~72%
of project cost typically recovered at resale
$42,120
recovered on a mid-range $58,500 project in Los Angeles
Project tierYou spendYou recover at saleNet real cost
Entry$26,000$18,720$7,280
Mid-range$58,500$42,120$16,380
Premium$123,500$88,920$34,580

Source: Remodeling Magazine 2024 Cost vs. Value Report (mid-range minor kitchen remodel; major remodels recoup ~55%)

Treat resale recovery as a secondary benefit, not the goal. The primary value of any home-improvement project is the comfort, function, and avoided-maintenance you get during the years you actually live in the home.

FAQs

Common questions about kitchen remodels in Los Angeles

Does Los Angeles require a permit for a kitchen remodel?
In Los Angeles (Los Angeles County), permits are typically required when the project moves plumbing, alters electrical, changes the footprint, or relocates fixtures. Cosmetic-only work usually doesn't require one. The authoritative source is the Los Angeles County building inspection office — see the permit-office link in the stats panel above. Pulling a required permit also protects future insurance claims and resale.
Do kitchen remodels actually pay for themselves?
Mid-range kitchen remodels recoup ~70-80% of cost at resale per the latest Cost vs. Value report — higher than most rooms. But high-end luxury kitchens recoup less (~55%) because buyers don't pay a premium for finishes they'd choose differently.
How do I budget for a kitchen remodel without going over?
Industry rule: get three contractor bids, pick the middle one, then add a 15-20% contingency on top. Walls always hide surprises (rotted subfloor, undersized electrical, old galvanized plumbing). Budgets that don't include contingency consistently blow up by exactly that 15-20%.
Should I use a designer or go directly to a contractor?
For projects under $40k where you're keeping the layout, a contractor + cabinet vendor is usually enough. For full reconfigurations, a kitchen designer (often included in cabinet pricing at higher-end vendors) catches expensive mistakes before they're built.
Is it worth removing a load-bearing wall?
Costs $5,000-$15,000 in structural work alone (engineer, beam, header, permit). Worth it for open-plan flow that adds resale value, but never a small line item — verify load-bearing status with an engineer before promising the wall comes down.
How long should a kitchen remodel take?
Cosmetic refresh: 2-4 weeks. Mid-range remodel: 6-10 weeks. Full reconfiguration: 12-20 weeks. Don't financing-commit until you have a signed contract with a realistic timeline; an over-aggressive timeline is the #1 sign of a contractor who'll under-deliver.