Hear from Our Customers
You’re not looking for the cheapest bid. You’re looking for someone who shows up, does what they said they’d do, and doesn’t leave you guessing about costs or timelines.
That’s what happens when you work with a licensed contractor who runs in-house crews instead of juggling subcontractors. Your kitchen remodel doesn’t get delayed because someone else’s bathroom job ran long. Your basement renovation doesn’t turn into a three-month nightmare because the flooring guy went silent.
You get clear communication from day one. A price that doesn’t change halfway through. And a finished space that actually looks like what you agreed on. No surprises, no runarounds, no wondering if today’s the day someone finally shows up.
We’ve spent close to ten years working inside homes across Centerport, Huntington, and the surrounding Suffolk County area. We’re not a crew that parachutes in from three towns over. We know what salt air does to finishes, how basements behave after heavy snow melt, and why your 1960s ranch needs more than just a fresh coat of paint.
We’re licensed, insured, and we keep our crews in-house. That means you’re not dealing with a rotating cast of subcontractors. You’re working with the same people from estimate to final walkthrough.
We handle interior work: kitchens, bathrooms, basements, flooring, custom carpentry, and high-level spackling and painting. If it’s inside your house and it needs upgrading, we’ve probably done it a hundred times.
You reach out, and we schedule a time to walk through your home. We look at what you want done, ask questions about how you use the space, and talk through any concerns you have about budget or timing.
From there, we put together a detailed estimate. Not a vague ballpark. An actual breakdown of what the work involves and what it costs. If you move forward, we give you a contract that spells everything out clearly—scope, timeline, payment schedule. No fine print, no hidden fees.
Once work starts, our in-house crew handles everything. We keep the job site organized because we know you’re still living there. We communicate regularly so you’re never wondering what’s happening or when we’ll be back. And when the work’s done, we walk through it with you to make sure it’s right.
That’s it. No drama, no disappearing acts, no surprise invoices at the end.
Ready to get started?
We focus on interior renovations because that’s where most homeowners in Centerport and Suffolk County see the biggest return. Kitchen remodels typically return 70-80% of what you invest, and a well-done bathroom renovation can completely change how your home feels and functions.
We handle full kitchen and bathroom remodels—cabinets, countertops, flooring, fixtures, tile work, the whole scope. We also finish basements, which is a smart move in a market where home values in Suffolk County are sitting around $602,000 and climbing. Finished square footage matters when it’s time to sell.
Beyond that, we do custom carpentry, flooring installation, and expert-level spackling and painting. If your walls look tired or your trim is beat up from years of Long Island winters, we can bring them back. And if you’re dealing with older construction that needs more than cosmetic work, we know how to handle it without tearing apart your entire house.
Everything we do is backed by proper licensing and insurance. You’re covered, we’re covered, and the work gets done right.
Suffolk County requires home improvement contractors to carry a valid license, and you can verify that through the county clerk’s office or by asking the contractor directly for their license number. A legitimate contractor won’t hesitate to provide it.
Beyond the license, check that they carry general liability insurance and workers’ compensation coverage. If someone gets hurt on your property and the contractor isn’t insured, you could be liable. Ask for proof of insurance and make sure the policy is current—not something that expired two years ago.
If a contractor avoids these questions or says licensing “doesn’t really matter” for smaller jobs, walk away. It matters. You’re protecting your home, your investment, and yourself from legal trouble down the road.
When you hire individual subcontractors, you become the project manager. You’re coordinating schedules, making sure one trade doesn’t undo another’s work, and troubleshooting when something goes wrong. If the electrician and the plumber both need to be there Tuesday and one doesn’t show, your timeline just shifted.
A general contractor manages all of that. We coordinate the work, handle the sequencing, and take responsibility if something needs to be fixed. When you work with a contractor who uses in-house crews instead of rotating subcontractors, it’s even smoother—no waiting for someone else’s schedule to open up.
The tradeoff is cost. A general contractor charges more than hiring individual trades yourself. But unless you have experience managing construction projects and the time to do it, the cost difference is usually worth it. You’re paying for someone to handle the chaos so you don’t have to.
A full kitchen remodel usually takes four to six weeks, depending on the scope. If you’re doing a complete gut—tearing out cabinets, replacing plumbing and electrical, installing new flooring and countertops—it’s closer to six weeks. A smaller refresh with new cabinets and countertops but no major layout changes can be done in four.
Bathrooms are faster. A full bathroom remodel typically takes two to three weeks. If you’re just updating fixtures and tile without moving plumbing, you’re looking at the shorter end of that range.
Weather can affect timelines in Suffolk County, especially during winter. If materials get delayed because of snow or if we’re waiting on inspections that got backlogged, it can add a few days. We build a little buffer into the schedule and keep you updated if anything shifts. The goal is to get it done right, not just fast.
Yes. Three estimates is a good benchmark. It gives you a sense of what the work should cost and how different contractors approach the job.
But don’t just compare the bottom-line numbers. Look at what’s included in each estimate. One contractor might bid lower because they’re using cheaper materials or skipping steps that matter. Another might come in higher because they’re accounting for potential issues they spotted during the walkthrough.
Ask questions. If one bid is significantly lower than the others, find out why. If one contractor is proposing a different approach, ask them to explain the reasoning. The cheapest bid isn’t always the best deal, and the most expensive one isn’t automatically the highest quality. You’re looking for someone who’s thorough, clear, and realistic about what the job involves.
A mid-range kitchen remodel in Suffolk County typically runs between $25,000 and $50,000. That includes new cabinets, countertops, flooring, a sink and faucet, and updated lighting. If you’re moving plumbing or gas lines, adding an island, or going with higher-end finishes, you’ll be closer to the top of that range or above it.
A smaller refresh—new countertops, backsplash, paint, and hardware—can be done for $10,000 to $15,000. A full luxury remodel with custom cabinetry, high-end appliances, and significant layout changes can easily hit $75,000 or more.
The key is to spend in proportion to your home’s value. If your house is worth $600,000, sinking $100,000 into a kitchen remodel probably doesn’t make financial sense unless you’re planning to stay there for decades. We’ll be honest with you about what makes sense for your situation, not just try to upsell you on the most expensive option.
It depends on the scope of work. If you’re doing cosmetic updates—painting, replacing cabinets, installing new flooring—you typically don’t need a permit. But if the work involves plumbing, electrical, or structural changes, you need permits from the Town of Huntington.
Moving a wall, adding or relocating plumbing fixtures, upgrading electrical panels, or doing anything that affects your home’s structure or systems requires permits and inspections. Skipping permits might save time upfront, but it creates problems later. If you try to sell your home and the buyer’s inspector finds unpermitted work, it can kill the deal or force you to bring everything up to code at your expense.
As a licensed contractor, we know what requires permits and handle the filing and inspections as part of the job. If someone tells you permits aren’t necessary when they clearly are, that’s a red flag. You want someone who does things correctly, not someone who cuts corners to move faster.