Hear from Our Customers
You’ve probably heard the horror stories. A kitchen remodel quoted at $30,000 that somehow becomes $42,000 halfway through. A contractor who shows up twice, then disappears for three weeks. Subcontractors who don’t show when promised, leaving your bathroom torn apart while you’re trying to get ready for work.
That’s not how renovations should work. When you hire a general contractor in Medford, you’re looking for someone who shows up when they say they will, does the work they promised, and charges what they quoted. You want your mornings back. You want to stop explaining to guests why your kitchen’s been wrapped in plastic for two months.
Fixed pricing means you know the number before demo starts. In-house crews mean the same people who started your project will finish it. A one-year warranty means if something’s not right, it gets fixed without a fight. You get your home back on schedule, built to Suffolk County code, without the runaround that’s become standard in this industry.
We’ve been handling interior renovations across Suffolk County since 2016. We’re licensed, insured, and we use our own crews for every job. That means no waiting for subcontractors to return your calls or fit you into their schedule between other projects.
Medford homeowners deal with specific challenges. Older homes with outdated electrical. Basements that need serious attention before they’re livable. Kitchens and bathrooms that haven’t been touched since the ’90s. We’ve worked on enough homes in this area to know what you’re up against, and what it actually takes to bring a space up to current code without blowing past your budget.
We don’t do high-pressure sales. You’ll get a clear quote, a realistic timeline, and straight answers about what your project involves. If something changes, you’ll know before we proceed.
First, we walk through your space and talk through what you want done. You tell us what’s not working, what needs to change, and what you’re hoping to get out of the project. We take measurements, note any structural concerns, and discuss realistic options for your budget.
Then we provide a detailed, fixed-price estimate. It includes materials, labor, timeline, and permit costs if applicable. No allowances that leave room for surprise charges later. You’ll know what you’re paying before we start.
Once you approve the estimate, we handle permits and schedule the work. Our crews show up on time, keep the job site as clean as possible, and communicate if anything comes up. You’ll have one point of contact throughout the project, so you’re not coordinating between multiple people.
After completion, we walk through everything together. You inspect the work, we address any concerns, and you get documentation for your one-year workmanship warranty. If something’s not right within that year, we come back and fix it.
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We handle kitchens, bathrooms, basements, flooring, custom carpentry, and full interior remodels. The work includes demo, framing, electrical and plumbing coordination, drywall, painting, trim, and finish work. Everything needed to take a space from outdated or damaged to fully functional.
In Medford, many homeowners are dealing with homes built in the ’60s through ’90s. That often means knob-and-tube wiring that needs updating, bathrooms with one outlet, and kitchens laid out for a different era. Bringing these spaces up to current Suffolk County building code while making them work for how you actually live takes experience with older construction and local permit requirements.
Material costs have increased significantly over the past few years. The median spend for kitchen renovations hit $24,000 in 2024, up 20% from the prior year. Bathrooms averaged $15,000, up 11%. Those numbers reflect real costs for quality materials and skilled labor. We source locally when possible to avoid supply chain delays that have become common across Long Island.
You’re not just getting updated finishes. You’re getting a space that functions better, meets current safety standards, and adds measurable value to your home. Most Suffolk County homeowners who invest in renovations see that money reflected in resale value, but more importantly, they get to enjoy the improvements while they’re still living there.
Ask for their Suffolk County home improvement license number and verify it directly with the county. It’s illegal to operate a home improvement business in Suffolk County without a license, but that doesn’t stop unlicensed contractors from taking jobs. The county maintains a database you can check.
A licensed contractor has met specific requirements, carries insurance, and can pull permits for your project. If someone tells you they’ll save you money by skipping permits, that’s a red flag. Unpermitted work can cause serious problems when you try to sell your home or file an insurance claim.
You should also ask for proof of insurance, including general liability and workers’ compensation. If someone gets hurt on your property and the contractor doesn’t have coverage, you could be liable. Don’t take their word for it. Ask to see current certificates.
A general contractor manages the entire project. That includes scheduling, permits, inspections, material ordering, and coordinating all the different trades needed to complete the work. When you hire individual tradespeople, you become the general contractor, which means you’re responsible for all that coordination.
For smaller jobs, hiring directly might make sense. But for anything involving multiple trades—like a kitchen or bathroom remodel—you’re managing the electrician, plumber, carpenter, tile setter, and painter. If the plumber doesn’t show up when scheduled, your tile guy might move on to another job, and now you’re pushed back two weeks.
A general contractor also handles problems that come up during construction. If we open a wall and find damage that needs attention, we handle it. You’re not scrambling to find someone who can fit you in while your project sits half-finished. You’re paying for project management, accountability, and the ability to keep working while your renovation happens.
It depends entirely on scope. A bathroom remodel typically takes two to three weeks. A full kitchen runs four to six weeks. Basement finishing can take anywhere from three to eight weeks depending on size and what’s involved.
Those timelines assume no major surprises and normal material availability. If we open walls and find structural issues, outdated wiring, or water damage, that adds time. If you’re ordering custom cabinets or specialty materials, lead times can push the schedule out.
We give you a realistic timeline upfront based on what we see during the estimate. We don’t promise two weeks when we know it’ll take four just to win the job. Delays happen, but they’re usually related to things outside anyone’s control—permit processing, material backorders, or hidden conditions we couldn’t see until demo. When delays happen, we tell you immediately and adjust the schedule.
Bathroom remodels in Suffolk County averaged $15,000 in 2024. Kitchens averaged $24,000. Those are median numbers, which means plenty of projects cost more or less depending on size, materials, and scope.
A basic refresh with new paint, flooring, and fixtures costs less than a full gut renovation with moved walls and updated systems. Custom cabinets cost more than stock. Tile costs more than vinyl. If your project requires structural work, electrical upgrades, or plumbing relocation, that adds cost.
The bigger issue isn’t the starting price—it’s surprise costs that show up mid-project. Over 50% of homeowners in 2024 encountered unexpected expenses, usually related to materials or labor. That’s why we provide fixed pricing. The number we quote is the number you pay unless you change the scope. If we find something during construction that needs attention, we discuss it with you before proceeding.
Most homeowners do, especially for kitchen and bathroom projects. It’s not always comfortable, but it’s manageable if your contractor keeps the job site organized and respects your space.
We contain dust as much as possible, keep pathways clear, and clean up at the end of each day. If we’re working on your only bathroom, we’ll get the toilet functional each evening so you’re not without facilities overnight. If it’s your kitchen, we’ll make sure you have access to water and a way to prepare basic meals.
The hardest part is usually noise and disruption to your routine. Demo is loud. Sawing, drilling, and hammering happen during normal work hours. If you work from home, plan for interruptions. If you have young kids or pets, you’ll need to manage their access to work areas. It’s doable, but it requires patience. Some homeowners choose to stay elsewhere during the messiest phases, especially for larger projects.
We walk through the completed project with you before we consider it finished. If something’s not right, we fix it then. You shouldn’t have to accept work that doesn’t meet the agreed-upon scope or quality standards.
After completion, you’re covered by a one-year workmanship warranty. If something fails or wasn’t done correctly, we come back and make it right. That doesn’t cover normal wear or damage you cause, but it does cover anything related to how the work was performed.
The key is communication during the project, not after. If you notice something that concerns you while we’re still on site, bring it up immediately. It’s much easier to address issues in real time than after everything’s buttoned up. We’d rather know your concerns early than find out you’ve been unhappy for weeks without saying anything.