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 vanish halfway through the job.
That’s harder to find than it should be. Especially in Suffolk County, where homeowners lose thousands every year to contractors who disappear, add hidden fees, or leave work unfinished.
Here’s what changes when you work with a licensed contractor who keeps an in-house team and communicates clearly: your project stays on schedule. You know what you’re paying before work starts. And when something needs adjusting, you hear about it right away—not three weeks later when it’s already a problem.
You get a finished space that works the way you need it to. No drama. No runaround. Just the renovation you were promised.
We’ve been working in Miller Place and the surrounding Suffolk County area for close to ten years. That means we know the permit process, the building codes, and the quirks that come with older Long Island homes—electrical upgrades, plumbing reroutes, structural adjustments that weren’t in the original plan.
Our team is in-house. No subcontractors bouncing between jobs. That gives you consistency, accountability, and someone to talk to when questions come up.
We’re not the company that pressures you into upgrades you don’t need or buries fees in fine print. We’re the ones who walk you through what’s involved, what it costs, and what your options are. Then you decide.
First, we meet at your home. You show us what you want to change, and we talk through what’s realistic for your budget and timeline. No sales pitch. Just a conversation about what’s possible.
Next, we put together a detailed estimate. Everything’s spelled out—labor, materials, timeline. If something might add cost down the road, we tell you upfront so there’s no confusion later.
Once you’re ready to move forward, we schedule the work and get started. Our team handles the job from beginning to end. You’re not coordinating between different crews or waiting on someone else’s availability.
Throughout the project, we keep you updated. If we run into something unexpected—old wiring, hidden water damage, structural issues—we stop, explain what we found, and give you options before moving ahead. When the work’s done, we walk through everything with you to make sure it’s right.
Ready to get started?
We focus on interior work: kitchens, bathrooms, basements, flooring, carpentry, spackling, and painting. If it’s inside your home and needs updating, we’ve done it before.
Miller Place homes often need more than cosmetic updates. Many properties here were built decades ago, and that means you’re dealing with outdated electrical, old plumbing, or layouts that don’t work for how people live now. We handle those challenges regularly.
Kitchen remodels in Suffolk County typically run between $35,000 and $85,000 depending on size and finishes. Bathrooms vary based on fixtures and layout changes. Basements depend on whether you’re finishing raw space or renovating what’s already there. We’ll give you real numbers based on your specific project—not ranges pulled from a national average.
The goal isn’t just to make your space look better. It’s to make it work better. That means thinking through storage, flow, lighting, and durability. It also means choosing materials that hold up in Long Island’s humid summers and cold winters, because what works in another climate won’t always work here.
In New York, any home improvement project over $200 requires a licensed contractor. That license means the contractor passed a written exam and met state requirements for insurance and bonding.
You can verify a contractor’s license through New York State’s Department of Consumer Protection. Ask for their license number upfront—if they hesitate or make excuses, that’s a red flag.
Licensed contractors also carry insurance that protects you if something goes wrong on the job. Without that coverage, you could be liable for injuries or damage that happen on your property. It’s not just about following the rules. It’s about protecting yourself from risk that shouldn’t be yours to carry.
When a contractor uses subcontractors, they’re coordinating between multiple crews who may be juggling other jobs. That often means delays, communication gaps, and inconsistent quality because no one’s overseeing the whole project day to day.
An in-house team works directly for the contractor. They’re on your job until it’s done, and they’re accountable to one person—the contractor you hired. That makes scheduling more reliable and gives you a single point of contact when questions come up.
It also means we have direct control over quality. If something isn’t right, it gets fixed immediately, not after tracking down a subcontractor who’s already moved on to another job. For you, that translates to fewer headaches and a smoother process from start to finish.
A full kitchen remodel usually takes four to eight weeks depending on the scope. If you’re changing the layout, upgrading electrical and plumbing, or waiting on custom cabinets, expect the longer end of that range.
Bathroom remodels typically take two to four weeks. Smaller updates like new tile, fixtures, and vanity can be faster. Larger jobs that involve moving plumbing or expanding the space take more time.
Weather affects timelines here more than people expect. Suffolk County’s humid summers can slow down drying times for certain materials, and winter can delay deliveries or create scheduling challenges. We build buffer time into the schedule so you’re not left hanging when the unexpected happens. We’d rather underpromise and finish early than leave you without a working kitchen for weeks longer than planned.
It depends entirely on what you’re doing. Kitchen remodels in this area typically range from $35,000 to $85,000 or more. Bathrooms run lower, usually between $15,000 and $40,000. Basement finishing can vary widely based on square footage and what you’re adding—bathroom, kitchenette, egress windows.
Here’s what drives cost: materials, labor, and scope. If you’re keeping the existing layout, costs stay lower. If you’re moving plumbing, adding electrical, or tearing down walls, costs go up because there’s more work involved.
The median renovation budget in Miller Place is around $19,000, but that includes smaller projects like flooring or painting. For larger remodels, expect to invest more. A detailed estimate breaks down where your money goes so you can make informed decisions about what’s worth it and what’s not. We’ll walk you through options at different price points so you’re not guessing.
Start by checking their license and insurance. Contractors who operate without proper credentials are more likely to cut corners or walk away when problems arise.
Ask for references from recent projects in your area, and actually call them. Find out if the contractor communicated well, stayed on schedule, and handled issues professionally. If they can’t provide references or the ones they give are vague, that’s a warning sign.
Get everything in writing before work starts—scope, timeline, payment schedule, materials. Avoid contractors who want large upfront payments or who pressure you to decide immediately. Legitimate contractors understand that you need time to compare options and make an informed choice. The ones who rush you or make it hard to get clear answers are usually the ones you’ll regret hiring.
Trustworthy contractors show up when they say they will, do what they promised, and communicate clearly when something changes. That sounds basic, but it’s surprisingly rare in this industry.
Look for contractors who’ve been working locally for years. They have a reputation to protect and relationships in the community. They’re not going to risk that by doing shoddy work or disappearing mid-project.
Transparency matters too. A trustworthy contractor gives you a detailed estimate, explains what’s involved, and tells you upfront if something might add cost. We don’t hide fees or surprise you with charges that weren’t discussed. And when problems come up—because they always do in renovation work—we bring you solutions, not excuses. That’s how you know you’re working with someone who’s in it for the long term, not just the quick payout.