A kitchen remodel can consume more money, time, and goodwill with your household than almost any other home project. It can also deliver more lasting satisfaction when it's done right. The difference between the two outcomes is almost always set before the first cabinet is removed — in the planning, sequencing, and decision-making that happen in the weeks and months before a contractor ever walks through your door.

This checklist walks through every preparation step in the order it actually needs to happen. It covers all eight phases of pre-remodel planning: vision and goals, design and layout, budgeting, permits and code, hiring, material selection and ordering, preparing your home, and what to expect — and inspect — during construction. Each phase builds on the one before it, which is why the sequence matters.

This is not a general overview of how kitchens work or a catalog of design trends. If you want to understand what a kitchen remodel should cost before you set a budget, the kitchen remodel cost guide covers current ranges for Greenville, SC and Charlotte, NC in detail. If you want to understand which tile works for which application in a kitchen, how to choose the best tile for your kitchen covers every selection criterion by zone. If you want a thorough breakdown of what goes wrong on kitchen remodels and why, common kitchen remodeling mistakes is worth reading before you finalize your plans.

What this article covers is the checklist — the concrete, sequential preparation that determines how smoothly a project runs once work begins. Work through it in order. Each decision you make cleanly in an earlier phase is one less problem to solve under time pressure later.


Phase 1: Vision and Goals

Before you look at a tile sample, a cabinet door style, or a contractor's schedule, you need a clear picture of what you actually want from this project — and why. Homeowners who skip this step end up remodeling based on whatever they saw most recently: a showroom visit, a neighbor's kitchen, a magazine spread. That approach produces kitchens that look fine but don't quite fit how the household lives.

Define Your Scope: Cosmetic Refresh, Layout-Preserving Remodel, or Full Gut

Cosmetic refresh. New tile on the backsplash, updated cabinet hardware, a fresh coat of paint, and new light fixtures. The layout stays exactly as it is. Plumbing and electrical are not touched. This is the right scope when the kitchen functions well and only the surfaces are tired. A cosmetic refresh can be completed in days rather than weeks and costs a fraction of a full remodel.

Layout-preserving remodel. New cabinets, countertops, tile, lighting, and appliances — all in their existing locations. The sink stays where it is. The stove stays where it is. Plumbing rough-in is not moved. This scope gives you a completely new kitchen without the cost and complexity of relocating mechanical systems. It covers the majority of kitchen remodels and is appropriate when the existing layout works well for the household.

Full gut with layout changes. Everything comes out, and at least some of it goes back in a different location. Moving the sink, relocating the range, removing a wall to open the kitchen to a dining or living space, adding an island where one didn't exist. These changes require plumbing relocation, new electrical circuits, and often structural engineering. The cost jumps significantly, the timeline extends, and the permit requirements broaden. This scope is appropriate when the current layout genuinely impairs how the kitchen functions.

Choosing your scope early is not a constraint — it's a decision that makes every subsequent choice faster and cleaner.

Identify Structural Constraints

Walls that run perpendicular to floor joists are more likely to be load-bearing. Walls on the exterior of the house almost always are. Walls aligned above a beam in the basement or crawl space typically carry structural load. The only way to know with certainty is to open the wall and trace the framing path, or have a structural engineer evaluate the framing before demo begins.

The drain stack location is critical if you're considering moving the sink. Moving a sink more than a few feet — or moving it to an island — requires rerouting the drain line, which typically means cutting the subfloor and rerouting through the space below. That work is doable, but it adds real cost and requires a plumbing permit and inspection.

Build a Wish List, Then a Priority List

The wish list exercise surfaces priorities that design inspiration alone doesn't capture. A homeowner looking at magazine kitchens may fixate on custom cabinetry and zellige tile. The same homeowner, if asked what they hate most about their current kitchen, might say there's nowhere to put a cutting board, the refrigerator is in the wrong corner, and there's only one outlet on the entire counter. Those are the problems worth solving first.

Your priority list is what keeps the project grounded when a contractor presents an option that sounds appealing but would redirect budget away from what actually matters.

Audit How You Actually Use the Kitchen

A kitchen that looks great in photos but is designed for someone else's habits is a source of daily frustration. A family that cooks from scratch most evenings needs different storage, different workflow, and different appliance placement than a household that reheats and assembles. Neither is wrong. But those realities should shape the design before the design is locked in.


Phase 2: Design and Layout

Layout decisions made here ripple through every downstream choice. Getting them right before any materials are ordered or contractors are signed prevents the most expensive mistakes on any kitchen remodel.

Plan the Kitchen Work Triangle and Zone Layout

The work triangle is not a rigid rule, but it reflects something real about how cooking works: the refrigerator, stove, and sink are the three most-used points in any kitchen, and the distance and path between them determines whether cooking flows or involves constant backtracking. An island that looks beautiful in a floor plan but cuts the triangle in half by blocking the path between the stove and sink will frustrate the household every day.

Larger kitchens increasingly plan around zones rather than a strict triangle. A baking zone with counter space, a mixer storage drawer, and proximity to the oven. A cleanup zone centered on a large sink with dishwasher access. A beverage zone with its own refrigerator drawer and counter. Zone planning requires more square footage to execute well but can make a large kitchen work far more efficiently than a rigid triangle layout would.

Decide on Upper Cabinet Height

Standard cabinet installations leave a gap between the top of the cabinets and the ceiling, which either collects dust or is covered by a soffit. Ceiling-height cabinetry eliminates that gap, adds meaningful storage, and creates a cleaner visual line. It also costs more — taller cabinets cost more per unit, and the space above standard cabinets that is being enclosed requires careful construction.

If the decision is not clear yet, confirm it before the cabinet order is placed. Cabinet height affects the backsplash tile area (taller cabinets mean less tile between the countertop and the upper cabinet), the lighting plan, and potentially the electrical rough-in for under-cabinet lighting.

Plan the Island (If Applicable)

The minimum clearance figures are not suggestions. A 36-inch walkway behind a cook standing at the range is too narrow for another person to pass safely. A 36-inch clearance between an island and a dishwasher door means the dishwasher can't fully open when someone is standing at the island. These problems are avoidable on paper and expensive to fix once cabinets are installed.

Islands with cooktops require dedicated ventilation — either a ceiling-mounted range hood above the island or a downdraft ventilation system built into the cooktop surface. Downdraft systems work adequately for light cooking but struggle with high-heat or heavy steam. Plan the ventilation solution when you plan the island cooktop, not after.

Lock in Appliance Placement and Sizes Before Cabinet Ordering

Appliance dimensions drive the cabinet layout. If the refrigerator opening is designed for a 36-inch refrigerator and you later decide on a 42-inch model, the cabinet on one side has to be rebuilt. Cabinet suppliers need appliance cutout dimensions to design the run correctly, and cabinet orders cannot be easily modified once they leave the factory.

Confirm the range hood's required rough-in before the cabinet order is placed. Some hoods vent through the cabinet above them; others vent through the ceiling or wall. The path the ductwork will take needs to be cleared before cabinets go in, not after.

Plan Backsplash Tile to Coordinate with Countertops and Cabinets

The guide to choosing kitchen backsplash tile covers every material type, design coordination principle, and grout decision in detail. The short version: match undertones between surfaces before finalizing selections, order physical samples rather than relying on website photography, and make the coordination decision with all major surfaces represented simultaneously rather than one at a time.

Plan Outlet Placement to Meet NEC Requirements

Outlet planning is one of the most frequently overlooked design details in kitchen remodels, and getting it wrong results in either a failed inspection or a finished backsplash that has to be cut open to add outlets that should have been planned from the start. Every electrical change in a kitchen requires a permit and inspection in both Greenville, SC and Charlotte, NC.

Create a Lighting Plan

Under-cabinet lighting often goes in as an afterthought. It should be in the plan before walls are opened, because the cleanest installation routes the low-voltage wiring through the wall inside the upper cabinet run — a straightforward task before drywall closes, a significant patch job after.


Phase 3: Budget

A realistic budget, set before contractor conversations begin, is the foundation that makes every other decision manageable. Homeowners who go into contractor conversations without a budget tend to be shaped by the first number they hear. Homeowners with a defined budget and a clear priority list stay in control.

Set Realistic Budget Allocations by Component

These percentages are guidelines, not rules. A homeowner who inherits a good set of cabinets and is only replacing countertops, tile, and appliances has a very different distribution than someone doing a full gut. The percentages are useful for checking whether your intuitive budget allocation is in proportion — if you're planning to spend 5% on cabinets and 30% on appliances, that's a sign something needs to be reconsidered.

Labor is the line item that surprises most homeowners. In the Greenville and Charlotte markets, skilled kitchen labor — cabinet installation, tile installation, plumbing, electrical, drywall, finish carpentry — is in demand and priced accordingly. Trying to cut total project cost by cutting labor rather than materials almost always leads to problems with the quality of the finished result.

Set a 15–20% Contingency and Treat It as Non-Negotiable

The contingency exists because kitchen remodels routinely reveal things that couldn't be seen before demo: subfloor damage from a slow leak under the dishwasher, electrical wiring that is not safe and needs replacement before new circuits can be added, a section of floor that isn't level enough for the large-format tile you've selected without additional floor leveling compound. Older homes — anything built before 1980 — have a higher probability of hidden conditions. In those homes, 20–25% contingency is realistic.

The contingency is not discretionary spending on upgrades you forgot to budget. It is insurance against conditions that are genuinely unknowable until the project is underway.

Understand the Correct Sequencing of Spend

The sequence matters for budget management as well as scheduling. Cabinet delivery is typically the largest single payment in a kitchen remodel. The countertop fabrication payment follows weeks later. Understanding the cash flow timing before the project starts prevents situations where money that was spent on one phase isn't available for the next.

Understand the Trade-Offs of Owner-Supplied Tile and Materials

Purchasing tile and materials directly removes the contractor's markup, which can be meaningful on higher-end selections. The trade-off is coordination responsibility. A contractor who supplies their own materials is responsible for having the right quantities on-site when needed. A contractor installing your materials is not. Order enough the first time, inspect materials on delivery, and have storage arranged before materials arrive.


Phase 4: Permits and Code

Permits are the most consistently skipped preparation step in residential kitchen remodels. The consequences range from a failed home inspection years later to insurance complications after an incident. Know what's required before work begins.

Determine Whether Your Project Requires a Permit

Permitted work is documented work. When you sell a home that has had unpermitted electrical or plumbing work done, buyers' inspectors often flag it, and the discovery can delay or derail a closing. The permit also provides you with inspection checkpoints — an inspector who reviews rough-in plumbing and electrical before walls close is a professional check on the quality of the work. That inspection benefits you.

Know What Electrical, Plumbing, and Structural Work Triggers Inspections

One common misconception: adding dedicated circuits for a new dishwasher location or a new refrigerator location, even if the appliance type is unchanged, often triggers an electrical permit because new circuit runs are involved. The permit is for the circuit work, not just for moving an existing outlet.

Handle HOA Approvals Before Signing a Contractor

Interior kitchen remodeling rarely triggers HOA restrictions. The exceptions are exterior modifications: a new range hood that requires a new exterior vent penetration, a wall modification that affects the exterior facade, or window changes. If your project includes any work that touches the exterior of the home, confirm HOA requirements first.


Phase 5: Hiring and Contracts

The contractor decision is the one that determines whether all the planning you've done in the previous phases pays off. A skilled contractor working from a well-defined scope delivers a kitchen that functions well and holds up for decades. An underqualified contractor given the same materials and the same plan will cut corners on the things you can't see — and you won't know until they become expensive problems.

Get Three Quotes — and Make Them Comparable

Getting three quotes does two things: it gives you a realistic price range for your market, and it reveals what each contractor considers standard practice. The gap between the highest and lowest quote is often explained by differences in what's included, what substrate preparation is planned, and what waterproofing approach is standard for that contractor.

The guide to choosing a tile contractor covers the full evaluation process, including license verification, insurance requirements, and what references to actually ask about.

Understand Who Is Coordinating Subcontractors

A kitchen remodel involves multiple trades working in sequence: demo, rough plumbing, rough electrical, framing, drywall, cabinet installation, countertop templating, tile installation, finish electrical and plumbing, appliance installation. When a GC manages this sequence, they are responsible for the schedule and for resolving conflicts between trades. When you manage it yourself, that coordination falls to you.

Self-managing trades can save 10–15% on total project cost by eliminating the GC's overhead. It is appropriate for homeowners who are organized, available during the day, and experienced with construction schedules. It is not appropriate for first-time remodelers or anyone who cannot dedicate significant time to scheduling and problem-solving during the project.

Review Every Line of the Contract Before Signing

The change order process deserves particular attention. A contract that is vague about change orders is a contract that will generate disputes. Any change to the scope of work — including conditions discovered during demo that require additional work — should be documented in a written change order, with a cost attached, before the work is performed. This protects both you and the contractor.


Phase 6: Material Selection and Ordering

All major materials should be selected, ordered, and have confirmed delivery dates before demolition begins. A project sitting in demo because materials haven't arrived is expensive, disruptive, and preventable.

Understand Cabinet Lead Times

Cabinet lead times are the most common scheduling problem in kitchen remodels. A homeowner who signs a contract in September, expecting a 10-week build time, and then doesn't order semi-custom cabinets until October is looking at a February delivery — and an extended period during which the kitchen is either in demo or on hold. Order cabinets as early as possible after design is finalized and the cabinet order is confirmed with your contractor.

Order Tile with Correct Overage

Tile is manufactured in production runs, and color varies between runs even within the same product line. Two boxes of the "same" tile from different batches will not match precisely. If you run short during installation and need to reorder, the chance of getting a matching dye lot decreases significantly over time. Order enough on the first order, including the full overage, every time.

Schedule Countertop Templating After Cabinets Are Installed

Countertop templating is the step most homeowners don't anticipate. Cabinet installation is not precise enough to fabricate countertops from design drawings — the templater measures the actual installed cabinets to produce exact cutout dimensions for the sink, cooktop, and any other penetrations. Fabrication happens after templating. This sequencing adds two to four weeks between cabinet installation and countertop delivery that must be built into the project schedule.

Time Appliance Delivery Correctly

Appliances delivered during demo or rough-in sit in the way, are at risk of being damaged, and force the crew to work around them. Large appliances also require a clear path from the delivery door to the kitchen — confirm that path is clear on delivery day and that any doorways or hallways along the route can accommodate the appliance's dimensions.


Phase 7: Preparing Your Home

The two weeks before construction begins are not downtime. They are active preparation time. A jobsite that is ready on day one runs faster and avoids costly delays caused by things that should have been handled before the crew arrived.

Set Up a Temporary Kitchen

A kitchen remodel is typically two to six weeks of disrupted cooking. Planning the temporary kitchen setup before demo day — rather than scrambling after the kitchen is already demolished — keeps the household functioning without daily improvisation.

Plan Dust Containment Strategically

Demo of ceramic or porcelain tile generates significant fine dust. It is more pervasive than most homeowners expect, and containment measures taken before demo day are far more effective than cleanup attempted afterward. Tell your contractor what dust containment you expect, and confirm they will maintain the barriers throughout the project.

Arrange Material Delivery and Storage

Cabinets, in particular, should be stored in a conditioned space. Extreme temperature or humidity fluctuations can affect wood doors and drawer fronts. Confirm with your cabinet supplier their storage requirements.

Plan for Pets and Children During Construction

Construction adhesives, grout, and thinset release fumes that are not dangerous in a well-ventilated work space but should not be inhaled directly or in concentrated form by pets, young children, or people with respiratory conditions. Confirm your contractor maintains adequate ventilation during adhesive and grout work.


Phase 8: During the Remodel

A well-prepared project does not run itself. Active management during construction — at the right moments and at the right level — prevents small issues from becoming expensive problems.

Know the Key Inspection Points Before Walls Close

The rough-in walkthrough is a significant moment in any kitchen remodel. Once the drywall goes up, nothing behind it is visible or accessible without cutting the wall open. Inspecting the rough-in yourself — alongside the inspector's review — ensures you understand the installed systems and have the opportunity to flag any issue before it's buried.

Review Tile Layout Before Grouting Begins

The tile layout review before grouting is one of the most important quality checkpoints in any kitchen remodel. Once grout is in the joints, making changes to the tile requires grinding out the grout, removing the tile (often damaging it), and resetting. Identifying a layout problem before grouting costs no money; fixing it afterward costs significant labor.

Pay particular attention to the backsplash area behind the range — this is the most visible section of tile in the kitchen and the area where pattern alignment and centering matter most.

Manage Change Orders in Writing, Every Time

Change orders are not a sign that a project is going poorly. They are the normal mechanism for handling conditions that weren't visible at the time of bidding and for scope changes you decide to make mid-project. The problem is undocumented change orders, where both parties remember the conversation differently when it's time to pay.

If a contractor discovers subfloor damage during demo that needs to be addressed before tile can go down, that is appropriate additional work that should be documented as a change order with a specific cost. Authorizing it verbally and expecting it to "come out in the wash" is how $2,000 worth of legitimate additional work turns into a billing dispute.


Pre-Demo Final Checklist: The Day Before Work Begins

Confirm each of these items before your contractor arrives on day one:

If any item on this list is unresolved on the eve of demo day, push the start date by 24 hours and resolve it. A one-day delay to get organized is significantly less costly than a mid-project problem caused by inadequate preparation.


Frequently Asked Questions

How early should I start planning a kitchen remodel?

For a standard layout-preserving kitchen remodel, begin planning three to four months before your target start date. For a full gut with layout changes, six months is more realistic. The timeline needs to accommodate: finalizing scope and design (two to four weeks), getting contractor quotes and selecting a contractor (two to four weeks), ordering cabinets with appropriate lead time (four to twelve weeks depending on cabinet type), and scheduling with the contractor whose calendar may already be partially booked. Rushing any of these phases creates compounding problems.

Do I need a permit to replace kitchen backsplash tile?

Replacing tile in the same location without touching electrical or plumbing does not require a permit in Greenville, SC or Charlotte, NC. An in-kind tile replacement — same location, same scope — is typically a non-permitted cosmetic update. However, if the tile replacement involves any electrical outlet relocation (even by a few inches), or if the contractor discovers plumbing or electrical conditions that need correction while the wall is open, those corrections may require permits. Your licensed contractor can advise on what's required for your specific scope.

What is the difference between semi-custom and custom cabinets?

Semi-custom cabinets are built to order in a range of sizes that go beyond standard stock dimensions, with more finish, door style, and interior configuration options. They're made by manufacturers in a factory setting, with lead times of four to eight weeks. Custom cabinets are built specifically for your kitchen by a local or regional cabinet shop, to the exact dimensions of your space, with any configuration you specify. Custom cabinetry offers more flexibility, typically better craftsmanship for the same price bracket, and longer lead times — eight to sixteen weeks is standard. For most kitchen remodels, semi-custom offers the best balance of quality, options, and lead time.

Can I save money by managing my own subcontractors instead of hiring a general contractor?

Yes, but the savings come with real responsibilities. A general contractor typically adds 15–25% to the total project cost for overhead and project management. Self-managing trades eliminates that cost but puts you in charge of scheduling each trade, coordinating sequencing (plumber before tile, electrician before drywall, cabinet installer before countertop fabricator), handling conflicts, and managing the permit and inspection process. Homeowners who self-manage successfully are organized, responsive, and available during the workday. Homeowners who take this on without those qualities often find that scheduling delays and miscommunications cost more than a GC's fee would have.

What should I do when contractors' quotes vary widely?

First, confirm that each quote covers the same scope. The most common reason for large quote variations is not skill level — it's differences in what's included. One contractor may include substrate preparation, waterproofing, and all tile grout and caulk in their tile line item; another may quote only labor. Compare line by line, not just as a total. Once you've confirmed scope is equivalent, a quote that is significantly lower than the others warrants direct questions: what are they planning to cut, and why? A quote that is significantly higher may include quality or warranty provisions worth understanding.

Is it worth changing the kitchen layout, or should I keep everything where it is?

The answer depends entirely on whether the existing layout is actually the problem. If the current workflow in your kitchen is inefficient — the sink and stove are too far apart, there's no prep space near the range, the refrigerator is in a corner that requires people to dodge each other — then a layout change addresses the root cause and is worth the additional cost. If the current layout works well and the issue is worn surfaces and dated finishes, a layout-preserving remodel delivers most of the benefit at a fraction of the cost. Moving plumbing is the most expensive single element in a kitchen remodel that doesn't involve structural work. It should be justified by a meaningful functional improvement, not by a vague desire to "mix it up."

How do I avoid running out of tile mid-project?

Order all tile — including the full calculated overage — before installation begins, in a single order. Calculate the square footage for each zone separately (backsplash, floor, accent areas), add 10–15% for straight patterns and 15–20% for diagonal or complex patterns, and order that quantity as one transaction. Confirm all boxes in the order share the same dye lot number. Keep the leftover tile after the project is complete — it is the exact batch match for future repairs. Ordering a second batch later to complete a project or repair a section almost always produces tile that does not match the original, because production batches vary in color and texture.

When should countertop templating happen?

Countertop templating happens after cabinets are fully installed, because the fabricator needs to measure the actual installed cabinet dimensions to cut the stone precisely. Design drawings are not accurate enough for stone fabrication — cabinets always have minor variations from the plan. Schedule the fabricator's templating visit for the day after cabinet installation is complete, or as close to that as possible. Expect two to four weeks between the templating visit and countertop delivery for standard materials. Do not install the backsplash tile before countertops are in place — the tile gets cut to fit against the actual countertop surface, and that measurement requires the countertop to be there.

What are the most important things to inspect before drywall closes?

Three things: rough plumbing, rough electrical, and blocking. Confirm the plumbing rough-in passes inspection (mandatory before close-up in both Greenville, SC and Charlotte, NC). Confirm the electrical rough-in passes inspection (same requirement). Walk the open walls and confirm that any blocking — wood blocking installed between framing members to support future wall-mounted items like a pot filler bracket, a range hood structure, or open shelving — is installed while the wall is still open. Missing blocking requires reopening the wall later, which means cutting through finished drywall and tile. These inspections cost nothing to do correctly and are extremely expensive to correct after the fact.

How do I handle unexpected discoveries during demo?

Stay calm, ask for documentation, and get a written change order before authorizing any additional work. When a contractor discovers something during demo — subfloor damage, mold, inadequate wiring, out-of-level framing — they should stop, show you what they found, and provide a written estimate for the additional work before proceeding. That is the correct process. If a contractor calls you and says "we found a problem, we went ahead and fixed it, here's the additional charge," that's a process failure — the authorization should have preceded the work. Establish the change order protocol clearly in the contract before construction begins so both parties understand the expectation.

What is the best way to coordinate backsplash tile with my countertops?

Start with the countertop, not the tile. The countertop is a larger surface and is harder to change later, so it should be your fixed reference point. Once you have a countertop sample (an actual physical piece, not a website photo), bring it to a tile showroom and evaluate options next to it in similar lighting. The critical factor is undertone: warm countertops (cream, yellow, or beige undertones) coordinate with warm tile; cool countertops (gray, blue, or white undertones) coordinate with cool tile. Mixing undertones — a warm stone countertop with a cool-white subway tile — is the most common coordination mistake, and it's difficult to diagnose until you're standing in the finished kitchen wondering why something feels off. Confirm the coordination by reviewing physical samples together in your actual kitchen under natural light before ordering.

How long will my kitchen be out of service?

For a layout-preserving remodel with all materials pre-ordered and a contractor managing multiple trades: typically three to five weeks for the kitchen to be fully functional, though some staged access may be possible before that. Full gut remodels with layout changes run five to eight weeks or longer. The variables that most affect timeline are cabinet delivery (semi-custom cabinets ordered late can extend the project by weeks), countertop fabrication lead time, and inspection scheduling (inspections are scheduled with the building department on their timeline, which can add days). Ask your contractor for a realistic construction schedule before demo begins, with specific milestones attached to calendar dates.

Should I tile the kitchen floor before or after cabinet installation?

In a remodel, after is more common. Tiling after cabinets are installed means less tile to purchase and install (tile only covers the exposed floor area, not under the cabinets), and cabinets provide a stable finished edge along which the floor tile can terminate cleanly. Tiling before cabinets (full coverage) gives you flexibility if the cabinet layout ever changes and eliminates the risk of an exposed tile edge if cabinets shift, but costs more in material and labor. In new construction, tiling before cabinets is the more common approach. Discuss the sequencing with your contractor and confirm the approach works with your specific floor tile and cabinet installation method.

What's the difference between getting three quotes and just going with who my neighbor recommends?

They are not mutually exclusive. A contractor recommended by someone who had a good experience is a legitimate lead worth pursuing — personal referrals in local markets are among the most reliable ways to find quality contractors. The issue is that a referral alone doesn't tell you whether the contractor is the right fit for your project size, scope, and budget. Getting three quotes — including the referred contractor — gives you a comparison basis, ensures you understand the market rate for your project, and reveals whether the referred contractor's approach and pricing are appropriate. One strong referral plus two competitive quotes is a sound approach.


Work with VT TILE LLC

VT TILE LLC is a licensed and insured tile installation and remodeling contractor serving Greenville, SC and the surrounding upstate South Carolina area, as well as Charlotte, NC and the greater Charlotte region. Our work includes custom kitchen backsplash tile, tile floors, full kitchen remodels, custom tile showers, bathroom remodels, and fireplace surrounds.

If you're in the planning phase of a kitchen remodel and want a professional perspective on tile selection, layout, or the installation scope, we're glad to walk through the project with you and provide a detailed written quote. Contact us to schedule a consultation.


Related guides: Kitchen Remodel Cost Guide | Kitchen Backsplash Tile Guide | Best Tile for Kitchens | Common Kitchen Remodeling Mistakes | How to Choose a Tile Contractor | Bathroom Remodeling Checklist