Quick Answer
Luxury remodels often cost more per square foot than new construction because they require selective demolition, structural modifications, temporary protection of existing areas, additional engineering, and significantly more project management. The work is more labor-intensive and discovery-driven than starting from a clean site. For most luxury remodels, a cost-plus contract serves the homeowner better than a fixed-price bid because it allows real costs to be paid as they occur, rather than being absorbed into a risk premium up front.
Why This Guide Exists
The Cost Question Deserves an Honest Answer
Homeowners researching a luxury remodel almost always start with the same question. How much per square foot? The expected answer is some figure lower than new construction, because the shell already exists. The actual answer is more complicated, and the way most builders avoid explaining it is one of the biggest sources of distrust in the industry.
This guide explains why luxury remodel economics work the way they do, what the per-square-foot ranges actually look like, and how cost-plus contracting compares to fixed-price bidding for a homeowner who wants real transparency.
Why the Math Works This Way
Six Cost Drivers Unique to Remodeling
New construction has the advantage of a clean site, complete plans, and engineered systems designed from scratch. Remodeling carries six categories of cost that new construction simply does not.
- Selective demolition and disposal. Removing existing finishes, walls, mechanical systems, and structural components without damaging adjacent work requires careful, hand-driven labor. Bulk demolition with heavy equipment is rarely an option in a home that will remain partially intact. Disposal costs also climb because materials must be sorted and hauled rather than landfilled in bulk.
- Structural modifications integrated into existing framing. Removing a load-bearing wall in a new build is a plan revision. Removing one in an existing home requires engineering review, temporary shoring, new beam installation, and integration with existing load paths. Every structural change cascades into related work that wouldn't be necessary in new construction.
- Temporary protection of areas that remain in place. Floors, finishes, cabinetry, and mechanical systems in occupied or preserved areas must be protected throughout the project. This means dust barriers, floor coverings, daily site clean-down, and protection of HVAC returns to prevent dust circulation. None of this exists in new construction.
- System integration with existing mechanical, plumbing, and electrical. New work has to connect cleanly to existing systems that were designed decades ago. Voltage matching, plumbing transitions, ductwork joining, and code upgrades in adjacent areas are routine costs that new construction simply doesn't carry.
- Discovery work and engineering for hidden conditions. Foundation cracks, undersized framing, outdated wiring, and aging plumbing all surface during demolition and require remediation that wasn't in the original scope. New construction has no equivalent. The cost of investigating and engineering solutions is real, and it accumulates.
- Higher supervision and project management load. A remodel coordinates more variables than a new build. Existing conditions evolve as demolition progresses. Design decisions change as homeowners see the spaces in person. Trade sequencing has to work around occupied areas. The on-site management hours per square foot are significantly higher than new construction, and that labor cost flows through to the homeowner.
What the Numbers Actually Look Like
Hill Country Per-Square-Foot Ranges
These are the typical ranges for luxury remodels and new construction in the Dripping Springs and broader Texas Hill Country market. Every project has variables that move the number up or down, but these are useful starting points for budget conversations.
Luxury Remodel
$400 to $800 per square foot of remodeled area, depending on finish level, structural work, and the complexity of integrating new systems. Whole-home luxury remodels with significant structural change typically land in the upper half of that range. Ultra-luxury work with imported finishes and bespoke millwork can exceed $1,000 per square foot.
New Custom Construction
$350 to $650 per square foot at comparable finish levels. Ultra-luxury new construction with architectural complexity, structural steel, and premium finishes can run $800 per square foot and up. The starting point is lower than remodeling because the work proceeds from a clean site without integration costs.
Targeted Single-Area Remodel
$500 to $1,200 per square foot for kitchens, primary bathrooms, and high-finish targeted spaces. Per-square-foot costs are higher here because the work is concentrated and finish-heavy, with significantly more cabinetry, plumbing, and mechanical density per area than whole-home work.
Substantial Addition
$450 to $750 per square foot. Additions combine the cleaner economics of new construction for the addition itself with the integration costs of tying into the existing structure. The result usually sits between new construction and full remodel pricing.
Contract Models
Cost-Plus vs. Fixed-Price: The Honest Comparison
Once a homeowner understands the cost drivers, the next question is how to structure the contract. Two models dominate residential remodeling, and the right choice depends on the project — not on which one the builder prefers.
Cost-Plus Contract
The homeowner pays actual costs of labor, materials, and subcontractors, plus an agreed builder fee — either as a fixed dollar amount or a fixed percentage. The model is also called open-book contracting because the homeowner sees real invoices for every line item. It works well when there are real unknowns (older homes, complex remodels) or when design is still evolving.
Fixed-Price Contract
The builder commits to a single price covering all scope. The homeowner pays that price regardless of what is actually spent. Works well for tightly scoped remodels with locked design and well-understood conditions. The builder absorbs cost overruns but also keeps any savings if actual costs come in lower.
What Cost-Plus Does Well
Aligns the builder's interest with the homeowner's, because there is no incentive to cut corners. Accommodates evolving design and unknown conditions without expensive change orders. Allows the homeowner to capture savings when conditions are better than expected. Builds trust through line-item transparency.
What Fixed-Price Does Well
Provides budget certainty. Removes the homeowner's exposure to cost overruns. Works well when the scope is genuinely fixed and the home is well understood. Easier for homeowners who prefer one number to manage rather than ongoing financial review.
The Trust Question
How to Keep a Cost-Plus Contract Honest
The reasonable concern with cost-plus is straightforward. If the builder is being paid actual costs plus a fee, what stops them from inflating hours or marking up materials beyond what was agreed? The concern is fair, and any builder who dismisses it is the wrong builder. Here is what real transparency looks like in a cost-plus arrangement.
- Itemized monthly statements with source invoices. The homeowner should receive a complete itemized statement every month, with copies of every subcontractor invoice and material receipt that drove the costs. No summary numbers without backup. This is the single most important transparency mechanism in any cost-plus contract.
- Builder fee defined in dollars or fixed percentage, in writing. The fee is set in the contract before work begins, not negotiated as costs accumulate. Whether it's a flat fee per phase, a fixed percentage of actual cost, or a hybrid, the structure is written down and doesn't move during the project.
- Written change orders for any scope additions. If hidden conditions or design changes add scope, the additional work is documented with cost and schedule impact before the work begins. No verbal change agreements absorbed into the monthly statement.
- Right to audit on request. The homeowner has the contractual right to review any line item, request additional documentation, or bring in a third-party reviewer to verify costs. A builder who resists this term is signaling that the open-book model isn't actually open.
- Unused contingency returns to the homeowner. Contingency funds belong to the project, not to the builder. Any contingency not spent at project close is returned to the homeowner. Builders who treat contingency as guaranteed revenue are not running a real cost-plus model.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common Questions About Remodel Costs and Contracts
Why does a luxury remodel cost more per square foot than new construction?
Luxury remodels require selective demolition, structural modifications, temporary protection of existing areas, more engineering, and significantly more project management than new builds. Builders must constantly adapt to existing conditions while preserving portions of the home that remain in place. The labor and expertise required is greater than building new from a clean slate.
What is a cost-plus contract for a home remodel?
A cost-plus contract is an arrangement in which the homeowner pays actual costs of labor, materials, and subcontractors plus an agreed-upon builder fee or percentage. Also called open-book contracting. It's common in luxury remodeling because it accommodates unknowns while keeping the homeowner fully informed about where their money is going.
Is a fixed-price or cost-plus contract better for a luxury remodel?
For most luxury remodels with significant unknowns or evolving design, cost-plus serves the homeowner better. Fixed-price bids on remodels typically include a large risk premium that the homeowner pays whether or not the unknowns materialize. Cost-plus allows the homeowner to pay actual costs and capture savings when conditions are better than expected.
How do I prevent a builder from inflating costs on a cost-plus contract?
Itemized monthly statements with source invoices. Builder fee defined upfront in dollars or fixed percentage. Written change orders for any scope additions. Right to audit on request. Unused contingency returns to the homeowner. Builders who resist these terms are signaling the model won't work in the homeowner's interest.
How much does a luxury remodel cost per square foot in the Texas Hill Country?
Luxury remodel costs typically range from $400 to $800 per square foot, depending on finish level, structural work, and integration complexity. Whole-home ultra-luxury can exceed $1,000. New custom construction at comparable finish levels typically runs $350 to $650. The remodel premium reflects additional labor, engineering, and risk in working with an existing structure.
When You're Ready
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If you're working through the cost and contract questions for a Hill Country remodel, we're glad to walk the property and talk through realistic ranges. Open book from the first conversation.
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