Most people walk into a home renovation thinking itâs about picking the right tile or finding a good contractor. After a decade in this business, I can tell you thatâs only about twenty percent of the story. The real challengeâthe thing that separates a project that finishes on time and on budget from one that drags on for monthsâis understanding how your house actually works. Not the way you want it to look, but the way it breathes, settles, and ages.
Weâve seen it all at IBA Builders, working across Los Angeles, CA. The 1920s bungalow in Santa Monica that looks charming but has zero insulation. The mid-century modern in the hills with electrical that hasnât been touched since 1965. The flip that looked great in photos but had a foundation that was basically holding hands. If youâre planning a renovation in this area, there are seven things you need to get right before you ever swing a hammer.
Key Takeaways:
The biggest mistake we see is homeowners falling in love with a Pinterest board before they understand whatâs behind their walls. In Santa Monica, many homes were built before modern building codes existed. That means youâre often dealing with knob-and-tube wiring, galvanized plumbing thatâs rusting from the inside out, or foundation work that was never engineered to handle a second story.
We had a client last year who wanted a simple kitchen remodel. New cabinets, quartz countertops, the works. When we opened the wall, we found that the original drain pipe was cast iron and had corroded so badly you could poke a finger through it. Thatâs not a design problem. Thatâs a structural and safety problem that has to be fixed first.
The hard truth is that you should budget for at least fifteen to twenty percent of your total project cost to go toward unseen issues. If you donât use it, great. If you do, you wonât be scrambling for a loan halfway through.
If youâre coming from outside the area, the permit process in Los Angeles County can feel like a full-time job. Santa Monica in particular has its own building and safety department with standards that go beyond the state code. This isnât a place where you can pull a quick permit and start demo the next week.
Weâve worked on projects where the permit process alone took three months. Thatâs not a complaintâitâs a reality. The city is strict about seismic retrofitting, energy efficiency, and historical preservation, especially in older neighborhoods near the pier or along Ocean Park Boulevard.
Some homeowners try to skip this step to save time. Donât. An unpermitted renovation can kill a home sale later, and in the event of an earthquake or fire, your insurance may not cover the damage if the work wasnât permitted. The cost of doing it right the first time is always lower than the cost of fixing it later.
Southern California has some of the most varied soil conditions in the country. You can have sandy soil near the coast, clay-heavy soil inland, and expansive soil that swells when it rains and shrinks when it dries. That movement matters.
Weâve done renovations in the Palisades where the foundation was fine, and weâve worked on homes in the flats of Santa Monica where the slab had cracked because the soil shifted. If youâre adding a second story or even a significant addition, you need a geotechnical report. Itâs not cheapâusually a few thousand dollarsâbut it tells you exactly what youâre dealing with.
One client wanted to add a bathroom in the basement. Sounded simple. The soil report showed that the water table was only four feet below the slab. We had to install a perimeter drainage system and a sump pump before we could even think about plumbing. Thatâs the kind of thing you canât see from a blueprint.
Thereâs a natural rhythm to a renovation, and itâs not the order most people assume. You donât pick paint colors first. You donât order custom cabinets before you know your floor plan is final. The sequence we follow at IBA Builders looks something like this:
Skipping steps or doing them out of order creates problems. Weâve seen people install hardwood floors before the drywall was hung, and then the dust from sanding ruined the finish. Weâve seen cabinets installed before the electrical was roughed in, requiring the electrician to cut holes in brand-new cabinetry.
It sounds basic, but when youâre living in the house during a renovationâwhich many of our clients doâthe temptation to speed things up is real. Resist it.
Trends come and go. Weâve installed enough subway tile to tile a tunnel, and weâve seen enough gray LVP flooring to last a lifetime. What matters is durability and suitability for your specific environment.
In a coastal climate like Santa Monica, salt air and humidity affect materials differently. Weâve seen hardwood floors warp in homes just a few blocks from the beach. Weâve seen exterior paint peel within two years because the wrong primer was used. Stainless steel fixtures that arenât marine-grade can pit and rust.
We steer clients toward materials that perform well in this environment. Porcelain tile instead of natural stone in bathrooms. Aluminum or fiberglass windows instead of wood. Exterior paints with UV stabilizers. Itâs not the sexiest advice, but itâs the kind that keeps your renovation looking good for fifteen years instead of five.
Weâre not going to pretend that every contractor is honest and reliable, because thatâs not true. But the relationship works best when itâs treated as a partnership, not a transaction.
That means being transparent about your budget from day one. If you tell us you have $100,000 to spend, we can tell you whatâs realistic. If you tell us you want a full gut renovation for $50,000, weâre going to have a hard conversation early. It also means being available for decisions. The fastest way to delay a project is to take a week to pick a light fixture.
Weâve had clients who wanted to be involved in every decision, and thatâs fine. Weâve had clients who said âjust make it look good,â and thatâs fine too. What doesnât work is changing your mind after materials are ordered or work is in progress. Change orders are expensive for everyone.
Thereâs a time and place for DIY. Painting a bedroom or installing a backsplash is something a reasonably handy person can handle. But there are things you should never DIY in a renovation.
Structural work, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC should always be handled by licensed professionals. Weâve seen too many homeowners try to save money by doing their own electrical work, only to fail inspection or create a fire hazard. In Los Angeles, CA, the building inspectors are thorough. If you DIY something thatâs supposed to be permitted, theyâll catch it.
The cost of hiring a professional isnât just about the work itself. Itâs about the liability, the insurance, and the warranty. If something goes wrong with a DIY job, youâre on the hook for everything. If a licensed contractor does it, thereâs recourse.
We had a homeowner who insisted on doing their own plumbing rough-in to save $3,000. It took them three weekends, and when the inspector came, they failed it because the venting wasnât to code. The homeowner had to pay us to tear it out and redo it. Total cost: $5,500. The lesson is that sometimes paying for expertise upfront is the cheapest option in the long run.
Every renovation involves trade-offs. You can have it fast, cheap, or high-qualityâpick two. Thatâs not a clichĂ©; itâs the reality of construction.
If you need the project done in six weeks, youâre going to pay a premium for materials and labor. If you want the highest-end finishes, youâre going to wait for them to be fabricated and shipped. If you want to save money, you might need to be flexible on timeline or material choices.
Weâve had clients who wanted Italian marble countertops. Beautiful material, but it took eight weeks to arrive. They had to choose between waiting or picking something that was in stock. They waited, and the project finished three weeks late. They were fine with that trade-off. The point is to know what your priorities are before you start.
Another common trade-off is between open floor plans and storage. Everyone wants that big, airy great room, but nobody thinks about where the coats, shoes, and vacuum cleaner go. Weâve designed plenty of renovations that look stunning but have zero closet space. A few years in, the homeowners regret it. Think about how you actually live, not just how you want the photos to look.
Santa Monica has its own quirks. The city has strict regulations on demolition waste disposal, noise hours, and street parking for contractor vehicles. If youâre in a historic district, you may need approval from the Landmarks Commission before you can change windows or exterior paint colors.
Weâve worked on projects near the Third Street Promenade where parking was so tight that our crew had to park four blocks away and haul materials by hand. That adds labor time and cost. Itâs something a local contractor knows to plan for, but an out-of-town crew might not.
The climate also affects scheduling. We try to schedule exterior workâroofing, painting, foundation workâduring the dry months from May to October. Rain in Los Angeles is rare, but when it comes, it can delay exterior work for days because materials need to dry. Planning around that is part of the job.
Because things will go wrong. Itâs not a matter of if, but when. A shipment of tile arrives cracked. A subfloor is rotted. The city inspector interprets a code differently than expected. The key is how you handle it.
We always recommend building a contingency into your timeline as well as your budget. If the contractor says the project will take ten weeks, plan for twelve. If the budget is $150,000, have another $20,000 available if needed. That buffer is what keeps a renovation from becoming a nightmare.
We had a project where the custom windows were fabricated incorrectlyâthe manufacturer measured wrong. It took six weeks to get replacements. The homeowner was frustrated, but because we had built a two-week buffer into the schedule, we were able to absorb part of the delay without pushing the final deadline past their move-in date.
A successful home renovation isnât about avoiding problems. Itâs about being prepared for them. Itâs about knowing your house, your budget, and your priorities before you start. Itâs about working with people who have seen enough projects to know what can go wrong and how to fix it when it does.
If youâre in Los Angeles, CA, and thinking about a renovation, take the time to do the upfront work. Get the soil report. Pull the permits. Hire a contractor who knows the local codes and conditions. Itâs not the glamorous part of the process, but itâs the part that determines whether you end up with a home you love or a project you regret.
Weâve been doing this long enough to know that the best renovations are the ones where the homeowner understands the reality from day one. Thatâs what we aim for at IBA Builders. Not perfection, but honesty. And that honesty is what makes the finished product worth the wait.
The 30% rule is a widely used guideline in home renovation, suggesting that you should not spend more than 30% of your home's current market value on a single room or major project. This helps ensure your investment does not outpace the potential resale value of your property. For example, if your home is worth $500,000, you would cap a kitchen remodel at $150,000. Staying within this threshold protects you from overcapitalizing. For more detailed strategies on managing costs effectively, we recommend reading our internal article titled 'Home Renovation Tips For Staying On Budget And Avoiding Overspending' at Home Renovation Tips For Staying On Budget And Avoiding Overspending. At IBA Builders, we always advise clients to balance personal enjoyment with long-term financial sense.
The most common renovation mistakes include underestimating the budget, ignoring structural issues, and choosing style over function. Many homeowners also fail to plan for the unexpected, such as permit delays or hidden damage. A critical error is not rethinking existing space; for example, you can avoid costly additions by reconfiguring rooms. For expert guidance on this, read our article How To Make The Most Of A Home Remodel By Rethinking Existing Space. IBA Builders recommends always prioritizing a detailed contract and hiring licensed professionals to avoid costly rework.
When considering what adds the most value in a renovation, focusing on the kitchen and bathrooms consistently yields the highest return on investment. Upgrading countertops to quartz or granite, installing modern cabinetry, and updating fixtures can transform these spaces. Enhancing energy efficiency with new windows, insulation, or a high-efficiency HVAC system also significantly boosts property value. For a more strategic approach, rethinking how you use your existing square footage can be incredibly rewarding. We recommend reading our internal article titled How To Make The Most Of A Home Remodel By Rethinking Existing Space to explore creative ways to maximize your home's potential without costly additions. At IBA Builders, we emphasize that a well-planned layout and quality finishes are the true drivers of long-term value in any Los Angeles renovation.
The hardest room to renovate is typically the kitchen. This is due to the complex interplay of plumbing, electrical wiring, gas lines, and structural modifications required. A kitchen renovation demands precise coordination of these systems to ensure safety and functionality. For a full home renovation, understanding these challenges is critical. We recommend reviewing our internal article How To Plan A Full Home Renovation With Confidence to gain comprehensive insights into managing such a project. At IBA Builders, we emphasize that proper planning and professional assessment are essential to avoid costly delays and ensure the final result meets your expectations.
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