Budget Guide · All Rooms · 2026

What Can You Renovate for $30,000 in Australia in 2026?

What Can You Renovate for $30,000 in Australia in 2026?
March 20269 min readRoom-by-Room Budget Breakdown

Reviewed March 2026 by the RenovationCalculator.AU editorial team

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Sources used in this guide
HIA Kitchens & Bathrooms Report 2025 · hipages 2025 · RenovationCalculator.AU calculator engine · HIA Trades Cost Indices Q4 2025

Thirty thousand dollars is one of the most common renovation budgets in Australia. It is enough to make a real difference to a home, but not so much that you can afford to spread it thin across every room. The key is knowing where your money goes furthest and where it runs out faster than you expect.

$30,000
Total budget
1–2 rooms
Realistic scope (mid-range)
15–20%
Contingency you should hold back

The first rule: hold back 15–20% for contingency

On a $30,000 budget, your real spending power is $24,000–$25,500. The rest should sit in a contingency fund. Nearly every renovation uncovers something unexpected: rotten framing behind tiles, outdated wiring that needs replacing, plumbing that does not meet current code. If you commit the full $30,000 to quoted work and something goes wrong, you are either borrowing more or cutting scope mid-project. Neither is a good outcome.

Budget rule

Budget $24,000–$25,500 for quoted work. Keep $4,500–$6,000 in reserve. If the contingency is not needed, use it for finishing touches or save it. You will not regret having it available.

What $30,000 gets you: room by room

These estimates are based on national mid-range pricing. In Sydney and Brisbane, they will be tighter. In Adelaide, they stretch further. Use the calculator to adjust for your specific city.

Option 1: A mid-range kitchen renovation

A $30,000 budget covers a solid mid-range kitchen renovation in most Australian cities. In Adelaide or Perth, this buys a full 5–6 linear metre kitchen with semi-custom joinery, stone benchtop, mid-spec appliances and new splashback tiling. In Sydney, the same kitchen pushes toward $35,000–$38,000 at mid-range, so you would need to either reduce to 4 linear metres, choose a lower tier or top up the budget.

Realistic in Adelaide/Perth: Full mid-range kitchen (5–6LM).
Tight in Sydney/Brisbane: Budget-to-mid kitchen (4–5LM) or requires top-up.

Option 2: A mid-range bathroom + laundry

This is one of the strongest combinations for $30,000. A mid-range 6m² bathroom renovation runs $22,000–$28,000 depending on city, leaving $2,000–$8,000 for a budget laundry refresh or basic laundry renovation. In Adelaide, you can comfortably do both rooms to a solid standard. In Sydney, you will need to keep the laundry very lean.

Best value combination: Bathroom (mid) + laundry (budget). Upgrades two of the three wet areas in the home.

Option 3: New flooring throughout + a cosmetic refresh

If the kitchen and bathroom are functional but the home feels dated, $30,000 goes a long way on flooring and cosmetic upgrades. A 100m² hybrid or engineered timber floor costs $8,000–$14,000 installed. That leaves $10,000–$16,000 for painting, new tapware, updated lighting, fresh splashback tiles and minor fixtures that lift the overall feel of the home without touching structure or plumbing.

Best for: Homes that are structurally sound but cosmetically tired. Particularly effective before selling.

Option 4: A hardwood deck + outdoor area

A 40m² hardwood deck in a lower-cost city like Adelaide costs around $15,000–$18,000. Add basic landscaping, outdoor lighting and a simple pergola frame and you have a complete outdoor living area for around $25,000–$30,000. This is a strong value-add for families and for homes with underused outdoor space.

Best for: Queensland and South Australian homes where outdoor living is a genuine selling point.

Build your own renovation budget with the calculator

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What $30,000 does not stretch to

At $30,000, you generally cannot do a full kitchen and a full bathroom to a mid-range standard. A mid-range kitchen alone costs $24,000–$38,000 depending on city, and a mid-range bathroom adds $22,000–$32,000. Together, that is a $46,000–$70,000 project. If both rooms need work, you will need to either phase the project (one room now, one later) or reduce one room to budget tier.

You also cannot do a whole-home renovation at this budget. Thirty thousand dollars is enough for 1–2 rooms done well, or 3–4 rooms done at a budget level. Trying to do everything at once almost always results in a compromised finish across the board.

How to get the most out of $30,000

Pick one or two rooms and do them properly

The single biggest mistake homeowners make with a $30,000 budget is spreading it too thin. One well-executed mid-range kitchen is worth more to your daily life and your resale value than five half-finished cosmetic touch-ups.

Keep plumbing where it is

Relocating plumbing in a kitchen or bathroom can add $3,000–$8,000. If you can design around the existing plumbing layout, that money goes directly into better cabinetry, benchtops or appliances instead.

Choose your city multiplier battles

A $30,000 renovation in Adelaide delivers roughly the same scope as a $36,000 renovation in Brisbane, purely because of the regional cost multiplier. If you are in a higher-cost city, you need to either accept a smaller scope or be strategic about where you compromise.

Get three quotes, not one

The gap between the cheapest and most expensive builder quote on a $30,000 project is typically $6,000–$12,000. Three quotes give you a real market read and the leverage to negotiate.

See what your $30,000 could cover

Use the calculator to build a multi-room estimate adjusted for your city, finish level and project size.

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Frequently asked questions

Almost always better to focus on one or two rooms. A properly finished mid-range kitchen adds more value and daily utility than five rooms with budget-level updates. The exception is if you are preparing to sell and the home needs cosmetic freshening across the board, in which case, painting, flooring and fixtures can be spread more widely.
Only at budget tier in a lower-cost city. A budget kitchen (3–4LM) plus a budget bathroom (small, no layout changes) in Adelaide could come in around $28,000–$32,000. In Sydney or Brisbane, the same combination would typically cost $38,000–$48,000. If both rooms need work, consider phasing: do one now, one in 6–12 months.
Kitchen and bathroom renovations consistently return the most at resale. If you can only pick one, a mid-range kitchen renovation is the strongest single investment. If the kitchen is already acceptable, a bathroom renovation or whole-home flooring replacement are both strong alternatives.
Hold back 15–20%, which is $4,500–$6,000. This covers unexpected issues that come up during demolition: outdated wiring, water damage, non-compliant plumbing. If you do not need it, put it toward finishing touches. If you do need it, you will be very glad it was there.
Sources: HIA Kitchens & Bathrooms Report 2025, hipages 2025, RenovationCalculator.AU calculator engine, HIA Trades Cost Indices Q4 2025. All figures are planning estimates and include GST. City multipliers: SYD 1.28×, MEL 1.18×, BNE 1.32×, PER 1.18×, ADL 1.08×. Always obtain at least 3 written quotes.
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