Skip to content
← Journal
Cost & Timeline · ·6 min read

How long does a kitchen remodel take in Denver?

A realistic breakdown of kitchen remodel timelines in Denver — by scope, with the phases that always take longer than people expect.

The honest answer most homeowners hear is “it depends.” Which is true and useless. Here is a more useful answer, drawn from decades of work in the Denver trades.

Short version

Cosmetic refresh (cabinets, counters, paint, no layout change): 5–7 weeks

Layout change, no walls moved (new island, relocated appliances, replumbed sink): 8–11 weeks

Wall removal and structural work (open the kitchen to the dining or living room): 12–16 weeks

Whole-floor remodel that includes the kitchen (typically with electrical and HVAC modernization): 16–22 weeks

These are realistic, on-the-job timelines for Denver, including the parts most online articles skip — permitting, custom cabinet lead times, and the inspection phase at the end.

What’s actually happening week by week

Weeks 1–2: design lock + permits

You finalize cabinetry, counters, tile, fixtures, and appliances. We submit permits. In the City and County of Denver, residential permits are typically issued in 2–4 weeks. If you live in a historic district (Wash Park, parts of Capitol Hill, parts of Highlands), add another 1–2 weeks for the design review process.

Weeks 3–10: cabinetry on order, then build

Custom cabinetry is the long-lead item that controls the entire project. Henrybuilt, Bulthaup, Snaidero, and most premium Italian lines run 8–12 weeks. Even mid-range custom shops in Colorado run 6–10 weeks. We schedule everything backwards from the day cabinets arrive on site.

While cabinets are in production, we demo, frame, run rough mechanical-electrical-plumbing, drywall, and prime — typically 4–6 weeks of work depending on whether walls are moving.

Weeks 11–14: install

Cabinets land. Stone is templated three days after cabinets are set, then fabricated and installed about a week later. Tile, appliances, and fixtures install in parallel over the next two weeks.

Weeks 15–16: punch list and inspections

Final electrical and plumbing inspections, walkthrough with you, fixes from the punch list. We do not call the project complete until you do.

What slows things down

  • Indecision on selections. This is the single biggest delay. We require all selections locked before demo starts.
  • Custom range hoods, imported fixtures, and discontinued tile. Anything with a 12+ week lead time can become the path. We flag these on day one.
  • Surprise structural conditions. 1920s Wash Park bungalows and 1940s Park Hill homes occasionally surprise us. We carry a contingency for this and do not pass surprises through to you in the price.
  • Pulling permits in Cherry Hills Village. It is its own municipality, and reviews can take 4–6 weeks.

What does not slow things down (anymore)

  • Material shortages: largely normalized since 2023.
  • Subcontractor availability: we have a tight bench of trades we work with weekly. We do not chase subs.
  • Inspections: Denver schedules within 24–48 hours.

How to compress a timeline

If you need to move fast, pre-order long-lead items during design — cabinets and stone especially. We will spec everything before contract signing so production runs in parallel with permitting.

Want a fixed timeline for your specific project? Schedule a 20-minute call and we will give you a real number, not a range.

The Journal, monthly

One email a month.
Worth opening.

A short note when we publish a new cost guide, finish a project worth showing, or learn something on a job site we'd want to know if the roles were reversed. No sales emails.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click. We send 1 email a month, max.

Start Your Project

Have a project in mind?

We respond to every inquiry within one business hour.