
Kitchen Remodeling Kennett Square PA
Kennett Square has the most architecturally varied housing stock we work in. Drive five blocks from State Street and the housing changes from 1880s borough Victorian to 1750s stone farmhouse to 2008 subdivision colonial — sometimes within the same neighborhood. We’ve been remodeling kitchens across Kennett Borough, Kennett Township, and East Marlborough since 1989. The remodel approach is genuinely different for each housing type.
Want full kitchen remodeling info? See our Kitchen Remodeling overview →
Remodeling Your Kennett Square Kitchen — What to Expect
Since 1989, Fedor has rebuilt kitchens across Kennett Borough, Kennett Township, and East Marlborough — opening up borough Victorians, working historic-respectfully in pre-1900 stone farmhouses, and running the cabinet-replacement playbook in the subdivisions, all on a fixed-price contract with a single point of contact who answers your calls.
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2026 Southeastern PA Kitchen Cost Guide
A complete 2026 kitchen cost reference for Chester County, Delaware County, and the Main Line — every tier, from a $30K refresh to a $150K+ custom build.
From a 1750 Kennett farmhouse to a 2008 colonial — same town, different scope
Four distinct project profiles based on where in greater Kennett Square you are:
Kennett Borough Victorians and twins (1880–1920). State Street and the surrounding blocks. Brick, stucco, or wood-frame construction. Original kitchens are small back-of-house rooms, often with original pine flooring. Common scope:
- Open the wall to the dining room or what used to be the back porch (often a candidate for being absorbed into the kitchen)
- Replace original electrical service — most are still on 1960s panels
- Replace galvanized supply lines
- Restore plaster walls where they’re being preserved
- Inset or Shaker cabinetry in painted finish — the right finish call for these homes
Pre-1900 stone farmhouses (scattered through Kennett Township and East Marlborough on larger lots). Working in 18-inch fieldstone walls, hand-cut joinery, and original beam ceilings. Higher-tier projects with historic-respectful detailing — closer to Chadds Ford scope than borough Kennett.
1950s–1970s rural ranches and split-levels. Standard post-WWII pattern — wall-removal kitchen openings, modern cabinetry, sound infrastructure.
Post-2000 subdivisions along Routes 1 and 82. Builder-grade cabinet-replacement pattern same as in Exton or Malvern.
Kennett Square kitchen costs across varied housing stock
| Tier | Range | Typical Kennett Square project |
|---|---|---|
| Cosmetic Refresh | $30,000 – $45,000 | Post-2000 subdivision kitchen with sound bones |
| Pull-and-Replace | $40,000 – $75,000+ | Standard subdivision or post-WWII scope |
| Full Remodel | $65,000 – $120,000+ | Borough Victorian with infrastructure work |
| Custom Kitchen Build | $100,000 – $150,000+ | Stone farmhouse or full borough rebuild |
Borough and stone farmhouse projects often land in higher tiers than subdivision projects due to infrastructure and historic-respectful work. Subdivision projects hit the published ranges cleanly. Appliances are not included in these ranges unless noted in your project scope.
Our Design-Build Process
Most remodels go sideways for the same reason: design and construction don’t talk to each other. The designer draws something the builder can’t actually build for the price quoted, and you’re stuck in the middle.
We use a design-build model — the team that designs your Kennett Square kitchen is the team that builds it. Every line on the drawing has been priced. Every spec has been confirmed. Because Kennett’s housing runs from 1750 stone farmhouse to 2008 subdivision, we scope each house on its own terms — in a borough Victorian or a fieldstone farmhouse we’ve already solved the problems other remodelers won’t find until they open a plaster wall (the 1960s panel, the galvanized supply, the hand-framing that isn’t where the drawings assume); in a subdivision the work is finishes-driven and the number is tight. We sequence the work around Kennett Borough’s inspection schedule so the project doesn’t stall waiting on the township.
The 8 steps, start to finish
- First Call — a 10–15 minute conversation to understand what you’re planning and whether it makes sense to meet.
- In-Home Consultation — we walk your space, listen, and learn what matters most in the finished result.
- Design Call + Initial Estimate — an initial design concept and a real budget range, walked through together.
- Selections & Design Refinement — cabinetry, countertops, tile, fixtures, hardware, lighting, paint — every choice made before we build.
- Fixed-Price Proposal + Contract — every line priced and confirmed buildable. The number is real before you sign.
- Pre-Construction — permits, ordering, scheduling, and material staging so the job runs without gaps.
- Construction — carpenter-led crews, a single point of contact, weekly updates, no surprise upcharges.
- Final Walkthrough + Warranty — we close out every detail and back the work with a 1-year workmanship warranty.
Kennett Square Borough + Kennett Township permitting
We handle permitting for your project through Kennett Borough. Permit fees tend to run 1–2% of contract value and are included transparently on every Fedor proposal.
Where we source for Kennett Square kitchens
- Plumbing fixtures: Ferguson (Delaware) — Wilmington, DE showrooms also available; or Ferguson (King of Prussia)
- Tile and stone: The Tile Shop (Wilmington, DE)
- Flooring: Avalon Flooring (Wilmington, DE)
- Appliances: Gerhard’s Appliances (Malvern)
Recent Work
Recent Kennett Square Projects
What Kennett Square Homeowners Say About Working With Us
★★★★★ 4.8 / 5
186+ verified reviews across Google and Angi
Reading reviews is the single best way to know what working with a contractor is actually like. We’d rather you read what our Chester County clients say in their own words than read marketing copy from us.
Everything from first meeting to final completion was a pleasure to work with the sales, craftsmen and ownership of Fedor. Everyone involved was committed to a quality design and installation of our new kitchen. We highly recommend Fedor Fabrication for kitchen and bath renovation. We are very pleased with our new kitchen.
Marianne M. — verified Google review
by far the best around ! kitchen and bathrooms in 2 homes that are outstanding …no need to interview other contractors !
Jack K. — verified Google review
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a kitchen remodel cost in Kennett Square?
Kennett Square kitchen remodels run $30,000 to $150,000+, and the tier depends heavily on the house. A post-2000 subdivision cosmetic refresh runs $30K–$45K; a standard subdivision or post-WWII pull-and-replace runs $40K–$75K+; a borough Victorian full remodel with electrical service replacement and replumb runs $65K–$120K+; a pre-1900 stone farmhouse or full borough rebuild runs $100K–$150K+. Borough and farmhouse projects skew higher because of infrastructure and historic-respectful work. Appliances aren’t included unless noted in scope. The free cost guide above breaks every tier down.
How long does a Kennett Square kitchen remodel take?
Most Kennett Square kitchen remodels run 6–8 weeks of active construction once cabinetry and materials are on site. The full timeline from first call to final walkthrough is typically 3–5 months — a post-2000 subdivision kitchen is on the shorter end, while a borough Victorian or stone farmhouse adds steps (electrical service replacement, replumb, plaster restoration, Kennett Borough inspections between phases). We give you a hard date at proposal and update it weekly in the JobTread portal so you always know where the project stands.
What’s included in your fixed-price quote?
Everything we can see at signing: design, all materials (cabinetry, countertops, tile, fixtures, hardware), all labor and trade partners (electrical through S.B. Electric, plumbing through AA to Z, tile, finish carpentry), permits, inspections, dumpster, project management, and the final walkthrough. On a borough Victorian, the known old-house work — panel replacement, galvanized-to-copper replumb, plaster restoration — is priced in, not left as an allowance that balloons later. Appliances are included only if noted in your scope. The only thing that changes the number is scope you add after signing, documented and approved by you in writing first.
What happens when you open a wall in an 1880s Kennett Borough home?
In an 1880–1920 Kennett Borough Victorian or a pre-1900 stone farmhouse we almost always find something behind the plaster — a 1960s panel still in service, galvanized supply lines, original hand-framing that isn’t where drawings assume, or 18-inch fieldstone where a clean opening was hoped for. None of it surprises us; it’s why these projects take real expertise to run. We price what we can see directly on the proposal and flag what we can’t. If hidden conditions surface at demo, we document, photograph, price, and get your written approval before proceeding. No silent change orders.
Can I keep my existing kitchen layout?
It depends on the house. In a post-2000 Kennett subdivision the layout usually works and a pull-and-replace is the right call. In an 1880s borough Victorian the original kitchen is a small back-of-house room — opening the wall to the dining room or absorbing the old back porch is usually worth it and the single most common change we make there. We give you an honest read on your specific kitchen; keeping a cramped Victorian layout to save money is the change homeowners regret most within a year.
What if I want to remove a wall or add an island?
Common on Kennett projects, especially borough Victorians and post-WWII ranches where opening to the dining room transforms how the house lives. If the wall is load-bearing — or a fieldstone wall in a stone farmhouse — we bring in Rise Engineering for a stamped beam design, scoped and priced on the proposal, not improvised mid-project. An island is one of the most-requested Kennett features; we account for the cabinet, electrical, and any plumbing runs it needs from the start.
What cabinetry and materials do you typically install in Kennett Square kitchens?
It tracks the house: inset or Shaker cabinetry in painted finish is the right call for borough Victorians and stone farmhouses; subdivision kitchens lean semi-custom to the ceiling. We spec cabinetry through Shiloh and Great Northern, with tile, stone, and flooring sourced through The Tile Shop and Avalon Flooring (Wilmington, DE), plumbing fixtures through Ferguson, and appliances through Gerhard’s in Malvern. We don’t take supplier kickbacks — the recommendation is based on what holds up in a working kitchen, not on our margin.
My borough home is in a historic district. Will I have restrictions?
Likely some, on anything visible from the street — windows, exterior doors, and facade changes in the Kennett Borough historic district can require review. Interior kitchen work is rarely restricted. We’ve worked the borough since 1989 and handle the historic review where it applies, building it into the schedule so it doesn’t surprise you mid-project. Tell us your address and we’ll tell you what, if anything, applies to your specific home.
Can you preserve original wood floors and trim?
Yes — preservation work is standard scope on borough Victorian and stone farmhouse projects. Original pine flooring, plaster walls, and period trim are part of what makes these Kennett homes worth keeping; we restore rather than replace wherever it’s structurally sound, and we tell you up front which approach your specific house calls for and what it costs.
What does Kennett Square Borough permitting cost for a kitchen project?
Permit fees through Kennett Borough typically run 1–2% of contract value. On a $90,000 borough Victorian kitchen, expect roughly $900–$1,800. We pull every required permit, schedule the inspections around the production schedule, and show the permit cost as a transparent line item on the proposal — it’s never buried in markup or sprung on you mid-project.
Do I need to hire my own designer?
No separate designer needed — we’re design-build, so the team that designs your Kennett Square kitchen is the team that builds it; nothing gets drawn that we can’t build for the price quoted (and we collaborate cleanly if you already have an architect).
How will you communicate with me during construction?
During construction you get one point of contact who answers calls and texts, weekly progress updates, and a heads-up before anything becomes a problem, plus the live JobTread portal showing schedule, budget, and invoices. On a 100-year-old borough house, that communication is the difference between a manageable project and a stressful one.
Can I see Kennett Square kitchen projects you’ve completed?
Yes — see our Kennett Square curved maple island kitchen remodel and the full project portfolio.
Do you also remodel bathrooms in Kennett Square?
Yes — Kennett Square bathroom remodeling — same fixed-price model, same Kennett Borough permitting, same in-house crews.
Schedule a Free Consultation
Ready to Start Planning Your Kennett Square Kitchen Remodel?
A free 15-minute discovery call with Alex is the fastest way to get real cost ranges for your Kennett Square kitchen and a straight answer about whether we’re the right fit.
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Or call us: 610-431-7150 · PA HIC #PA202519

