Kitchen Remodeling Broomall PA

Broomall sits at the southwestern edge of the Main Line, with Marple Township covering most of the residential footprint. The housing mix runs heavy on 1950s and 1960s post-war split-levels and ranches on larger lots, with a smaller share of mid-century traditionals and an increasing share of post-2010 contemporary rebuilds on tear-down lots. We’ve been doing kitchen work in Marple Township since 1989. Broomall clients tend to be remodel-savvy — they’ve done it before, they know what they want, and they’re often specifying at higher finish levels than the regional median.

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Remodeling Your Broomall Kitchen — What to Expect

Since 1989, Fedor has rebuilt kitchens across Broomall and Marple Township — taking cabinetry to the ceiling, replacing builder-grade everything with the high-finish materials these clients expect, and doing it 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.

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See what every kitchen tier actually costs in our service area — with line-item breakdowns from completed Fedor projects in West Chester, Exton, Wayne, and Malvern.

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What a Broomall kitchen remodel actually looks like

Three project profiles based on house type:

1950s and 1960s post-war split-levels and ranches. The largest share of Broomall housing. Typical builders include post-war builders and later infill. Common scope:

  • Cabinetry to the ceiling — either extending the existing cabinets up or removing the soffit and extending to the ceiling. Replacing the original builder-grade cabinet boxes is part of nearly every tract-home kitchen we run.
  • Quartz countertops in calmer patterns (the busy granite of the 2000s spec era is gone)
  • Modern lighting — under-cabinet LED, dedicated pendants, dimmer-controlled zones
  • Higher-spec appliances — Broomall clients often go above mid-range, with paneled refrigeration and pro-grade ranges
  • Layout typically stays — these kitchens are usually large enough that wall removal isn’t needed
  • Sound infrastructure — modern systems

Mid-century traditionals (1950s–1970s). Smaller share, often on the older established lots. Wall-removal kitchen openings are common — these kitchens were built closed-off from the rest of the house. Standard post-WWII pattern with high-finish materials.

Post-2010 contemporary rebuilds. Newer construction, often only 8–12 years old when clients call us. Refresh-tier scope with current materials — replacing the original quartz with new spec, swapping panel-front fixtures for higher-spec integrated units.

What’s distinctive about Broomall: clients tend to specify above the regional median. Higher-tier kitchens are common; integrated appliances, paneled refrigeration, and custom millwork are the default rather than the upgrade.

Cost ranges for Broomall kitchens

TierRangeTypical Broomall project
Cosmetic Refresh$30,000 – $45,000Refresh on a post-2010 contemporary kitchen
Pull-and-Replace$40,000 – $75,000+Lighter-scope subdivision projects keeping appliances and lighting
Full Remodel$65,000 – $120,000+Standard subdivision scope — most projects land here
Custom Kitchen Build$100,000 – $150,000+Down-to-studs custom on subdivision or contemporary rebuild

Broomall projects tend to specify above the regional median because of finish-level expectations. Material selection (especially custom cabinetry and paneled appliances) is the biggest budget lever. 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 Broomall kitchen is the team that builds it. Every line on the drawing has been priced. Every spec has been confirmed. By the time we hand you a contract, the number is real, the timeline is real, and the high-spec selections that drive Broomall budgets — paneled refrigeration, custom millwork, integrated appliances — have all been confirmed and priced, not left as allowances that drift upward. We sequence the work around Marple Township’s inspection schedule so the project doesn’t stall waiting on the township, and we collaborate cleanly with your interior designer if you already have one.

The 8 steps, start to finish

  1. First Call — a 10–15 minute conversation to understand what you’re planning and whether it makes sense to meet.
  2. In-Home Consultation — we walk your space, listen, and learn what matters most in the finished result.
  3. Design Call + Initial Estimate — an initial design concept and a real budget range, walked through together.
  4. Selections & Design Refinement — cabinetry, countertops, tile, fixtures, hardware, lighting, paint — every choice made before we build.
  5. Fixed-Price Proposal + Contract — every line priced and confirmed buildable. The number is real before you sign.
  6. Pre-Construction — permits, ordering, scheduling, and material staging so the job runs without gaps.
  7. Construction — carpenter-led crews, a single point of contact, weekly updates, no surprise upcharges.
  8. Final Walkthrough + Warranty — we close out every detail and back the work with a 1-year workmanship warranty.

Marple Township permitting for Broomall kitchen work

We handle permitting for your project through Marple Township. Permit fees tend to run 1–2% of contract value and are included transparently on every Fedor proposal.

Suppliers we use for Broomall projects

Recent Work

Recent Broomall Projects

Lantern Pendants Kitchen Remodel

Lantern Pendants Kitchen

Cabinetry to the ceiling with lantern pendant lighting.

Pebble Mosaic Bathroom Remodel

Pebble Mosaic Bathroom

A bathroom remodel finished with pebble mosaic tile.

What Broomall 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 Main Line 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 Broomall?

Broomall kitchen remodels run $30,000 to $150,000+, and most land in the Full Remodel tier. A lighter pull-and-replace keeping appliances and lighting runs $40K–$75K; a standard subdivision full remodel runs $65K–$120K+; a down-to-studs custom build on a subdivision or contemporary rebuild runs $100K–$150K+ and often beyond. Broomall skews high because clients here specify above the regional median — paneled refrigeration, custom millwork, integrated appliances. Appliances aren’t included unless noted in scope. The free cost guide above breaks every tier down.

How long does a Broomall subdivision kitchen remodel take?

Most Broomall 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. Subdivision homes have sound infrastructure so there’s no old-house surprise work, but high-spec custom cabinetry and paneled appliances carry longer lead times — that’s usually the schedule driver, not construction. 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 Broomall subdivision home there’s far less hidden old-house risk than on a older Broomall home — the value of fixed price here is locking the high-spec selections so the number doesn’t drift as you choose finishes. 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 a 1950s or 1960s split-level Broomall home?

Far fewer surprises than in a pre-1940 older Broomall home — 1990s and 2000s subdivision construction is modern, code-built, with sound wiring and plumbing. The main thing we confirm before opening a wall in these homes is whether it’s load-bearing, because open-concept-era floor plans often used engineered framing that needs a stamped beam design when you remove a wall. We bring in Rise Engineering when a load path is involved, scoped and priced on the proposal. Anything we can’t fully see, we flag — but on these homes it’s the exception, not the rule.

Can I keep my existing kitchen layout?

Usually yes, on a subdivision home — most 1990s+ Broomall kitchens are large enough that the layout works and the project is really about taking cabinetry to the ceiling and lifting the finish level, which is a pull-and-replace. Mid-century traditionals are the exception: those were built closed-off and almost always benefit from a wall removal. We give you an honest read on your specific kitchen; we won’t push a layout change you don’t need just to grow the project.

What if I want to remove a wall or add an island?

Common on mid-century traditionals, less so on subdivision homes that already have open plans. If the wall is load-bearing — frequently the case in open-concept-era framing — we bring in Rise Engineering for a stamped beam design, scoped and priced on the proposal, not improvised mid-project. A large island with seating, second sink, or beverage zone is one of the most-requested Broomall 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 Broomall kitchens?

Broomall clients lean toward semi-custom and custom cabinetry to the ceiling, often with paneled appliances and integrated millwork. We spec cabinetry through Shiloh and Great Northern, tile and stone through Devon Tile or The Tile Shop in King of Prussia, plumbing fixtures through Ferguson, and appliances through Gerhard’s in Ardmore. We don’t take supplier kickbacks — the recommendation is based on what holds up in a working kitchen, not on our margin.

Do you work with my architect or interior designer?

Yes — many Broomall clients already have a design relationship. We function as the build half of a design-build collaboration: if you have drawings, we review them, tell you what works and what won’t build for the price assumed, then build to spec. If you don’t, our in-house design-build covers it end to end.

What appliance brands do you work with?

We work across the full price spectrum. On the high end, paneled Sub-Zero refrigeration, Wolf or La Cornue ranges, and Miele integrated dishwashers come up regularly on Broomall projects. We also work with step-down lines like GE Monogram, GE Café, Bosch, and KitchenAid when clients want the look without the top-tier price tag. Appliance lead times are usually the longest item on a Broomall schedule, so we lock the package early.

What does Marple Township permitting cost for a kitchen project?

Permit fees through Marple Township typically run 1–2% of contract value. On a $110,000 subdivision kitchen, expect roughly $1,100–$2,200. 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 Broomall 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 a designer, which many Broomall clients do).

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.

Can I see Broomall kitchen projects you’ve completed?

Yes — see our Lantern Pendants Kitchen Remodel and the full project portfolio.

Do you also remodel bathrooms in Broomall?

Yes — Broomall bathroom remodeling — same fixed-price model, same Marple Township permitting, same in-house crews.