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Renovation Auckland 2026: Costs, Consents & Trends

Renovation Auckland 2026: Real Costs, Consent Rules, Trends and What to Know Before You Start

Quick answer: A standard renovation in Auckland costs $2,500–$4,500 per square metre in 2026, with mid-range kitchens averaging $28,000–$35,000 and bathrooms $25,000–$35,000. Most structural, plumbing, or electrical changes require building consent through Auckland Council — allow 4–8 weeks for processing before work can begin.

If you’re reading this, you’re probably staring at a kitchen that hasn’t been touched since the early 2000s, a bathroom with cracked tiles and questionable grouting, or a home that just doesn’t work for how your family lives now. You’re not alone. Auckland homeowners are spending more on renovations in 2026 than any other year on record, and the reasons go beyond aesthetics — it’s about comfort, energy bills, and making a home that actually functions.

We’ve been renovating Auckland homes since 2017 from our showroom at 16B Link Drive, Wairau Valley. In that time, we’ve watched material costs climb, consent rules tighten, and design trends shift from the farmhouse look to matte black everything to (now) warm minimalism. What hasn’t changed is the number one question every homeowner asks first.

How much is this going to cost me?

That’s where this guide starts. We’ll give you actual numbers — not vague ranges pulled from national averages that don’t reflect Auckland reality. Then we’ll walk through consents, the trends that are actually worth your money, how to future-proof while you’ve got the walls open, and what’s different if you’re renovating an apartment. Everything here is based on 2026 pricing from completed Auckland projects.


How Much Does a Renovation Cost in Auckland in 2026?

Let’s get straight to the numbers. Auckland renovation costs run 10–20% higher than the national average due to elevated labour rates, stricter council requirements, and the sheer demand for qualified tradies across the city. A builder in Grey Lynn charges more per hour than one in Hamilton — and the materials cost the same regardless of where you are, so there’s no escaping the Auckland premium.

Auckland Renovation Cost Breakdown by Project Type

These figures reflect 2026 pricing from our completed projects and are consistent with what we publish on our FAQ page. They include design, labour, materials, and project management.

Renovation Type Budget / Refresh Mid-Range Luxury / Custom
浴室翻新 $9,000–$16,000 $25,000–$35,000 $45,000+
Kitchen renovation $15,000–$25,000 $28,000–$35,000 $90,000–$138,000+
Full home renovation $80,000–$160,000 $200,000+
House extension (ground floor) From $80,000 $150,000+
Second storey addition From $150,000 $250,000+
Garage conversion From $40,000 $80,000+
Per square metre (standard) $2,500–$4,500/m² $5,500+/m²

For specific estimates tailored to your project, try our renovation cost calculator tools — we have individual calculators for bathrooms, kitchens, house extensions, garage conversions, and more.

💡 Quick tip: Labour accounts for 40–50% of most Auckland renovation budgets. Rates currently sit around $90–$150 per hour depending on the trade. When comparing quotes, make sure you’re comparing like for like — some builders quote labour only, others include project management and materials.

Why Auckland Renovations Cost More Than the Rest of NZ

The Auckland premium is real, and it isn’t going away. Skilled tradies in Auckland command $90–$150/hour compared to $70–$120/hour in regions like Waikato or Canterbury. Add in higher material transport costs, more complex council requirements, and the simple fact that demand for good renovation companies outstrips supply — and you’re looking at 10–20% more than national averages for an equivalent job.

We had a client in Remuera last year who got a quote from a Hamilton-based company that came in $22,000 cheaper for a bathroom renovation. Sounds great on paper. But the Hamilton team couldn’t guarantee Auckland Council compliance, didn’t have established relationships with local suppliers, and couldn’t provide on-site project management five days a week. The cheapest quote isn’t always the cheapest renovation.

Budgeting for the Unexpected: Your Contingency Fund

Here’s the part nobody enjoys talking about. Set aside 10–20% of your total budget as a contingency fund. Older Auckland homes — and we’re talking about the 1970s brick-and-tile places across Henderson and Manurewa, the pre-war bungalows in Mt Eden, the leaky homes from the early 2000s in Albany — almost always produce surprises once demolition starts.

Rotten framing behind the GIB. Outdated wiring that doesn’t meet current code. Plumbing that’s been patched so many times it needs complete replacement. You won’t know until the walls are open. A 15% contingency on a $35,000 bathroom renovation is $5,250 — money you’d rather not spend, but money that keeps your project moving if something turns up.

“The most common budget blowout I see isn’t from changing your mind on tiles — it’s from discovering water damage that’s been sitting behind the shower wall for a decade. In older Auckland homes, especially anything built before the mid-2000s, a solid contingency fund isn’t optional. It’s the thing that keeps the project on track.”
— Dorothy Li, Design Manager, Superior Renovations

Fixed-Price Contracts vs Charge-Up: Why It Matters

This is one of the most important decisions you’ll make, and most homeowners don’t think about it until they’re already signed up. A fixed-price contract gives you one clear number for the entire project — labour, materials, project management, margins, and admin all included. If costs go up during the build, that’s on us. If material prices jump, that’s on us. You know what you’re paying before the first wall comes down.

A charge-up (sometimes called cost-plus or time-and-materials) contract means you pay for hours worked plus materials at cost plus a margin. It sounds transparent, but the risk sits entirely with you. Hours can spiral. Material choices get made on the fly. And there’s no ceiling.

At Superior Renovations, every project runs on a fixed-price contract based on the approved scope of works and consent plans. If something comes up during demolition that falls outside the original scope — say, we discover water damage behind a shower wall — we’ll flag it, explain the cost, and get your approval before any additional work proceeds. No surprises. No invoices you weren’t expecting.


Building Consent for Auckland Renovations: When You Need It and How It Works

Getting building consent right is one of those things that saves you thousands down the track — and ignoring it can cost you even more. Most renovations that change your home’s structure, plumbing layout, or electrical systems require a building consent from Auckland Council. Skip it, and you’re looking at potential fines, a stop-work notice, difficulty selling your property, or having to rip out and redo completed work.

Which Renovations Need Consent — and Which Don’t

Under Schedule 1 of the Building Act 2004, certain low-risk work is exempt from consent. But the line between exempt and not-exempt catches plenty of homeowners off guard.

Work Type Consent Required? Notes
Replacing a vanity, toilet, or taps in the same position Usually no Must use a licensed plumber; no structural changes
Replacing kitchen cabinetry and benchtops (same layout) Usually no No consent if plumbing and electrics stay put
Removing a load-bearing wall Structural engineering and LBP required
Moving plumbing to a new location New pipework triggers consent
Adding a new bathroom or ensuite New fixtures + waterproofing + potential structural
House extension or second storey Architectural drawings + structural engineering required
Garage conversion to living space Must meet insulation, health, and safety standards
Recladding exterior walls Fire, weatherproofing, and insulation compliance
Painting, wallpapering, new carpet 没有 Cosmetic work — no consent needed

If you’re not sure whether your project needs consent, Auckland Council’s website has a “Do I need consent?” tool, or call their helpline on 09 301 0101. We also assess this during every free in-home consultation — it’s one of the first things we check.

💡 Quick tip: Consent fees for residential renovations in Auckland typically run $3,000–$8,000 depending on project complexity. Budget for this separately from your renovation cost — it’s a council fee, not a builder fee.

How the Consent Process Works with Superior Renovations and Sonder Architecture

For consent-required renovations — extensions, garage conversions, open-plan conversions involving structural walls — we work with Sonder Architecture, whose head office sits alongside our showroom at 16B Link Drive, Wairau Valley. Having architect and renovation company under the same roof isn’t a gimmick. It means your architect, your designer, and your project manager are in the same building talking to each other — not playing email tag across town.

Here’s how it works in practice:

1. Your enquiry comes in. We contact you, understand what you’re after, and introduce you to Sonder’s head architect.
2. Feasibility study. Sonder reviews what’s possible for your property. You’ll need to request your property file from Auckland Council (or we can guide you through that).
3. On-site visit. The architect visits your home to discuss options, assess the site, and identify any constraints.
4. Concept drawings and architectural quote. If you’re good to proceed, Sonder produces concept drawings and a quote for the full architectural plans needed for consent submission.
5. Architectural drawings submitted to council. Once approved, the drawings go to Auckland Council for building consent.
6. Our renovation consultant steps in. While consent is processing, our team goes through the plans, conducts an on-site visit, discusses design, measures the space, and prepares a fixed-price proposal with project specifications.
7. Consent approved — your renovation begins.

Consent processing typically takes 4–8 weeks through Auckland Council, though heritage properties in areas like Ponsonby or Devonport can take longer. Complex applications involving resource consent as well as building consent add further time. Plan for this. Starting the consent process early is one of the simplest ways to keep your overall project timeline on track.

“The biggest cause of delays I see isn’t construction — it’s consent applications submitted with incomplete documentation. If your plans are thorough and your documentation is right the first time, Auckland Council processes them faster. That’s why we do the architectural and renovation planning together, not separately.”
— Alison Yu, Designer, Superior Renovations

Code Compliance Certificate: Don’t Forget This Step

Once your consented renovation is complete and all inspections have passed, you need to apply for a Code Compliance Certificate (CCC) from Auckland Council. This confirms the work was done in accordance with the building consent. Without a CCC, your renovation is not legally complete — and that can create problems when you sell, when you insure, or when you try to do further work on your property down the line.


Auckland Renovation Trends That Are Actually Worth Your Money in 2026

Trends come and go. Some are worth following. Others will date your home faster than you’d think. After years of renovating Auckland homes across every suburb from Titirangi to Howick, here’s what we’re seeing homeowners spend on in 2026 — and why these particular trends have staying power.

Open-Plan Living Is Still the Most Requested Layout Change

Knocking through to create an open-plan kitchen, dining, and living area remains the single most popular renovation request we get in Auckland. The reason is simple — most Auckland homes built before the 1990s have compartmentalised floor plans with small, dark rooms separated by walls that don’t need to be there. Opening these up creates flow, brings in natural light, and makes a 140m² house feel like a 180m² one.

The catch? If the wall you want to remove is load-bearing, you’ll need structural engineering, a steel beam, and building consent. That adds $5,000–$15,000 to the project. Worth it for most homeowners — but it needs to be in your budget from the start, not discovered halfway through.

Energy Efficiency Isn’t a Trend — It’s the New Baseline

Auckland homeowners are spending more on energy-efficient upgrades than ever before, and it’s not because they’re chasing a trend. It’s because power bills are high, Auckland’s climate is damp, and the updated H1 insulation requirements under the NZ Building Code mean any consented renovation needs to meet higher thermal performance standards.

The upgrades that deliver the best return on your energy spend in Auckland include double-glazing ($20,000–$35,000 for a full house — try our double glazing cost calculator), insulation improvements to walls and ceiling, and switching to an efficient hot water system like a heat pump cylinder. EECA (the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority) estimates that a well-insulated Auckland home uses 30–40% less energy for heating than an uninsulated one.

Eco Upgrade Auckland Cost Range (2026) Why It’s Worth It
Double-glazed windows (full house) $20,000–$35,000 Reduces heat loss, noise, and condensation
Solar panels $8,000–$15,000 Reduces power bills long-term; increasing buyer demand
Heat pump hot water cylinder $4,000–$7,000 Uses 60–70% less energy than standard electric cylinder
Low-VOC paints (e.g. Resene Eco.Decorator) $40–$60/litre Healthier indoor air quality; less off-gassing
Water-saving fixtures $100–$400 per fixture Lower water bills; responsible in a city with ageing infrastructure

💡 Quick tip: If you’re already doing a consented renovation that involves opening up walls, add insulation at the same time. The walls are already open — the material cost is relatively low, and you won’t get a cheaper opportunity to improve your home’s thermal performance.

Minimalist Bathrooms With a Few Luxury Touches

The over-the-top bathroom is out. What’s in is clean, simple design with one or two things done really well. Matte black tapware from brands like Reece, large-format tiles from The Tile Depot, concealed storage, and heated floors ($1,000–$3,000) are the elements Auckland homeowners keep choosing in 2026.

The approach is straightforward: spend on what you touch and see every day (tapware, shower, vanity), save on what you don’t (behind-wall plumbing, standard toilet connections). A Henderson Valley bathroom we completed recently came in under $30,000 with matte black tiles, a wall-hung bathtub, and underfloor heating — it reads as a $45,000 bathroom because the design choices were smart, not expensive.

For design inspiration, take a look at our bathroom design gallery or read our guide on making the most of a small bathroom.

Smart Home Tech That’s Actually Practical

Smart home technology has moved past the novelty stage. In 2026, the upgrades Auckland homeowners are making include smart thermostats for heat pumps, automated lighting via PDL by Schneider Electric, and app-controlled security systems. These aren’t gadgets — they’re practical upgrades that reduce energy use and add genuine convenience.

USB-integrated power outlets, smart light switches, and wired-in home automation are best installed during a renovation when walls are open and electricians are on site. Retrofitting later costs more and creates mess. If you’re already rewiring, adding smart switches adds a few hundred dollars per room — not thousands.

Outdoor Living and Deck Extensions

Auckland’s climate makes outdoor living a genuine extension of indoor space for most of the year. Deck extensions, covered pergolas, and outdoor kitchens are consistently popular — particularly across the North Shore and in suburbs like Titirangi and West Harbour where section sizes allow for it. A quality deck build runs $15,000–$40,000 depending on size and materials. Our pergola cost calculator gives you an initial estimate if you’re at the planning stage.


Future-Proofing Your Auckland Home While the Walls Are Open

A renovation is your best — and cheapest — opportunity to fix what’s hidden behind the walls. Once the GIB goes back up and the tiles go on, you’re not touching those services again for another 20 years. If you’re already spending $30,000+ on a renovation, investing a bit more in infrastructure upgrades while everything is accessible is one of the smartest decisions you can make.

Rewiring and Electrical Upgrades

Older Auckland homes — anything pre-1990 — often have wiring that doesn’t meet current standards. Outdated wiring is a fire risk, limits your ability to run modern appliances, and fails compliance checks during consented renovations. A full rewire for a three-bedroom Auckland home runs $8,000–$15,000. While you’re at it, add extra power outlets where you’ll actually need them, upgrade your switchboard, and consider USB-integrated sockets.

Replumbing

Galvanised steel pipes. Old copper connections with decades of mineral build-up. PVC that’s been patched more times than anyone can remember. If your home’s plumbing is original and it was built before the 1990s, replumbing during a renovation saves you from emergency callouts and water damage later. Modern plumbing systems use materials that last longer, flow better, and don’t corrode. Replumbing a full house typically costs $10,000–$20,000 in Auckland.

“When we open up a wall during a bathroom renovation and find the original galvanised pipes from the 1960s, the conversation with the homeowner is always the same — do you want to deal with this now for a known cost, or deal with it as an emergency at 2am on a Saturday in three years’ time? The answer is always the same.”
— Cici Zou, Designer (NZ Dip. Interior Design, Certified Designer), Superior Renovations

Insulation: The Upgrade You Can’t See but Feel Every Day

Good insulation is the single most impactful upgrade for year-round comfort in Auckland. Upgrading wall, ceiling, and underfloor insulation during a renovation typically costs $3,000–$8,000 — and the payback through reduced heating bills is surprisingly fast. According to EECA, insulating a previously uninsulated Auckland home can save $500+ per year in energy costs.

Any consented renovation in 2026 must meet the updated H1 insulation requirements under the NZ Building Code. Even if your renovation doesn’t trigger consent, upgrading insulation while the walls are open is a no-brainer. The material cost is relatively low. The access cost — opening and re-closing walls — is what makes it expensive when done as a standalone project.

💡 Quick tip: Ask your renovation company what infrastructure work they’d recommend while walls are open. Good companies will proactively flag opportunities — a new extraction fan in the bathroom, upgrading to Laminex or GIB Aqualine in wet areas, adding a data cable run. These small additions are cheap during a renovation and expensive as standalone jobs.

Energy-Efficient Windows and Doors

Single-glazed aluminium windows are still common in Auckland homes built before the 2000s. They’re cold in winter, hot in summer, and terrible for noise. Replacing them with double-glazed units improves thermal performance, reduces condensation (a major issue in Auckland’s humid climate), and cuts outside noise significantly. If your renovation involves exterior walls, replacing windows at the same time keeps disruption and scaffolding costs down.


Renovating an Apartment in Auckland: What’s Different

Apartment renovations follow most of the same rules as standalone homes — but with a few extra layers of complexity that can trip you up if you’re not prepared for them.

Body Corporate Approval Comes First

Before you touch anything in an Auckland apartment, you need body corporate approval. Most body corporates have specific rules about what renovations are allowed, what hours work can happen, noise limits, and whether you need to notify neighbours. Some restrict changes to common walls or floors. Get this sorted before you sign a building contract — discovering a restriction after demolition has started is an expensive problem.

Structural Limitations You Can’t Change

Apartments have fixed structural elements — load-bearing walls, shared floor slabs, column placements — that you can’t alter. Moving a kitchen or bathroom to a completely different part of the apartment is usually not possible without significant structural work that the body corporate is unlikely to approve. Work within the existing layout wherever you can. Smart design within constraints often produces better results than fighting the structure.

Shared Services Complicate Plumbing and Electrical

Your plumbing and electrical systems connect to shared building services. Changing them can affect your neighbours. Any work on shared services requires coordination with the body corporate and sometimes with other residents directly. A licensed plumber who’s experienced with apartment work in Auckland will know what’s possible and what creates issues for units above, below, or beside yours.

Consent Still Applies — Plus Extra Approvals

Auckland Council building consent requirements apply to apartments the same way they apply to houses. If you’re making structural changes, moving plumbing, or altering electrical circuits, you need consent. But you may also need body corporate sign-off on top of that. Some apartment buildings in Auckland CBD and Parnell have additional heritage or design overlays that add another layer of approvals.

💡 Quick tip: If you’re renovating an Auckland apartment, tell your neighbours before work starts. Even if the body corporate doesn’t require it, a quick heads-up about noise and timeline goes a long way toward keeping relationships smooth. Apartment renovations generate noise that carries — being upfront about it costs nothing and prevents complaints.


How to Choose the Right Renovation Company in Auckland

The renovation industry in Auckland has no shortage of operators. The challenge isn’t finding someone who’ll take your money — it’s finding someone who’ll deliver what they promised, on budget, on time, and to a standard you’re happy with five years from now.

What to Look For

Check their reviews. Not just the five-star ones — read the three-star ones and see how they responded. A company with 100+ Google reviews that addresses complaints openly is a far safer bet than one with ten perfect reviews and no track record. Look at our online reviews and client stories to see what this looks like in practice.

Other things that matter: do they have a physical showroom you can visit? (Ours is at 16B Link Drive, Wairau Valley — open seven days.) Do they offer fixed-price contracts? Do they use Licensed Building Practitioners (LBPs) for restricted building work? Do they manage the full project — design, consent, construction, inspections — or do they hand parts off to subcontractors you’ve never met?

Have a look at finished projects. Visit the case studies page to see project specifications, timelines, and photos from real Auckland renovations.

Timelines You Can Actually Plan Around

Knowing how long your renovation will take matters — especially if you’re living in the house during the work or paying rent elsewhere. Here’s what to expect for common Auckland projects:

Project On-Site Duration Notes
浴室翻新 3–4 weeks Assumes design finalised and materials on site before demo
Kitchen renovation 5–6 weeks Longer if structural changes; splashbacks installed separately after
Full home renovation 3–6 months Depends on scope, levels, and whether extensions are included
House extension 4–8 months Includes consent processing time before construction starts

Weather plays a role in Auckland timelines, particularly for exterior work. Roofing, cladding, and outdoor builds are weather-dependent — Auckland’s wet winters (June–August) can add days or weeks to exterior projects. Interior renovations are less affected, but delivery logistics and tradie availability can shift during peak building season (October–March).

“The projects that run smoothest are the ones where the homeowner made all their design decisions before demolition started. Every change made during construction costs time and money. Get the tiles, tapware, vanity, and benchtop locked in before the first wall comes down — that’s the single best thing you can do for your budget and your timeline.”
— Eunice Qin, Designer, Superior Renovations


Your Next Step: Getting Started on Your Auckland Renovation

Whether you’re pricing up a bathroom refresh, planning a full home renovation, or trying to figure out whether your 1980s brick-and-tile in Papakura needs consent for the changes you want to make — the best next step is a conversation.

We offer a free in-home consultation where one of our team visits your property, talks through what you’re trying to achieve, assesses consent requirements, and gives you a realistic picture of costs and timelines. No obligation. No pressure. Just straight answers from people who’ve done this hundreds of times across Auckland.

Book your free in-home consultation with Superior Renovations
Use our renovation cost calculators to get an initial estimate
Request a free feasibility report for your project


How much does it cost to renovate a house in Auckland in 2026?

In 2026, Auckland renovation costs range from $2,500 to $4,500 per square metre for standard finishes, with luxury work exceeding $5,500/m². For specific projects: mid-range bathroom renovations cost $25,000–$35,000, mid-range kitchen renovations $28,000–$35,000, and full home renovations typically $80,000–$160,000. Auckland runs 10–20% higher than the national average due to elevated labour rates ($90–$150/hour) and compliance costs.

Do I need building consent for a bathroom renovation in Auckland?

Most standard bathroom renovations — replacing tiles, vanity, toilet, and shower in the same positions — do not require consent. Consent is required if you are moving plumbing to a new location, removing or adding walls, or making significant changes to electrical systems. If you are adding a new bathroom or ensuite, consent is always required. Auckland Council consent processing takes 4–8 weeks.

Do I need building consent for a kitchen renovation in NZ?

Kitchen renovations that replace cabinetry, benchtops, and appliances in the same layout usually do not require consent. Consent is needed if you are removing load-bearing walls for an open-plan conversion, relocating plumbing, or making significant electrical changes. Auckland Council fees for a standard kitchen consent run around $3,000–$4,000.

How long does a bathroom renovation take in Auckland?

A standard full bathroom renovation takes 3 to 4 weeks from the date demolition begins, assuming design is finalised and all materials are on site. If your project requires Auckland Council consent — for example, moving plumbing or making structural changes — add 4–8 weeks for consent processing before work starts.

How long does a kitchen renovation take in Auckland?

A standard kitchen renovation takes 5 to 6 weeks on site. More complex projects involving structural changes or open-plan conversions typically take 6 to 12 weeks. Splashbacks require additional manufacturing time and are installed as a separate visit after the main build is complete.

Is it cheaper to renovate or build new in Auckland?

Renovating is generally more cost-effective than building new when you factor in land acquisition costs. Auckland renovation costs of $2,500–$4,500/m² compare favourably to new-build costs of $3,500–$6,000/m² or more. However, if extensive structural repairs are needed — common with leaky homes from the early 2000s — the gap can narrow significantly. A feasibility study helps determine which option delivers better value for your specific property.

What is a fixed-price contract and why does it matter?

A fixed-price contract gives you one clear total for your entire renovation — labour, materials, project management, and admin included. If costs increase during the build, the renovation company absorbs them, not you. This is different from charge-up (cost-plus) contracts where you pay hourly rates plus materials, with no cost ceiling. Fixed-price contracts protect your budget and transfer cost risk to the builder.

奥克兰扩建房屋的费用是多少?

In Auckland, a ground floor extension starts from around $80,000 and a second storey addition from $150,000. Garage conversions start from approximately $40,000. These figures are indicative — the final cost depends on size, materials, site conditions, and council consent fees ($3,000–$8,000). Use the Superior Renovations house extension cost calculator for an initial estimate.

Can I live in my house during a renovation?

For smaller projects like a bathroom or kitchen renovation, yes — though expect some disruption to your daily routine. For full home renovations involving multiple rooms, structural changes, or extensive demolition, it may be impractical or unsafe to stay on site. Budget $400–$800 per week for temporary accommodation if you need to move out during a major renovation.

What should I budget for contingency in an Auckland renovation?

Budget 10–20% of your total renovation cost as a contingency fund. For older Auckland homes — particularly pre-1990s bungalows and villas, or homes built during the leaky building era (mid-1990s to mid-2000s) — aim for 15–20%. Common surprises include rotten framing, outdated wiring, damaged plumbing, and water damage behind walls that only becomes visible during demolition.

What are the most popular renovation trends in Auckland in 2026?

The top trends in Auckland for 2026 include open-plan living conversions, minimalist bathrooms with matte black fixtures and heated floors, energy-efficient upgrades (double glazing, insulation, solar panels), smart home technology (automated lighting, smart thermostats), and outdoor living spaces with covered decks and pergolas. Energy efficiency upgrades are increasingly driven by the updated H1 insulation requirements in the NZ Building Code.


Further Resources for your renovation

  1. 特色项目和客户故事,查看部分项目的规格。
  2. 来自奥克兰的真实客户故事

需要更多信息?

利用我们的免费《房屋翻新完整指南》(48 页)无论您是已经开始翻新还是正在决定翻新,这都不是一个简单的过程,本指南包括一份免费的 100 多点检查清单--将帮助您避免代价高昂的错误。

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