Renovation Contractor in Thunder Bay
Compare local general contractor pros in Thunder Bay and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: CA$5,500–CA$322,000
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Renovation Contractor prices in Thunder Bay
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single-room refresh Flooring, paint, and fixture updates in one room | CA$5,500 | CA$13,800 | CA$27,600 |
| Kitchen or bathroom renovation Full remodel of one wet room managed by a GC | CA$13,800 | CA$27,600 | CA$64,400 |
| Multi-room renovation Two to four rooms with plumbing or electrical rework | CA$27,600 | CA$64,400 | CA$128,800 |
| Whole-home renovation Full interior renovation of a typical detached home | CA$69,000 | CA$147,200 | CA$322,000 |
How to hire a renovation contractor pro in Canada
- Check the licensing rule for your province: Quebec requires an RBQ licence for contractors, Toronto requires a municipal Building Renovator licence, and BC licenses residential builders for new-home work — rules are provincial and municipal, not federal
- Ask for a WSIB (Ontario) or WorkSafe clearance certificate so an injured worker can't claim against you
- Verify general liability insurance of at least $2 million
- Confirm who applies for the municipal building permit — required for structural, plumbing rough-in, and most electrical changes
- Get three itemized quotes after site visits and compare line by line
- Apply the statutory holdback from your provincial lien act (10% in Ontario) to progress payments until the lien period expires
Contractor regulation in Canada is provincial and municipal: Quebec's RBQ licence is mandatory for most contracting, while Ontario and other provinces regulate through municipal licensing and permits. Provincial construction lien acts let unpaid subcontractors lien your home, which is why the statutory holdback (e.g., 10% in Ontario) exists and should be used on any significant renovation.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives renovation contractor prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How do I check a renovation contractor in Thunder Bay is legitimate?
Check the licence or registration your country requires (see the hiring checklist for your country), ask for proof of liability insurance, and ask for two or three recent customers in or near Thunder Bay you can actually contact. A legitimate contractor expects these questions; evasiveness on any of the three is a reliable early warning.
How many renovation quotes should I get in Thunder Bay?
Get at least three itemized quotes from contractors who have visited the property in Thunder Bay. Phone or photo-based estimates are fine for a ballpark, but only an in-person survey produces a quote a contractor will stand behind. Discard any quote that is dramatically below the others rather than celebrating it — it usually signals missed scope or planned extras later.
What are variations (change orders) and how do I keep them under control?
A variation is any change to the agreed scope after signing — moving a wall, upgrading tiles, fixing a hidden problem. Insist every variation is priced and approved in writing before the work happens. Most renovation budget blowouts are not the original quote being wrong; they are dozens of verbally-approved variations nobody tracked.
What should be in a renovation contract?
At minimum: full scope of works, itemized price, start and completion dates, payment schedule tied to milestones, who obtains permits, how variations are priced and approved in writing, warranty terms, and how disputes are handled. If a contractor resists putting these in writing, that is the answer to whether you should hire them.
What do general contractors charge in Canada?
Hourly rates typically run CAD 50-130 depending on province and city, with most renovations priced as a project including a 10-20% management markup. Mid-range whole-home renovation work commonly lands around CAD 100-300 per square foot in major metros.
Do I need a permit for interior renovations in Canada?
Cosmetic work doesn't need one, but municipal building permits are required for structural changes, moving plumbing, most electrical alterations (with inspection by the provincial electrical authority, e.g., ESA in Ontario), and basement legalizations. Unpermitted work commonly surfaces during home inspection at resale and can kill a deal.
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