Renovation Contractor in Bray
Compare local building contractor pros in Bray and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: €3,700–€230,000
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Renovation Contractor prices in Bray
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single-room refresh Replastering, flooring, and decoration of one room | €3,700 | €7,350 | €13,800 |
| Kitchen or bathroom renovation Full refit of one wet room | €7,350 | €13,800 | €27,600 |
| Multi-room renovation Several rooms including rewiring or plumbing | €18,400 | €41,400 | €82,800 |
| Whole-house renovation Full refurbishment of a 3-bed house | €55,200 | €110,400 | €230,000 |
How to hire a renovation contractor pro in Ireland
- Check membership of the Construction Industry Register Ireland (CIRI) — voluntary but a useful quality signal
- Confirm electrical work will be done by a Safe Electric registered electrician and gas work by an RGII registered installer (both legally required)
- Check whether your project is exempted development or needs planning permission from the local authority
- Ask for proof of public liability insurance and confirm the contractor is tax-registered (you'll need this for the Home Renovation-style tax schemes when available)
- Get three itemized quotes after site surveys
- Agree staged payments in writing with 5-10% retained until snags are closed
Ireland has no mandatory general builder's licence, but gas work must be done by RGII-registered installers and electrical work by Safe Electric registered electricians by law. Internal renovations are usually exempted development, while extensions beyond 40 square metres and external changes need planning permission from your local authority.
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See the full breakdown of what drives renovation contractor prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How do renovation payment schedules work?
Payments should follow completed milestones, not calendar dates: for example deposit, completion of demolition and first-fix (rough-in), completion of second-fix and finishes, then a final payment of 5-10% held until the snag list (punch list) is closed. That final retention is your only real leverage for defect fixes.
What questions should I ask before hiring a contractor in Bray?
Ask: who will actually be on site daily (the owner or a foreman), which parts are done by their own team versus subcontractors, how many projects they run at once, what their current lead time in Bray is, how they price variations, and what their warranty covers and for how long. The quality of the answers tells you as much as the answers themselves.
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 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.
How many renovation quotes should I get in Bray?
Get at least three itemized quotes from contractors who have visited the property in Bray. 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 do building contractors charge in Ireland?
General building rates run around €40-€80 per hour, with renovation projects commonly pricing at €900-€2,200 per square metre depending on spec. Dublin pricing sits at the top of the range, and demand from deep-retrofit grant work keeps good contractors booked months ahead.
Can I get a grant for renovation work in Ireland?
SEAI grants cover energy upgrades — insulation, heat pumps, windows — and can be combined with a renovation if the works are done by SEAI-registered contractors. Vacant and derelict property grants of up to €50,000-€70,000 also exist for bringing empty homes back into use, which materially changes the budget on older-property projects.
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