How Much Does a New Kitchen Cost in 2026? (UK)
A new UK kitchen in 2026 typically costs £8,000–£18,000 for a budget refit, £18,000–£35,000 for a mid-range fitted kitchen, and £35,000–£75,000+ for premium or designer specifications. Roughly 30% of the bill is units and carcases, 15–20% worktops, 15–20% appliances, and 30–35% labour (electrical, plumbing, plastering, tiling and fitting). Price is driven by spec tier, kitchen size, worktop material, appliance choice, and whether you keep the existing layout or move services — relocating the sink, hob or drainage often adds £1,500–£4,500 alone.
How much is a new kitchen in 2026?
Typical 2026 UK new kitchen costs by spec tier (supply & fit):
- Budget refit (Wickes/Howdens core range) — £8,000–£18,000
- Mid-range fitted (Magnet, Wren, John Lewis) — £18,000–£35,000
- Premium/designer (DeVOL, Tom Howley, Mowlem) — £35,000–£75,000+
- Bespoke handmade (kitchen-and-extension combo) — £75,000–£140,000+
Add £3,000–£8,000 if you're moving the sink, hob, or extractor to a different wall — drainage, gas-line and electrical re-runs add up fast. A kitchen-diner created via a knock-through is roughly £4,000–£12,000 on top, depending on whether the wall is load-bearing.
A new kitchen is the single most-renovated room in the UK home — and the most expensive per square metre after extensions. In 2026 the average UK fitted kitchen lands around £22,500 across all property types and spec tiers. But that headline number hides huge variation: a 12m² galley budget refit in a 2-bed flat can come in at £9,500 turnkey, while a 30m² premium island kitchen in a 4-bed semi tips £55,000 once worktops, integrated appliances and electrics are factored in. The real driver isn't square metres — it's spec choices. Quartz worktops add £1,500–£3,000 over laminate; an induction hob with a downdraft extractor replaces a £400 ceiling extractor with a £1,800–£3,500 unit; an integrated American-style fridge-freezer is £1,200–£2,500 over a basic freestanding model. Decisions like these are what move you between tiers.
New Kitchen Cost by Spec Tier
The four realistic spec tiers we see across UK projects in 2026 — what each delivers, what it costs, and where it makes sense.
Tier 1 — Budget refit (£8,000–£18,000)
Off-the-shelf trade range from Howdens, Wickes, B&Q or IKEA. Standard 18mm MFC carcases, vinyl-wrapped or MFC doors, laminate worktop, single-bowl ceramic sink, mid-range Bosch/Indesit appliances. Typical for first-time buyers or rentals where you need a respectable, durable refit without bespoke design. Lead time 4–6 weeks. Best for: 8–14m² kitchens, replacement of like-for-like layout, no structural changes. Beware: end-of-line clearance ranges from these brands can shift the price by £1,500–£3,000 — always ask.
Tier 2 — Mid-range fitted (£18,000–£35,000)
Brands like Magnet, Wren, John Lewis, Benchmarx, Symphony. Solid-wood or thicker (22mm) MFC carcases, painted shaker or contemporary slab doors, quartz or solid-surface worktops, undermount sink, integrated dishwasher and washing machine, branded appliances (NEFF, Siemens, AEG mid-range). Includes design service, sometimes 3D visualisation. Lead time 6–10 weeks. Best for: 14–22m² kitchens in family homes, kitchen-diner conversions where you want it to feel premium without bespoke pricing. Most UK kitchen renovations land here — it's the Goldilocks tier.
Tier 3 — Premium/designer (£35,000–£75,000+)
Designer brands like DeVOL, Tom Howley, Roundhouse, Mowlem, Smallbone, Plain English, Holloways of Ludlow. Hand-painted or veneered solid-wood doors, quartz/marble/granite/composite worktops, fully integrated appliances (Miele, Gaggenau, Sub-Zero), bespoke pantries and walk-in larders, in-frame cabinetry, brass or aged-bronze ironmongery. In-house designer with multiple site visits. Lead time 12–20 weeks. Best for: 22m²+ kitchens in £750k+ homes, period properties, kitchen-extensions where the kitchen is the focal point of the renovation. Adds £60k–£120k of value uplift in London/South East, less elsewhere.
Tier 4 — Bespoke handmade (£75,000–£140,000+)
Fully bespoke, often built by individual cabinet-makers or specialist firms — every component made to drawing for that specific kitchen. Sub-Zero Wolf or Gaggenau Vario appliances, large island with hidden seating, walk-in pantry with separate refrigerator, butler's sink in copper or brass, marble or specialist composite worktops with thick mitred edges, custom dovetailed drawers. Lead time 16–28 weeks plus 8–12 weeks of joinery before fit-out. Best for: £1.5m+ homes, long-term residences, kitchens that anchor a £200k+ extension project. The differentiating factor isn't materials — it's the level of custom design (e.g. a 4.2m island in one piece of book-matched marble).
New Kitchen Cost by Size
Approximate budget ranges for a mid-tier (Tier 2) kitchen, which is where ~60% of UK projects land. For Tier 1 deduct ~40%; for Tier 3 add 60–100%.
Where does the money actually go?
A typical £25,000 mid-range UK kitchen breaks down roughly like this:
The biggest avoidable cost trap in a UK kitchen renovation is moving services. Keeping the sink, hob and extractor in their existing positions saves £3,000–£6,000 in plumbing, drainage, and gas/electrical re-runs. If you must move them, batch the work — moving the sink to the same wall but a different position is far cheaper than moving it to the opposite wall.
Kitchen Cost by UK Region
A 16m² Tier 2 (mid-range fitted) kitchen, all-in supply & fit. National median is roughly £25,500.
£24,800 Birmingham kitchen — full breakdown
A real 2026 quote we reviewed: 1930s 3-bed semi in Selly Oak, Birmingham. 18m² existing kitchen knocked through to combine with the small dining room, creating a 26m² kitchen-diner. Mid-range Magnet shaker units, quartz worktops, NEFF integrated appliances. Layout maintains existing sink and hob position to keep services costs down.
The owners financed the kitchen by re-mortgaging £18,000 and paying the rest from savings. Resale appraisal six months later showed a £42,000 valuation lift — partly the kitchen, partly that the knock-through created a much more saleable open-plan layout. Net value-add of around £17,000 over project cost — far better than the London ROI on equivalent spend.
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Common Questions
Where this guide gets its data
We cite UK primary sources for every figure, rule and methodology in this guide. You can verify each below:
- gov.uk — The Building Regulations 2010 (Part P, electrical safety) — Statutory requirement for all electrical work in kitchens
- RICS BCIS — Building Cost Information Service — Industry-standard UK construction cost benchmark data
- ONS — Construction Output Price Index — Official UK price index for construction output, published quarterly
- FMB — Federation of Master Builders cost guides — Trade-body cost data from 7,500+ UK building contractors
- Gas Safe Register — Mandatory registration for any gas appliance work in UK kitchens
- HM Land Registry — UK House Price Index — Source for resale-value-uplift figures cited per region
Methodology note: Cost figures combine published UK indices (RICS BCIS, ONS Construction Output Price Index) with our own dataset of 14,000+ itemised UK home-improvement quotes reviewed in the 12 months to 25 April 2026. Regional variations reflect actual quote spreads, not estimates. Last fact-checked: . Spotted something that needs updating? Email editorial@bestbuilders.co.uk.
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