
By Simon Liu, Founder, Add Value Renovations
Around 60% of New Zealand renovations come in over budget — typically by 15–30% of the original quote. The reasons are predictable, repeatable, and almost entirely preventable. They’re not bad luck. They’re a small number of decisions made before the build starts (and a couple made during) that systematically drive the final cost above where it should land. After delivering renovations across Auckland for over a decade, I can tell you the seven causes that account for almost every blow-out we see — and the seven defences that keep your project on budget. This guide is the honest version of the conversation most builders avoid having.
The seven causes of renovation budget blow-outs
1. Scope creep — the silent killer
The single biggest cause of blow-outs. It starts innocently: “While we’re at it, let’s also redo the laundry.” “Can we upgrade the bathroom tiles to that nicer one?” “We may as well replace the windows in the bedrooms too.” Each individual change feels small. Cumulatively, scope creep adds 10–25% to the final cost of most renovations.
The mechanism: every change involves not just the new work, but disruption to surrounding work, additional trade callbacks, and project management overhead. A “small” $3,000 addition often costs $5,000 in actual delivered cost once the build coordination is factored in.
2. Inadequate contingency for unforeseen items
Renovations uncover things the original scope couldn’t see. Rot in the framing behind the bathroom. Asbestos in the popcorn ceilings. Galvanised pipes failing during plumbing relocation. Power circuits that turn out to be sub-code. Each is a real, legitimate cost — but if your budget was tight, they become a “blow-out”.
The fix: budget 15–20% contingency on top of the contract price for genuinely unforeseen items. Older Auckland homes (pre-1990) lean toward 20%. Newer homes can plan for 10–15%. This isn’t waste — it’s planning. Better to release contingency at the end than scramble for funds mid-build.
3. Choosing charge-up instead of fixed-price
Charge-up (cost-plus) arrangements bill you actual costs plus a builder’s margin. They sound flexible. They’re not. Charge-up projects almost always run 10–25% over equivalent fixed-price quotes. The builder has no incentive to manage efficiency — every additional hour is more revenue. Every supplier markup flows through to you. Every scope decision tilts toward more work.
The fix: insist on a fixed-price contract for everything you can. Use charge-up only for genuinely unknown-scope work (full restoration of a character villa with unknown rot) and even then, cap the charge-up portion and run the predictable scope as fixed-price. See our design-and-build vs architect-and-tender guide.

4. Selecting finishes after the contract is signed
A common pattern: the contract is signed with “Provisional Sums” or “Prime Cost Allowances” for things like tiles, fittings, appliances, and joinery. The actual selections happen later. By then, you’ve fallen in love with finishes that are 2–3x the original allowance. The contract budget hasn’t changed — but the actual final cost has.
The fix: make finish selections BEFORE the contract is signed. Specify the actual tile, the actual tap, the actual oven, the actual cabinetry handle. The price you sign is then the price you pay. Provisional Sums are a budgetary blind spot — eliminate them where possible.
5. Underestimating consent, design, and council fees
The construction part of a renovation is what families budget for. The peripheral costs — architect/designer fees ($8K–$40K), engineer’s design ($3K–$25K), building consent application ($2,500–$15K), council development contributions if adding new dwelling area ($10K–$30K), resource consent on heritage or Special Character properties ($5K–$30K) — are often missed or underestimated.
The fix: budget 5–12% of the construction value for design and consent fees, plus development contributions if applicable. Get a written design fee proposal and a council fee estimate before final budgeting. See our Auckland renovation costs hub for line-item benchmarks.
6. Choosing the cheapest builder
The cheapest quote on a substantial renovation is suspicious 80% of the time. Quotes 15–25% below other quality builders usually mean: missing line items in the scope, lower-grade materials specified, unrealistic timelines, plans to recover cost through variation pricing, or financial pressure on the business that leads to corner-cutting.
The fix: select on quality and process, not just price. Compare line-by-line scope, not just totals. The “cheapest” builder often ends up most expensive once variations, additions, and quality issues are factored in. See our 12 questions to ask a renovation builder guide.
7. Trying to live in the home during a major build
Living through a major renovation costs more than you think. Daily decisions about temporary kitchen setups, navigating dust, working around trades, makes the project take longer (typically 20–30% more time on site), creates relationship friction, and tempts families to “approve anything just to finish faster” — which feeds scope creep.
The fix: for projects over $400K, seriously consider temporary accommodation. The accommodation cost (typically $3K–$8K/month for a furnished Auckland family rental) is often less than the productivity loss and stress cost of an occupied build.
The seven defences that keep your budget on track
| Defence | What it prevents |
|---|---|
| 1. Define detailed scope BEFORE quoting | Prevents quote-vs-actual gaps and Provisional Sum surprises |
| 2. Fixed-price contract with documented variation process | Eliminates charge-up creep; controls scope additions |
| 3. 15–20% contingency budgeted separately | Absorbs unforeseen structural, service, compliance items |
| 4. Make finish selections pre-contract | Replaces Provisional Sums with hard prices |
| 5. Get a detailed cost breakdown, not just a total | Reveals missing line items or low specifications |
| 6. Choose design-and-build for budget control | Design is built to budget; no expensive architect revisions |
| 7. Accept that 5–10% over-run is normal | Sets realistic expectations; avoids “blow-out” framing for small variances |
The hardest conversation: when to walk away
Some renovations should not proceed. If the realistic full cost (contract + design + consent + contingency + finance + insurance) exceeds what you can afford without serious financial strain, the right answer is to wait, scale back the scope, or sell-and-buy instead of renovate.
Trying to deliver a $500K renovation on a $350K budget is how projects end half-finished. Better to delay 12 months, save aggressively, and start the right project — than to commit to the wrong project and watch it implode.
The signal: if you find yourself negotiating away contingency, downgrading specs you wanted, or hoping nothing unforeseen happens during the build — you’re under-budgeted. Pause and reset.
Realistic budget framework for an Auckland renovation
| Component | % of total budget |
|---|---|
| Construction (fixed-price contract) | 70 – 78% |
| Design and consent fees | 5 – 12% |
| Contingency for unforeseen items | 10 – 20% |
| Finance costs (interest, fees, insurance) | 3 – 5% |
| Temporary accommodation (if needed) | 3 – 8% |
If you have $500K total to spend on a renovation, the realistic construction budget is $350K – $390K, not $500K. The other $110K – $150K covers design, consent, contingency, finance, and accommodation. Plan from the total cost down, not from the construction cost up.
Renovation budget FAQs
What percentage of renovations go over budget in NZ?
Approximately 60% of NZ renovations come in over original quote, typically by 15 – 30% of the original budget. The over-runs concentrate in: charge-up vs fixed-price contracts, projects with inadequate contingency, scope creep during build, and Provisional Sum surprises on finishes. Fixed-price design-and-build projects with proper contingency rarely exceed 5 – 10% over original budget.
How much contingency should I budget for a renovation?
Plan for 15 – 20% contingency on top of the contract price. Older Auckland homes (pre-1990) lean to 20% because of higher likelihood of asbestos, rot, galvanised plumbing, and outdated wiring surprises. Newer homes (post-2000) can plan 10 – 15%. The contingency is for genuinely unforeseen items, not for things you decide to add mid-build (those are scope creep, not contingency).
What is the biggest cause of renovation cost overruns?
Scope creep — homeowners adding “while we are at it” items during the build. Each small addition feels manageable but cumulatively adds 10 – 25% to the final cost. The mechanism: each change involves not just the new work, but disruption to surrounding work, trade callbacks, and project management overhead, so a “small” $3,000 addition often costs $5,000 in actual delivered cost.
How can I avoid scope creep on my renovation?
Lock the scope completely in writing before signing the contract. Decide the answer to every “while we are at it” question upfront. During the build, use a formal variation process: every change documented, costed before work proceeds, signed off in writing. Many families maintain a “future renovation” list for items they would like but are deferring to a later project, which removes the pressure to add mid-build.
Are fixed-price contracts really fixed?
Yes for the agreed scope. Fixed-price contracts lock in the cost for delivering the specified work. They can change through: variations (you decide to change scope), genuinely unforeseen items (covered by contingency), or Provisional Sum reconciliations (where actual cost of an allowance differs from estimate). Quality builders document each clearly and only proceed with variations on signed approval.
What is a Provisional Sum in a renovation contract?
A Provisional Sum (PS) is an allowance for an item not yet specified at contract signing – typically finishes like tiles, fittings, appliances, or cabinetry. The contract lists, say, a $5,000 PS for bathroom tiles. If you later select $12,000 tiles, you pay the extra $7,000. PS items are the biggest source of “blow-out” surprises. Minimise PS items by making selections pre-contract.
How do I know if my builder quote is realistic or too low?
Compare line items, not just totals. A realistic quote breaks down: design, consent, demolition, structural, services, finishes, project management, GST, and contingency. Quotes 15 – 25% below other quality builders are suspicious – they typically miss items, specify lower-grade materials, plan to recover cost through variations, or signal financial pressure on the business. The “cheapest” builder is often the most expensive once variations stack up.
Should I do a renovation in stages to manage budget?
Sometimes, but it is usually more expensive in total. Doing a kitchen now, bathrooms in two years, and an extension in five typically costs 15 – 25% more than doing the whole project together, because of repeated mobilisation, separate consents, three project management overheads, and additional disruption. If budget genuinely limits you, focus on the highest-ROI work first – typically kitchen and bathrooms.
How much should I budget for design and consent fees?
5 – 12% of construction value for design, engineering, and consent. Breakdown: architect or designer fees $8K – $40K depending on project scale; engineer’s design for structural work $3K – $25K; building consent application $2,500 – $15K; resource consent if needed for heritage or Special Character properties $5K – $30K. Add council development contributions ($10K – $30K) if adding new dwelling area.
Can I save money by living in my home during the renovation?
Usually less than you think for major projects. Occupied builds typically take 20 – 30% longer due to navigating around the family, daily decisions about temporary services, and reduced trade efficiency. The longer timeline often costs more in finance interest and lost productivity than the saved accommodation. For projects over $400K, temporary rental ($3K – $8K/month) is often cheaper than the productivity loss of an occupied build.
Talk to us about realistic budgeting
The strongest renovation projects start with realistic budgeting and a clear, fixed-scope, fixed-price contract. That’s the only way we work. Book a discovery call for an honest conversation about what your renovation will actually cost — and what to do if the answer doesn’t match your current budget.
Related guides
- Renovating Through an Auckland Winter — why winter renovations work
- Devonport Renovation Guide — heritage harbourside character home renovations
- Auckland Renovation Costs Hub 2026 — master cost overview
- How to Finance a Major Renovation in NZ
- 12 Questions to Ask Before Hiring a Builder
- Design-and-build vs Architect + Builder
- Master Builder 10-Year Guarantee
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