2023’s Top Kitchen Trends Are All About Saving Money, Honey MABA MassachusettsRealEstate FirstTimeHomeBuyers MassBuyerAgents

Is your kitchen begging for some updates or a full-on makeover? Then you’ll want to be up on the latest design trends and keep the environment in mind, too.

A new survey of 3,600 homeowners by Houzz has found that an overwhelming majority of people planning a kitchen renovation this year (ninety two percent) are looking to include eco-friendly features.

Some of the most popular upgrades chosen include energy-saving appliances (sixty one percent) and LED lights (sixty five percent), as well as more efficient windows (twenty seven percent) and fixtures that conserve water (thirty four percent).

Yet saving the earth is actually more of a side benefit to homeowners’ main goal: saving money.

According to Houzz staff economist Marine Sargsyan, “the most frequent reason behind choosing sustainable options is long-run cost effectiveness, with environmental-friendliness as a secondary consideration.”

Photo by Kountry Kraft 

Saving cash isn’t easy, though, given the median spend on minor kitchen renovations has shot up 40% year over year, to $14,000. Meanwhile, the money plunked down for major overhauls (which include replacing all appliances and cabinets) has remained steady at $45,000.

Here’s a detailed look at the report’s findings, which might get some ideas cooking on how to change up your own kitchen, too.

A new year, a new style

Photo by Winder Gibson Architects 

As has been the pattern over the past few years, eight three percent of homeowners who are delving into a kitchen rehab are changing the room’s style. Top designs include transitional (twenty three percent), followed by modern (fourteen percent) and contemporary (twelve percent). Still love the modern farmhouse look? It remains in the mix and even went up a point from last year, to eleven percent.

Open floor plans are still going strong

Photo by Paragon Custom Builders 

When it comes to kitchen design, the open plan is still in vogue. Last year, interest in this look dropped a bit, but per the latest numbers, forty percent of renovating homeowners are opting for cook spaces that are open to the rest of their interiors, which is up from thirty eight percent in the previous year.

What’s more, twenty percent of folks are even looking to open up their new kitchens to the outdoors, with a set of double doors or row of doors taking the top choice (forty six percent), a single door after that (twenty nine percent), and a pass-through window last, at fourteen percent.

White still rules, with wood tones next

Photo by rk MILES, Inc. 

Forty percent of homeowners surveyed still want white cabinets in their kitchens, but wood-toned options are gaining traction, up three percentage points, to twenty four percent, this time around. And for those homeowners who are into contrasting island cabinet doors, black as well as medium and dark wood shades all increased at least two percent percentage points in 2022.

But blue (twenty four percent) and gray (fifteen percent) still win the kitchen island color contest, even though these hues declined two and three percentage points respectively since last year.

Electronic upgrades are everywhere

Photo by Mannino Cabinetry 

Sustainability, pretty colors, and a breezy open flow don’t mean a thing if you can’t charge all of the family phones in one easy spot. Electronic improvements continue to increase in desirability, per the report, which includes docking stations (forty nine percent, up nine percentage points), wireless speakers for rocking out during Taco Tuesday (thirty seven percent, up eleven percentage points), and stereos (up ten percentage points, to twenty pecent).

Homeowners also crave high-tech bells and whistles in their faucets and appliances. Sink tap choices include ones that save water (twenty four percent) and those that offer touch-only or touch-less activation (twenty three percent).

As for fridges and other big-ticket items, folks are putting in appliances with Wi-Fi connections (25%) and ones that can be controlled from a phone or tablet (twenty four percent).

Put that contractor on speed dial

Photo by M Prevost Design 

Homeowners know they need the right person on the job when it comes to kitchen rehabs, which is why eight four percent still pick a pro rather than going the DIY route. General contractors rank the highest (fifty percent), with kitchen designers (twenty two percent), interior decorators (fifteen percent), and architects (eleven perent) following behind.

And to get those green touches just right, three percent of us are hiring a dedicated source to advise on all things eco-friendly in the kitchen. Mother Earth thanks you!

The post 2023’s Top Kitchen Trends Are All About Saving Money, Honey appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.

 


 

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