When the kitchen no longer works for you, the big question often comes down to two choices: extend it or simply remodel what you already have. Both approaches can dramatically improve how you live day to day, but the right answer depends on your space, budget, lifestyle and the home you live in.
This guide explains the difference between a kitchen extension and a kitchen remodel, the pros and cons of each, and the key things to think about before you decide.
Understanding the Two Options
Before comparing them, it helps to be clear on what each option actually means.
Kitchen extension
An extension means increasing the physical footprint of your kitchen by building outwards. This could be to the rear, to the side, or wrapping around a corner. It involves new foundations, walls, a roof and connecting the new space seamlessly to the existing house. It gives you more square metres to work with.
Kitchen remodel
A remodel means working within the existing walls. You may knock down internal partition walls; change the layout; replace all units and appliances; update plumbing and electrics; and refresh the floors, walls and lighting. The overall footprint stays exactly the same.
Both options can include new kitchens, but one adds space while the other rearranges it.
Things to Think About First
Why do you need to change your kitchen?
Be honest about the problem you are trying to solve. Is the kitchen too small? Is there not enough storage or worktop space? Is the layout awkward and frustrating? Do you need space to eat as a family? Do you want an open-plan feel? Your answer will immediately point you more towards one solution.
How much outdoor space can you use?
If you are thinking about extending, you need available land. A rear extension uses garden space. A side return uses the narrow passage often found next to the kitchen in terraced houses. If you have very little outdoor area or it is already heavily used, an extension may not be possible without sacrificing something you value.
What is the condition of your existing kitchen?
A remodel often makes more sense if the footprint is actually fine but the kitchen itself is tired, poorly laid out or falling apart. If the room is structurally sound and gets good light, a full remodel can bring it back to life without touching the walls.
Planning permission
Many kitchen extensions fall under permitted development, but there are limits on size, height and proximity to boundaries. Side extensions and two-storey additions often need permission. A remodel that only changes the interior and does not alter the outside of the house almost never needs planning permission. Always check your local rules before committing.
Budget reality
Generally, a remodel costs less than an extension because you are not building new foundations, walls and a roof. However, a high-end remodel with structural wall removal, underfloor heating and bespoke joinery can still reach a significant cost. An extension adds square metres, which usually adds more value, but it comes with a higher price tag.
Kitchen Extension – In Detail
A kitchen extension physically expands your home. It can be done in several ways.
Common types of kitchen extension:
- Rear extension: Built across the back of the house, often opening onto the garden with large glass doors.
- Side return extension: Fills the narrow alleyway along the side of a terraced or semi-detached kitchen, widening the room.
- Wrap-around extension: Combines a rear and side return, creating an L-shaped space around the existing back wall.
- Small infill extension: Uses a small unused area like a corner of the garden or a courtyard to add just a few extra metres.
Pros of a kitchen extension:
- Creates genuinely more floor space for a larger kitchen, dining area, and seating.
- Allows a complete change in how the ground floor flows, often linking the kitchen to the garden.
- Typically adds more natural light through roof glazing, bifold doors or large windows.
- Usually adds significant value to the property.
Cons of a kitchen extension:
- More expensive due to building work.
- Takes longer, often several months.
- Reduces your garden or outdoor area.
- May require planning permission and building regulations approval.
- Causes significant disruption to daily life while work is underway.
- You may need to temporarily move out or set up a temporary kitchen.
A kitchen extension is ideal when the existing room is simply too small, no amount of rearranging will fix it, and you have the land and budget to expand.
Kitchen Remodel – In Detail
A kitchen remodel transforms the space you already have. It can be as simple as new cabinets and worktops, or as involved as removing internal walls to open the kitchen to the dining room.
What a remodel can include:
- Removing non-load-bearing walls to create an open-plan kitchen-diner.
- Reconfiguring the layout entirely – moving the sink, cooker, and fridge positions.
- Upgrading all units, worktops, flooring, lighting and appliances.
- Replastering, repainting and replacing windows or doors within the existing openings.
- Improving storage with better-designed cabinets and pull-out systems.
Pros of a kitchen remodel:
- Lower cost compared to an extension.
- Quicker to complete, often a matter of weeks.
- No loss of garden or outdoor space.
- Usually does not need planning permission.
- Less disruptive structurally.
Cons of a kitchen remodel:
- Cannot increase the physical size of the room.
- If the kitchen is very small, you are limited by the footprint.
- May reveal hidden problems like old pipework, damp or poor electrics once walls are opened.
- If you remove a load-bearing wall, you will need a steel beam and building regulations approval, which adds time and cost.
A kitchen remodel is ideal when the size is adequate but the layout, look or functionality is not working. It is also the right choice when budget or planning restrictions rule out an extension.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | Kitchen Extension | Kitchen Remodel |
|---|---|---|
| Space gained | Significant extra floor space | No additional space, but can feel larger with an open-plan layout |
| Typical cost | Higher overall investment | Lower than an extension |
| Project length | Several months | A few weeks to a couple of months |
| Planning permission | Often needed, although many projects fall under permitted development | Rarely required unless structural walls are removed or the property is listed |
| Outdoor space impact | Usually reduces garden, patio, or side return space | No impact on outdoor areas |
| Light improvement | Major improvement with roof lights, bifold doors, and glazing | Moderate improvement depending on window upgrades |
| Value added | Usually adds significant property value | Can add good value depending on design and finish quality |
| Disruption level | Higher disruption and may require a temporary kitchen setup | More manageable and often allows limited kitchen use during works |
How to Decide – Which One Is Better for You?
Ask yourself these questions. Your answers will point you in the right direction.
Is the current kitchen big enough for how we want to use it?
If yes, remodel. If not, and you have space outside, consider an extension.
Do we need a dining area, a family space, or room for more people to be in the kitchen at the same time?
If the answer is yes and the current room cannot fit this, extending is usually the only real solution.
Is our garden small, or is the outside space very important to us?
If you cannot afford to lose any garden, a remodel may be the only option, or you could look at a very small infill extension that uses an awkward corner.
What is our budget, realistically?
A modest remodel is almost always cheaper than an extension. If funds are limited, a well-planned remodel gives you a beautiful working kitchen for less.
How long can we cope with disruption?
A remodel can be done fairly quickly. An extension will put your kitchen out of action for a longer period.
Do we plan to stay in this house long-term?
If you intend to move within a few years, consider the return on investment. An extension often adds more resale value, but only if it is done well and suits the area. In some neighbourhoods, a really well-executed remodel also adds solid value.
What do other houses on our street have?
If every similar house has already been extended, not having an extension might affect your future sale. If all your neighbours have kept the original footprint, extending could make your home stand out in a positive way.
Can you combine both?
Yes. Many homeowners start with an extension to create a larger shell, then complete a full remodel within that new space. This is often the best overall result because you gain both size and a perfectly tailored layout. However, it costs the most and takes the longest.
A more phased approach is to extend first, create a basic working kitchen, and then upgrade fittings and finishes later when the budget allows.
