£45,000
- Focused essentials
- Practical finishes

Estimates derived from UK trade benchmark data and regional labour indices, updated May 2026. Methodology →
Kitchen Extension in South West England can swing with access, season, and how busy good contractors are — especially near the coast. We anchor everything in our UK guide, then fold in that regional reality.
In South West England, coastal access and seasonal demand can push contractor lead times and pricing. For the full UK-wide baseline, compare with Kitchen Extension Cost UK.
Pick the path that fits where you are — running early numbers, or pressure-testing a quote you've already got.
Three planning tiers for kitchen extension in South West England, with scope and a representative figure for each. Run your own numbers in the calculator for a tailored range.
£45,000
£68,500
£107,000
| Item | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Single-storey extension shell (15 m²) | £23,000 – £47,500 |
| Kitchen fit-out (mid-range) | £8,400 – £21,000 |
| Kitchen fit-out (premium) | £21,000 – £52,500 |
| Bifold or sliding doors (3–4 m) | £3,700 – £9,500 |
| Full kitchen extension (build + mid kitchen) | £37,000 – £68,500 |
Indicative range: £1,600–£3,700 per m².
Three quick inputs and we'll email you an indicative range. Run the full calculator for a postcode-adjusted estimate.
Use this checklist to spot missing scope before you sign — each item names what should be priced and what to ask for if it isn't.
A kitchen extension involves load-bearing walls (almost always — the existing back wall comes out), so structural calculations are mandatory. Architect drawings are needed for planning (if applicable) and Building Control. These are typically separate from the build quote.
Fair UK range: £2,000–£5,000 architect; £800–£2,500 structural engineer.
Ask: Are architect and structural engineer fees included separately in this quote, or arranged by me?
This is the 'getting weather-tight' phase: digging foundations, building walls (cavity construction with insulation), installing the roof structure, fitting windows and doors. The biggest single cost block on the project.
Fair UK range: £1,400–£2,000/m² for shell construction depending on spec.
Ask: Can you break down the shell cost into foundations, walls, roof, and windows/doors as separate sub-totals?
Kitchen unit cost varies massively (£6k Howdens to £40k+ bespoke). A fair quote separates: carcase/unit cost, worktop, appliances, taps/sink, kitchen fitter labour. Don't let the contractor bundle all this into 'kitchen fit'.
Fair UK range: £8,000–£40,000+ for the kitchen itself depending on spec; £1,500–£3,500 for kitchen fitter labour.
Ask: Can you itemise: units, worktops, appliances, taps/sinks, fitter labour as separate lines?
Electrical (sockets, lighting, cooker circuit, extractor — all Part P certified by NICEIC electrician), plumbing (sink, dishwasher, hot/cold feeds), heating (radiators or underfloor heating connection). These need to be itemised — bundled 'services' line is a red flag.
Fair UK range: £3,500–£7,000 for combined first/second fix services on a typical kitchen extension.
Ask: Are electrics and plumbing itemised separately, with Part P certification by an NICEIC/NAPIT electrician?
The 'final 5%' that often gets squeezed: floor finishing (tile, LVT, polished concrete), painting, skirting, sealing, snagging. Cheap quotes underbid this and you end up either paying extras or moving in to an unfinished kitchen.
Fair UK range: £3,000–£8,000 depending on floor finish and decoration scope.
Ask: What flooring spec is included, and is decoration of the new space and reinstatement of any disrupted areas covered?
Want this run on your actual kitchen extension quote? Upload it and our AI Quote Checker flags missing line items, overcharges and the questions worth asking.
UK-specific signals — each red flag explains why it matters and the question that surfaces the truth.
Why it matters: A kitchen extension involves at least 6 distinct trades: structural builder, electrician (Part P certified), plumber, kitchen fitter, tiler, decorator. A single trader doing all of these is either inexperienced or cutting corners on certification.
Ask: Who specifically does the electrical work and is it Part P notifiable? Who fits the kitchen units?
Why it matters: On a £40k–£80k project, working without a JCT Minor Works contract or equivalent is reckless. There's no defined payment schedule, variation procedure, or dispute mechanism — just vibes.
Ask: Will you work to a JCT Minor Works contract, and how are variations handled — written orders, prior approval?
Why it matters: Underfloor heating (UFH) is laid before the floor screed. If you decide to add UFH AFTER the screed, you're either ripping it up (£3–5k extra) or living without it. A reputable contractor confirms UFH decision in the design phase.
Ask: Is underfloor heating included or decided? It must be agreed BEFORE the screed goes down.
Why it matters: All replacement and new windows/doors must be installed by FENSA or CERTASS-registered installers (Building Regs Part L). Without that registration, you can't get the compliance certificate — a major issue on resale.
Ask: Are the windows and bi-fold doors being installed by a FENSA or CERTASS-registered installer, with compliance certificate provided?
Why it matters: Bundling electrics, plumbing, and kitchen fit into one 'fit-out' line hides where the money is. It's also where contractors substitute lower-spec work without telling you.
Ask: Can you separate electrics, plumbing, and kitchen fit-out into distinct line items with sub-totals?
Why it matters: Kitchen extensions on attached homes almost always trigger the Party Wall Act 1996. Awards take 4–8 weeks and cost £700–£1,500. A contractor who doesn't mention it is hoping you won't notice — until your neighbour serves notice mid-build.
Ask: Will this trigger the Party Wall Act, and have you allowed for surveyor fees and timing?
Why it matters: On a long project (8–14 weeks), upfront payments fund the contractor's other work. If they go bust mid-build, you're an unsecured creditor. Industry norm: stage payments tied to verifiable milestones (foundations, weathertight, first fix complete, completion).
Ask: Can we agree stage payments tied to milestones, with no more than 20% upfront and verifiable inspection at each stage?
Spot a couple of these on your kitchen extension quote? Upload it for a full red-flag scan and fair-rate comparison.
A simple framework, a verbatim script you can paste into an email or text, and the topic-specific levers that move the price.
I've had three quotes for this kitchen extension. Yours is competitive overall, but the shell construction is £X above the median I've received from two other FMB-registered contractors, and the kitchen fit-out line is £Y below. The other quotes specify [brand/spec] units and [bi-fold brand]. Can you walk me through what's included in your shell pricing, and confirm the kitchen spec includes the same components, and let me know if you'll work to a JCT Minor Works contract?
Want to know which line items on your kitchen extension quote are above market before you negotiate? Upload it for a fair-rate comparison.
Vet on competence, insurance, paperwork and process — not price alone. Each question spells out the answer you want and why.
Why it matters: FMB and TrustMark members are vetted on workmanship and finances. They typically offer Insurance-Backed Warranties (IBG). NHBC is for new-build work but signals seriousness.
Why it matters: Recent local references let you visit the actual work and speak to past clients about the experience — particularly variations, communication, and snagging.
Why it matters: Structural design is critical and regulated. The engineer should be IStructE-registered with current PI insurance. Vague 'we'll get one' usually means they don't have an established relationship.
Why it matters: JCT contracts are industry standard and define payment, variations, and dispute resolution. Contractors offering only 'their own terms' usually have less protection for you.
Why it matters: Stage payments tied to verifiable milestones (foundations laid, weather-tight, first fix complete, etc.) protect you if the contractor goes bust. Calendar-based payments don't.
Why it matters: Full Plans is preferable to Building Notice for extensions (you get written approval before work). Some contractors prefer Building Notice (less paperwork, more risk for you).
Why it matters: Kitchen fitting is a separate trade (often 'KBSA member'). Window/door installation requires FENSA or CERTASS for Part L compliance. A single trader claiming to do all of this raises red flags.
Why it matters: Knocking out the back wall creates an open hole. Reputable contractors use temporary weatherproof partitions and dust screens. Vague answers mean ruined carpets and wet rooms.
Why it matters: Industry norm: 10-year insurance-backed warranty (FMB IBG, BuildSure, etc.) for structural; 12–24 months for other workmanship. Verbal-only warranties are worthless if the contractor goes bust.
Why it matters: VAT registration matters for invoicing and warranty enforcement. Public liability of £5M minimum is industry norm for £40k+ projects. Ask to see certificates.
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