If you are planning to sell your Reno home in the next year or two, you have probably asked yourself the same question every Northern Nevada homeowner asks at some point:
"Which projects actually pay back, and which ones just drain the budget without moving the sale price?"
This guide walks through the home improvements that consistently add resale value in Reno, Sparks, Carson City, and the surrounding Northern Nevada communities. We will also be straight about the projects to skip, the 30% rule that keeps you from over-investing, and when a price reduction beats a renovation.
ROI information we're covering in this blog:
Northern Nevada continues to attract buyers relocating from California and other Western states, which keeps demand steady even in a higher-rate environment. But buyers are also more selective than they were two years ago. They'll pay up for a home that is move-in ready, and haggle for one that needs work.
That dynamic is what makes targeted improvements valuable. You're not trying to remodel the whole house. You' re trying to remove the reasons a buyer might walk away or make a low offer.
If you only have time and budget for a few projects, focus here. These are the improvements that consistently return the strongest ROI for Northern Nevada sellers based on Remodeling Magazine's Cost vs. Value Report (West region) and what we see in the field.
Notice what is not on this list: pools, sunrooms, full primary suite additions, and luxury kitchen overhauls. Those projects can absolutely improve your enjoyment of the home, but they rarely return what you put in.
Curb appeal is the single biggest lever in Reno because most home tours start with a drive-by. If the outside looks tired, buyers price it tired before they ever walk in.
A modern insulated garage door is one of the highest-returning projects nationwide, and Reno is no exception. Cost runs around $4,000 to $5,500 for a standard double door with insulation. The visual upgrade is immediate, and the energy story matters here, where attached garages connect to conditioned living space.
A new steel or fiberglass entry door costs $2,000 to $4,000 installed and recovers most of that at sale. It also signals security and craftsmanship before the buyer steps inside.
Manufactured stone applied to a partial front elevation runs $9,000 to $12,000 and transforms the home's curb appeal. This works particularly well on the stucco and lap-siding tract homes common across Spanish Springs, Sparks, and South Reno.
This one is Reno-specific and matters more than most homeowners realize. Buyers paying attention to wildfire risk will discount a property surrounded by overgrown junipers, dead grass, or untrimmed pines too close to the structure. A clean, drought-tolerant front yard with proper plant spacing is both a safety upgrade and a resale upgrade. Budget $5,000 to $15,000 for a meaningful redesign.
Once a buyer is inside, the spaces that close deals are kitchens, primary baths, and main living areas. You do not need to gut them. You need them to feel current and well-maintained.
This is the highest-ROI interior project, full stop.
We are talking about refacing or repainting cabinets, swapping countertops for quartz or granite, updating the backsplash, installing a new sink and faucet, and replacing dated appliances. Total spend for a kitchen refresh is typically $25,000 to $50,000. A full kitchen gut ($75,000+) almost never returns the same percentage.
A focused bathroom update in the primary or hall bath returns 60% to 70% in our market. New vanity, new tile, new lighting, and a clean tile or solid surface shower. Budget $12,000 to $25,000 per bathroom for a contractor-grade refresh.
Worn carpet is a dealbreaker for a meaningful percentage of buyers. Luxury vinyl plank (LVP) in the main living areas runs $8 to $12 per square foot installed and gives the home a unified, modern feel. Refinishing existing hardwood is even better if you have it.
Fresh neutral paint is the cheapest dollar-for-dollar resale upgrade in existence. A whole-home interior repaint runs $5,000 to $10,000 and pays back multiples of that in faster sale time and higher offers.
These are the projects that national resale articles miss but that Northern Nevada buyers absolutely notice.
Reno summers hit triple digits, and winters drop below freezing. An aging HVAC system or original single-pane windows are immediate negotiation points during inspection. Replacing both is rarely glamorous, but it removes thousands of dollars' worth of objections from the buyer's pencil.
Northern Nevada has had ongoing drought conversations for years. Low-flow toilets, efficient faucets, and a water-smart irrigation controller cost a few hundred dollars each and play well with buyers who have been watching their TMWA bill.
Reno buyers come with toys: bikes, skis, kayaks, snowboards, e-bikes, paddleboards. A garage with organized storage, durable flooring, and proper lighting reads as functional square footage. Budget $3,000 to $8,000.
Parts of Washoe County and the surrounding region have elevated radon readings. A documented mitigation system is a small spend ($1,200 to $2,000) that removes a real inspection-stage concern.
Here is a useful guardrail before you start writing checks. The 30% rule says you should not spend more than 30% of your home's current value on a single renovation project, and not more than 30% of total value across all pre-sale improvements combined.
If your Reno home is worth $550,000, that means no single project over about $165,000, and your total pre-sale investment should stay under that same range. For most sellers, the right number is far smaller. We typically see strong returns in the $15,000 to $60,000 range when projects are chosen well.
These are the projects that Reno sellers regularly regret, either because the return is poor or because they actually narrow the buyer pool.
This is the question most home improvement articles dodge. We want you to have all the information. Sometimes, the smartest move financially is to price the home for what it is rather than spend $40,000 to make improvements.
You are usually better off remodeling when:
You are usually better off dropping the price when:
This is the conversation we have with every potential client before any work begins. There is no point spending money on a project that the sale price will not return.
The highest-returning improvements for Reno homes are garage door replacement, entry door replacement, manufactured stone veneer, minor kitchen remodels, and new siding. Each consistently returns 90% or more of its cost in our market. Curb appeal projects tend to outperform interior renovations dollar for dollar.
The 30% rule says you should not spend more than 30% of your home's current market value on any single remodeling project, and your total pre-sale renovation budget should also stay under that threshold. It is a guardrail against over-improving for the neighborhood.
Deferred maintenance on major systems (roof, HVAC, plumbing), unpermitted work, signs of water damage, dated wall-to-wall carpet, overgrown or fire-risk landscaping, and obvious DIY repairs. Any of these can knock 5% to 15% off the sale price or kill a deal at inspection.
A minor kitchen remodel typically returns more dollars and influences more buyers, but bathrooms have a lower threshold for "good enough." If the kitchen already functions well, an updated primary bath is often the better single investment.
No. Renovations only increase value when they match the neighborhood, are well executed, and meet current buyer expectations. Over-personalized, over-priced, or poorly executed work can actually reduce value compared to leaving the space as-is.
Most well-chosen pre-sale projects return between 60% and 110% of cost at sale, with curb appeal and minor kitchen work at the top of that range and major additions at the bottom. The right project, sized correctly, almost always beats the wrong project, no matter how nicely done.
The ROI numbers and recommendations above come from a combination of national data (Remodeling Magazine's Cost vs. Value Report, NAR survey data) and what we see week to week as a licensed remodeling contractor working across Reno, Sparks, Carson City, and the surrounding Northern Nevada communities.
M&G Construction was founded in 2023 by Elisio Medina and Jackie, both civil engineering graduates from the University of Nevada, Reno. Elisio grew up around construction, working alongside his father, then spent several years with established Northern Nevada contractors before launching M&G with a focused mission: bring engineering-grade planning, clear communication, and a predictable process to residential remodeling and restoration.
We don't recommend projects we wouldn't recommend to a family member selling in the same neighborhood. If a remodel doesn't make financial sense for your specific home and timeline, we will tell you, and we'll walk through the alternatives.
Choosing the right project is the hard part, and it depends on your home, your timeline, and your local market.
If you're thinking about selling in the next 12 to 24 months and want a straight conversation about which improvements are actually worth doing on your specific home, we are happy to walk through it with you.