Renovation vs Extension: Which Is Right for Your Home?

Renovation vs Extension: Which Is Right for Your Home?

At some point, most homeowners in Bayside and on the Mornington Peninsula reach the same crossroads: do we renovate what we already have, or do we extend and create more space?

It’s a reasonable question — and the answer isn’t always obvious. Both paths can dramatically improve how your home works for your family. But they involve different budgets, timelines, site considerations, and trade-offs.

The right choice depends on understanding your home, your block, and what you’re genuinely trying to achieve. Here’s how we think about it.

 

What Is a Renovation?

A renovation focuses on improving existing space within your current footprint. You’re not adding floor area — you’re making better use of what’s already there.

Typical renovation scope in our projects includes:

  • Reconfiguring or opening up living areas
  • Full kitchen and bathroom updates
  • Replacing flooring, joinery, and finishes throughout
  • Improving natural light and indoor-outdoor flow
  • Structural changes that improve the layout without expanding the footprint

Renovations work well when the home already has a workable amount of space — but the layout, condition, or functionality no longer suits how the family lives. Many homes in Bayside and on the Peninsula were built in an era when kitchens were separate rooms and living spaces were smaller. A well-considered renovation can fundamentally change how those homes feel without touching the external walls.

What Is a Home Extension?

An extension adds new floor area to the home. You’re physically increasing the size of the building — typically at the rear, to the side, or above.

The most common extension types we work on:

  • Rear extensions creating new kitchen, dining, and living areas
  • Side extensions to widen existing rooms or add a bedroom
  • Second-storey additions for extra bedrooms or a master suite
  • Combined extension and renovation — extending at the rear while updating the rest of the home

Extensions are typically considered when the home is genuinely short on space — there’s not enough room to reconfigure your way out of the problem. If the family has grown, or you want a kitchen and living area that feels open and generous, an extension is usually the answer.

The Real Cost Difference

Cost is one of the most common reasons homeowners choose renovation over extension — but it’s worth understanding what you’re actually comparing.

Renovation costs

A whole-home renovation in Bayside or the Mornington Peninsula typically ranges from $150,000 to $500,000+, depending on scope, finishes, and the condition of the existing structure.

Kitchen and bathroom upgrades, flooring, and joinery are the key cost drivers. Structural changes — like removing walls or improving the roofline — add to that figure.

Extension costs

Rear and side extensions in this part of Melbourne typically start around $250,000–$400,000 for a standard addition. Larger, more architectural extensions — particularly second storeys — often reach $500,000–$900,000+.

Extensions involve structural engineering, planning permits, additional drainage and services, and more complex construction sequencing. The cost reflects that.

The combination approach

In reality, many projects combine both. The rear of the home is extended to create a new open-plan kitchen and living area, while the rest of the house is renovated — new bathrooms, updated bedrooms, improved finishes throughout. This is often the most cost-effective way to deliver a complete transformation.

As a design-and-build company, we scope both the extension and the renovation together from the start, which means the budget is clear before any work begins — not revised once it’s already underway.

Which Adds More Property Value?

Both can improve property value, but they do it differently — and the return depends heavily on the home, the street, and the suburb.

Renovations tend to improve the quality and appeal of a property. A well-executed kitchen and bathroom renovation, combined with improved flow and finishes, can significantly lift value — particularly in established suburbs where buyers expect a certain standard.

Extensions improve the size and liveability of the property. Adding a bedroom, a larger living area, or a generous open-plan kitchen directly affects how many buyers will consider the home — and how much they’ll pay.

In Bayside and on the Mornington Peninsula, properties are expensive enough that the cost of a well-designed extension can absolutely be justified by the lift in value — particularly if the result is a home that competes with new builds in the area. But a poorly planned extension, or one that feels bolted on rather than designed, won’t deliver the same return.

This is where the design component matters. Getting the architecture right — the proportions, the light, the connection to the garden — makes a meaningful difference to both liveability and resale value.

When Renovating Makes More Sense

Renovating is usually the better option when:

  • The home already has enough rooms — the problem is condition or layout, not size
  • The budget doesn’t support the cost of a structural addition
  • Council restrictions or site constraints limit what can be built
  • You want to preserve the character of an older home while updating its functionality
  • The primary goal is a refresh rather than a transformation

Many of the homes we work on in Bayside are federation or inter-war properties with genuine architectural character. A renovation that respects that — while modernising the interior — often delivers a better result than an extension that conflicts with the original form.

When an Extension Is the Right Call

An extension tends to make more sense when:

  • The home is genuinely too small — there’s not enough space to reconfigure your way out of the problem
  • You want a large open-plan kitchen and living area that connects to the garden
  • You need additional bedrooms as the family grows
  • You’re planning to stay in the home long term and want it to genuinely suit your life
  • The block has the capacity to support an addition without compromising the yard

Rear extensions are particularly common in our projects. They allow homeowners to create the kind of generous, light-filled living and dining space that older homes rarely have — while keeping the original character of the front facade intact.

What We Actually Look At When Advising Clients

Before recommending one path over the other, we look at a few specific things:

The existing structure — is there anything worth keeping? A home with strong bones and a good layout is a better candidate for renovation. A home with a fundamentally awkward configuration may need to be extended to fix it properly.

The block — how much site coverage is already used? What setbacks apply? Is the orientation going to work for a rear extension? These are site questions, not just design questions.

The planning overlay — Heritage overlays, neighbourhood character provisions, and council-specific rules can significantly affect what’s possible. We check this early, because discovering a constraint after you’ve committed to a design direction is expensive.

The long-term plan — are you improving this home to live in for the next 20 years, or positioning it for sale? The right answer shapes the brief.

Having an Advanced Diploma of Building Design means our director Matthew approaches every project from the architecture first — understanding how the building works before we talk about budgets. That’s a different starting point to a builder who quotes first and designs second.

So — Which Is It?

The honest answer: if your home has enough space but the wrong layout or outdated condition, renovate. If the home is genuinely too small for how you live, extend. And if you want the best possible result, consider whether a combination of both — done as one coordinated project — might be the most efficient path.

What almost always costs more in the long run is doing one without properly considering the other — renovating beautifully, then realising the house still isn’t big enough, or extending without upgrading the rest of the home to match.

A design-and-build approach means the whole project is scoped and costed from the start — so you’re making decisions with complete information, not finding out the full cost halfway through.

Thinking About Renovating or Extending in Bayside or the Mornington Peninsula?

The best time to have the renovation-vs-extension conversation is before you’ve committed to a direction — when the options are still open and the brief can be shaped properly.

At CDC Victoria, we work through both options with homeowners before any design work begins. It’s a practical conversation, not a sales process — and it often changes what people decide to do.

If you’d like to talk through your home and what might be possible, get in touch with our team. We work with homeowners across Bayside and the Mornington Peninsula on renovations, extensions, and new builds.

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