Solid Site Studios
Remodeler websitesStarting at $850

Home Remodeler Website Design in Utah

Home remodeler website design example with a warm kitchen hero image

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Tell us whether the remodeler needs more kitchens, bathrooms, basements, additions, or whole-home project inquiries.

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Why remodel pages convert differently

The best remodeler page makes the finished room feel real and the disruption feel managed.

Remodel buyers are judging two things at once: will the finished home feel worth the cost, and will the process feel organized while the family still lives there? A stronger remodeler page should answer both before the estimate ever starts.

01

Show the room type clearly

Separate kitchens, baths, basements, additions, and whole-home work so the visitor can recognize their project fast.

02

Show how the job is controlled

Written scope, materials, start and finish expectations, cleanup, and daily protection make an occupied-home remodel feel safer to start.

03

Show how the home works better after

Storage, layout, lighting, ventilation, and future-friendly accessibility details make the upgrade feel smarter, not just prettier.

High-value remodel details to feature

  • Written scope, materials, timing, cleanup, and warranty trust signals
  • Occupied-home protection: dust control, room separation, and daily reset expectations
  • Pre-1978 home awareness and lead-safe credibility where older homes are involved
  • Bathroom moisture and ventilation thinking, not just surface finishes
  • Aging-in-place or safer-living options for longer-term usability
  • Finished-room proof that makes the disruption feel worth it
What real remodel buyers quietly screen for

Turn the page into a plan for living through the remodel, not just admiring the reveal.

Strong remodeler pages do more than sell a pretty after photo. They show project fit, older-home awareness, occupied-home discipline, and the practical details that make kitchens, baths, basements, additions, and whole-home updates feel safe to begin.

Separate the project lanes early

Kitchens, baths, basements, additions, and larger whole-home work should not blur together. Each lane carries different photos, budgets, selections, and emotional stakes, so the visitor should feel their project type immediately.

Make the lived-in process visible

Families want to know how the company handles dust, room protection, access, cleanup, and the day-to-day reality of a remodel while the house is still functioning. That trust detail is far more valuable than extra filler copy.

Make the result feel better to live in

The page should elevate the details that change daily life: better storage, better flow, better lighting, better ventilation, and options that support safer long-term living instead of treating the remodel as a style update only.

Page directions built for real remodel decisions

Compare a project-lane direction, an occupied-home trust direction, and a higher-end transformation direction built specifically for remodel buyers.

Three remodeler homepage directions

Three ways to separate kitchens, baths, basements, additions, and lived-in remodel trust signals without letting the page feel busy.

What remodel buyers want to see

  • Separate lanes for kitchens, baths, basements, additions, and bigger renovations
  • Occupied-home trust: cleanup, room protection, phasing, and calm communication
  • Older-home awareness, especially when pre-1978 conditions may matter
  • Proof that the result improves daily life, not only the finishes

Best fit

Best for kitchen and bath remodelers, basement finishers, addition builders, whole-home renovation firms, and design-build brands that need more process trust and higher-value storytelling.

FAQ

Can one remodeler page handle kitchens, baths, basements, and additions without feeling messy?

Yes. Strong remodeler pages can separate each project lane clearly so the visitor sees the right fit fast instead of sorting through one blended service list.

Should the page talk about living in the home during the remodel?

Yes. Families want to know how the company handles cleanup, phasing, access, and day-to-day disruption while the home is still occupied.

Can older-home details like lead-safe work and dust control make the page stronger?

Yes. Older-home awareness makes the remodeler feel more credible, especially when the page signals lead-safe practices, protection of lived-in areas, and a cleaner work process.

Can aging-in-place or accessibility upgrades fit naturally on a remodel page?

Yes. That lane can sit naturally beside kitchens, baths, and additions because many families are planning for safer long-term living, not only a prettier room.