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9 Home Improvements That Are Almost Never Worth the Money

OwnerHacks Editorial Team drafted this article for homeowners. Caleb Hollis then reviewed it for judgment, defensibility, and real-world housing relevance. Reviewer profileEditorial teamEditorial policyDisclaimer

Not every home improvement pays you back. Some actually hurt your return when it’s time to sell. And yet people keep making these upgrades, convinced they’re “investing in the house.” They’re not. They’re just spending money.

To be clear — if a project genuinely makes you happier in your home, go for it. But go in with your eyes open about what you’ll recoup. Here are the worst offenders.

1. Swimming Pool

The big one. An inground pool runs $40,000–$80,000 to install. Typical ROI at resale? About 7%. Not a typo. Spend $50,000, get maybe $3,500 in added value. And some buyers actively avoid pool homes — the maintenance, liability, and insurance implications scare them off.

Speaking of which, your homeowners insurance goes up. Your property taxes go up. The weekly chemical and cleaning costs add up. A pool is a lifestyle decision, not an investment. Know the difference.

2. Over-the-Top Kitchen Remodel

A minor kitchen refresh (new countertops, cabinet refacing, updated hardware, paint) returns about 75–80%. Solid. But a full gut job with commercial appliances, custom cabinetry, and imported tile? Maybe 50–60% back.

Here’s the problem: overcapitalizing. A $90,000 kitchen in a $300,000 house doesn’t make it a $390,000 house. It makes it a $330,000 house with a really nice kitchen. The neighborhood sets the ceiling. Always has.

3. Converting the Garage

Turning a garage into a bedroom, office, or game room sounds practical. But most buyers want a garage. In fact, lack of a garage is a deal-breaker for a huge percentage of them. You gain 400 square feet of living space but lose way more in resale appeal.

Exception: three-car garage and you convert one bay? Minimal impact. Otherwise, don’t.

4. Sunroom Addition

Sunrooms cost $20,000–$80,000 and return about 50% on average. The issue? Many aren’t truly conditioned space — too hot in summer, too cold in winter. And appraisers sometimes don’t even count them in the home’s GLA (gross living area). If it doesn’t count as living space in the appraisal, it barely moves the value needle.

In Florida, where you’d think sunrooms would be a big draw, they’re often just glorified screen porches that don’t factor into square footage. Frustrating for sellers who spent serious money on them.

5. Luxury Bathroom Upgrade

Same story as the kitchen. Basic bathroom update (new vanity, fixtures, tile, fresh paint) returns about 70%. Spa-style renovation with heated floors, frameless glass, freestanding tub? Maybe 40–50%. Buyers appreciate clean and updated. They won’t pay a premium for your marble slab walls.

Keep the upgrade restrained

If you are refreshing a bathroom, spend like a buyer will notice — not like a showroom.

A clean vanity, faucet, sink, or shower-door update can make sense. The trap is turning a practical refresh into an overbuilt luxury project the market will not repay.

Affiliate disclosure: OwnerHacks may earn a commission if you buy through this link, at no extra cost to you.

Compare restrained bathroom fixtures →

6. Built-In Electronics and Smart Home Overkill

Custom entertainment centers, whole-house audio, elaborate smart home setups — all depreciating faster than the tech they run on. Today’s cutting-edge is tomorrow’s obsolete. A $15,000 home theater system is worth approximately $0 at resale because the next owner wants their own setup.

Simple smart features? Fine. Thermostat, doorbell camera, smart locks — cheap and universally liked. But don’t go crazy.

7. Removing Bedrooms

Knocking down a wall to turn two small bedrooms into one big one sounds great. But you just reduced your bedroom count, and homes are priced partly by bedrooms. Going from 4-bed to 3-bed can cost $10,000–$30,000 in value depending on the market.

Need more space? Find it somewhere that doesn’t kill your bed count.

8. Elaborate Landscaping

Basic curb appeal (clean mulch, trimmed shrubs, maintained lawn) absolutely adds value. But a $25,000 custom landscape with water features, exotic plants, and hardscaping? You’ll see maybe 15–20% back. And elaborate landscaping requires constant maintenance that intimidates buyers who don’t want the commitment.

9. Wall-to-Wall Carpeting (Over Hardwood)

This used to be common. People actually covered hardwood floors with carpet. If that’s your house — rip it up. There might be gold underneath. But installing new carpet over existing hard floors? You’re spending money to reduce your home’s value. Hard surface flooring is overwhelmingly what today’s buyers want.

What Actually Returns Well

For comparison, here’s what consistently delivers strong ROI: garage door replacement (95%+), minor kitchen refresh (75–80%), manufactured stone veneer (90%+), new entry door (75%), roof replacement (60–70% plus insurance savings), and basic maintenance and repairs that prevent bigger problems down the road.

The pattern is obvious. Maintenance and modest updates pay off. Luxury upgrades and major additions mostly don’t. Spend money on what keeps the house solid. Not on what impresses the neighbors.

Sources reviewed

  • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau home buying guidance
  • HUD buyer and closing guidance
  • Fannie Mae consumer homeownership references
  • Freddie Mac My Home buyer guidance

Keep Reading

Pressure-test the project first

Some improvements are lifestyle choices, not value plays. Use the ROI calculator before assuming the project pays you back.

Check ROI →
Decision path

Best next move if the real question is value protection

Projects feel simple until they hit permits, resale, or insurance. Check the broader guide, then compare this idea against the fixes that matter more.

Official resources and reference points

This page is homeowner education, not a property-specific appraisal, legal opinion, tax advice, or lender/carrier instruction. Use these when a project decision affects safety, permits, energy cost, resale, or insurability and you want something sturdier than a contractor sales pitch.

Why this article is worth trusting

Caleb Hollis reviewed this page. He reviews homeowner education on home value logic, cost realism, Florida housing questions, and decision quality.

See the reviewer profile and editorial team profile for who does what. OwnerHacks publishes homeowner education, not property-specific appraisal work, legal advice, tax advice, lending advice, or insurance advice.

OwnerHacks updates articles when rules, costs, or homeowner decision factors materially change. If something looks outdated, use our contact page and we will review it.

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