
When you remodel a kitchen, it’s easy to get caught up in how beautiful it will look—sleek cabinets, pretty backsplash, fancy fixtures. But after the dust settles, many homeowners find themselves living with decisions that are more frustrating than fabulous. We’ve collected the most common regrets people have, and how to avoid making the same mistakes in your kitchen.
1. Layout Mistakes
- Awkward appliance placement — Maybe the fridge is too far from your prep space or the stove, or the dishwasher opens into a tight corner. What looked good on paper doesn’t always feel good in motion.
- Corner cabinets that are useless — They look neat, but often half the storage is hard to reach.
- Not enough prep/counter space — Too many times people regret having all appliances but no spare surface where they can chop, set down, or prep.
- Poor outlet planning — You want outlets where you’ll need them: near the islands, next to the mixer, etc., not hidden behind furniture.
- Pot drawers and specialized storage — Deep drawers for pots and lids, appliance garages, pull-out pantry shelves: you’ll appreciate these every day.
Pro Tip: Before picking up your paint brush or ordering cabinets, tape cardboard or painter’s tape onto the floor to map out island size, appliance spaces, walkway widths. Pretend you’re making breakfast or kids are coming in. Make sure your space works for you and your family.

2. Choosing Finishes Poorly
- Picking something trendy but hard to live with—like a backsplash with lots of grout lines, matte black faucets, or dark cabinets that reveal EVERY fingerprint.
- Choosing finishes that scratch easily, stain, or are difficult to clean. What looked beautiful under showroom lights might look terrible in kitchen lighting after a month.
- Forgetting to test samples under your own lighting. Place them in your kitchen, watch how they look throughout the day. Leave glasses of water on engineered stone or quartz to see if water marks stay.
3. Underestimating Costs & Surprises
- Hidden plumbing/wiring issues — once walls are opened, sometimes outdated or insufficient wiring or plumbing need to be upgraded.
- Fixture delays, discontinued items, shipping damage — all of these can stretch the timeline and increase cost.
- Permits, inspections, and fees that weren’t planned for. Sometimes these are small, but they add up.
- Differences in what you thought vs what’s possible — like ideal ceiling height, venting hood requirements, or expensive vents/ducts.
4. Skipping Practicalities
- Not enough lighting: task lighting under cabinets, proper overhead lighting, dimmers for mood.
- Not enough outlets or USB charging ports—kitchen is one of the biggest places people use gadgets.
- Poor storage: lack of drawers, deep cabinets that hide what’s inside, no appliance storage on counters to avoid clutter.
- Investing in a walk-in pantry (if space allows) → many wish they had given up some dining room or adjacent space just to get more storage.
- Appliance drawers or appliance garages: for blenders, Instapots, mixers, crockpots—if you love cooking or baking, having them accessible but not cluttering the countertop makes a huge difference.
Final Thoughts

A kitchen renovation is more than looks. It’s about how you live in your kitchen. How many people cook at once? How many gadgets are in rotation? What types of foods do you prepare?
If you plan for how you actually live, not just what looks good, you’ll finish the project with a kitchen that works—beautifully and practically—for years.