First renovation post-mortem – I'm doing this myself next time and I want to plan better. Where do I start?

First renovation post-mortem – I'm doing this myself next time and I want to plan better. Where do I start?

A genuine request for advice from a scarred first-timer. What's the single biggest lesson you'd drop in this person's lap?

Year
2026-07-10 09:43
Category
PostMortem

I just finished my first full renovation. Kitchen, two bathrooms, all new floors, new windows, new everything. It took 19 weeks. It should have taken 12. It cost more than I budgeted, took longer than I planned, and aged me about five years.

And I am absolutely, positively, without question going to do it again. But next time? I'm doing it myself.

Not the actual building – I'm not delusional. I can't hang drywall or solder copper. But I'm going to project manage it myself. No general contractor. No 25% overhead. No "I'll handle it" followed by weeks of silence. Just me, a schedule, a list of trades, and a very large spreadsheet.

I know it sounds crazy. Maybe it is. But after watching my GC collect his fee while I did half the coordination anyway, I figure I can do the other half too. And if I'm going to spend the next three years saving for the next project, I want to start planning now – not because I'm eager for more pain, but because I'm determined to make the next one less painful.

So here's my question to the people who've done this before: where do I even start?

What I already know (or think I know):

  • I need to assemble my own team – plumber, electrician, tile setter, carpenter, painter. No GC to coordinate them.

  • I need a realistic schedule that I can actually track.

  • I need a procurement system so I don't order windows 5 weeks late again.

  • I need to understand the order of operations so I know who to call and when.

What I don't know:

  • How do I find good trades without a GC's rolodex? Referrals are great, but I only know a few people who've renovated.

  • How do I schedule trades who are booked weeks in advance? Do I book them before I know the exact start date? What if I'm wrong?

  • How do I handle inspections? Do I call them myself, or does the plumber/electrician handle their own?

  • What happens when a trade doesn't show up? Who's my backup?

  • How do I manage the money? Paying trades in installments, holding back for punch list – how do I not get burned?

  • And the big one: what's the one thing I haven't even thought about yet?

Why I'm posting this now

I'm still in the "never again" phase of post-reno trauma. The dust is still settling (literally). The last punch-list item just got crossed off. But I know myself – in a year or two, I'll forget the pain and start dreaming about the next project.

And when that happens, I want a plan. Not a vague idea. Not a "I'll figure it out." A real, actionable, step-by-step plan that turns "doing it myself" from a fantasy into a workable reality.

So I'm collecting advice now, while the memory is fresh and the mistakes are still sharp.

What I'm asking you:

  • If you've project-managed your own renovation, what's the single most important thing you wish you'd known before you started?

  • What's the biggest risk that no one warned you about?

  • What's the one investment (time, money, or tool) that paid off more than anything else?

  • If you could go back and tell your pre-reno self one thing – just one – what would it be?

I'm not looking for a masterclass. I'm looking for the hard-won, boots-on-the-ground wisdom that doesn't show up in renovation magazines or GC sales pitches.

And I'll start with the one thing I learned from my GC-led project:

My biggest lesson: the GC is not your friend, and the contract is not a promise.

I assumed that because my GC seemed nice and had great references, I could trust him to manage the schedule, coordinate the trades, and keep me informed. I was wrong. Not because he was dishonest – but because he was busy, overcommitted, and had no incentive to communicate proactively. The contract was a list of things he'd do "in the course of the work." It wasn't a promise about when or how well. I spent the whole project chasing him, not the other way around.

Next time, I'm the one doing the chasing – because I'm the one who cares the most.


So now I'm asking you:

  • If you've done this before – what's the one thing you wish you'd known?

  • If you haven't – what's stopping you?

  • If you're a pro reading this – what would you tell me not to do?

I'm genuinely taking notes. I'm creating a document called "Next Reno – Lessons from the Veterans." And I'm going to read it every month until I'm ready to start.