If you've been living in your home for a few years, there's a good chance both your kitchen and at least one bathroom are on your renovation list. The question most homeowners run into isn't whether to remodel — it's which one to tackle first.
The honest answer is that it depends. But there are a few clear frameworks for thinking it through — and the right choice usually becomes obvious once you weigh the right factors.
Start with the one causing daily pain
The simplest way to prioritize is to ask yourself: which space frustrates me more on a Tuesday morning? If your kitchen is a cramped, poorly lit obstacle course every time you try to cook dinner, that's a real daily quality-of-life issue. If your main bathroom is one person's bottleneck during the morning rush, that pain compounds every single day too.
Renovations should make your life better — not just look better in photos. The project that will most immediately improve how your household functions is often the right place to start.
Think about which one will disrupt you more
A kitchen remodel typically creates more household disruption than a bathroom remodel. You'll be without a functional cooking space for weeks, which means more takeout, more paper plates, and more creative workarounds. If you can plan around that — or if you have a secondary sink or outdoor grill to lean on — it may not be a dealbreaker. But for families with young kids or busy schedules, the logistics matter.
A bathroom remodel is more contained in scope, but if you're remodeling your only full bathroom, the disruption is just as real. In that case, it's worth thinking carefully about timing — and whether you'd have access to another bathroom during construction.
Consider return on investment
Both kitchen and bathroom remodels consistently rank among the highest-return home improvement projects. That said, kitchens tend to carry more weight in home valuations — they're the room buyers scrutinize most closely, and a well-designed kitchen can meaningfully move a home's asking price.
Bathrooms, especially primary bathrooms, are close behind. A spa-quality master bath is a strong selling point. And if your home has only one full bathroom, upgrading it punches above its weight for resale.
If resale is your primary motivator, kitchen first is usually the conventional wisdom. If you're staying put and want to improve daily life, let your own frustrations guide you.
Budget sequencing matters more than people realize
Doing both projects back-to-back — or even within the same year — can be a smart move if your budget allows for it. Design decisions can be coordinated so materials, finishes, and hardware feel cohesive throughout the home. You also avoid the disruption of two separate construction phases spread out over years.
If budget means you're choosing one for now, it's worth having a conversation about sequencing early. Some structural or plumbing decisions in a kitchen remodel can make a future bathroom project easier (or harder) depending on where the walls are opened. A design team that handles both can help you plan smarter from the start.
You don't have to decide alone
At Cumberland Kitchen and Bath, we do exactly this — full kitchen remodels and full bathroom remodels, often for the same homeowner. We're happy to walk you through both projects at a first consultation, look at your home's specific layout and priorities, and help you build a plan that makes sense for your timeline and budget.
Contact us today to schedule your consultation. Bring your wish list for both rooms — let's figure out the best place to start.





