Adding usable space to your home is one of the most valuable projects most homeowners will ever take on. It is also one of the most complex. In Onslow and Pender Counties, addition costs have risen significantly since 2020 due to material inflation, labor shortages, and tightened building code requirements. This guide gives you honest 2026 pricing for the ground-level additions we actually build (sunrooms, screened-in porches, and room additions). These are not lowball bait prices, but real costs you can use for planning.
What we build: ground-level additions. That covers sunrooms, screened-in porches and patios, extra bedrooms, master suites, and bump-outs. We do not build second-story additions. Ground-level additions are less disruptive to live through, avoid major structural reinforcement of your existing home, and typically deliver more usable space per dollar.
Key Takeaways
- Screened-in porches are the most affordable way to add usable space ($15,000-$45,000 typical), but they aren’t weather-tight and are best 8-9 months a year in Coastal NC.
- Three-season sunrooms (vinyl windows, no HVAC) run $25,000-$60,000 and extend usability spring through fall.
- Four-season sunrooms are built to code with insulation and HVAC, count as permanent conditioned living space, and run $45,000-$120,000.
- Ground-level room additions (bedroom, office, den) run $200-$350 per square foot; master suites with a bathroom run $350-$550.
- Permit and design costs typically add $2,500-$8,000, and you should carry 10-15% contingency on any addition to an older home.
Why Additions Cost What They Do in 2026
Material costs have risen 25-40% since 2020 for most residential construction inputs: lumber, OSB, drywall, roofing, windows, HVAC equipment, and electrical components. Labor rates for skilled trades have risen 15-25% in the same period due to ongoing shortages of framers, electricians, and finish carpenters in Eastern NC. Combined, these pressures have pushed addition costs well above the “$150 per square foot” numbers that circulated pre-pandemic.
The good news is that pricing has stabilized in 2025-2026. Material costs are flat or slightly down from 2023 peaks, and labor availability has improved modestly. A project that would have been unpredictable two years ago can now be quoted with reasonable confidence if scope is well-defined up front.
Addition Types and Typical Costs
The cost ranges below assume quality standard construction with mid-range finishes, not builder-grade minimums and not luxury finishes. Adjust accordingly for your specific expectations.
Screened-In Porch or Patio Addition
Typical size: 200-400 square feet Cost per square foot: $60-$120 Total typical cost: $15,000-$45,000
A screened-in porch is the lowest-cost way to add an outdoor-adjacent room. Construction includes a roof tied into the existing house, a floor, screen walls, and a door. It is not weather-tight, since wind-driven rain and cold air pass through the screens, but it is the best value for fresh-air living space. If you already have a deck or patio, converting it into a screened-in porch can lower the cost further because the structure and footing may already be in place.
Three-Season Sunroom
Typical size: 150-350 square feet Cost per square foot: $150-$250 Total typical cost: $25,000-$60,000
A three-season sunroom uses vinyl or single-pane glass windows and typically has no dedicated HVAC, making it comfortable spring through fall but not during the coldest or hottest weeks of the year. It is a popular middle ground between a screened porch and a full four-season room: more weather protection than screens, at a lower cost than a fully conditioned addition. See our sunroom contractors page for build options.
Four-Season Sunroom (Permanent Addition)
Typical size: 150-400 square feet Cost per square foot: $300-$600 Total typical cost: $45,000-$120,000
A four-season sunroom is built to code with insulation, HVAC, and a permanent foundation, so it counts as conditioned living space and adds to your home’s square footage for resale. These are often the most cost-effective way to add true living space because the glass walls are the main feature and interior finish requirements are minimal. Not sure which sunroom fits your home and budget? Our sunroom vs. screened porch comparison breaks down the tradeoffs in detail.
Single-Room Ground-Level Addition (Bedroom, Office, Den)
Typical size: 200-400 square feet Cost per square foot: $200-$350 Total typical cost: $50,000-$140,000
A ground-level single-room addition is the simplest and lowest cost-per-square-foot conditioned addition type. Construction includes new foundation (slab or crawl space), framing, roofing tied into the existing house, siding, windows, door, drywall, flooring, paint, HVAC extension, electrical, and finish trim. No plumbing or kitchen fixtures are required.
What affects the price within this range:
- Foundation type (slab cheaper than crawl space)
- Roof tie-in complexity (simple gable vs. multiple pitches)
- Window count and quality
- HVAC tie-in vs. dedicated mini-split
- Finish level (standard LVP vs. hardwood, painted drywall vs. shiplap accents)
Master Suite Addition (Bedroom + Bathroom + Closet)
Typical size: 400-700 square feet Cost per square foot: $350-$550 Total typical cost: $140,000-$385,000
Master suite additions include a bathroom, which significantly raises the cost per square foot because of plumbing rough-in, waterproofing, tile work, cabinetry, and fixture installation. A walk-in closet adds modest cost if it is standard drywall with wire shelving, significant cost if it includes custom built-ins.
Kitchen Addition or Kitchen Expansion
Typical size: 200-400 square feet of new kitchen space Cost per square foot: $400-$600 Total typical cost: $80,000-$240,000
Kitchen additions are expensive because kitchens are the most finish-dense rooms in a home. Cabinetry, counters, appliances, tile backsplash, pendant lighting, and plumbing fixtures all stack on top of the basic structural cost. Expanding an existing kitchen by bumping out a wall is typically cheaper than adding a completely new kitchen as part of a larger addition.
What’s Included vs. What’s Extra
Addition quotes vary wildly depending on what is actually included. A “$200 per square foot” quote from one contractor might cover dramatically less scope than a “$280 per square foot” quote from another. Before comparing prices, make sure each quote includes all of the following:
Typically included in a complete addition quote
- Architectural drawings (basic)
- Permit fees
- Foundation work
- Framing (walls, floors, roof)
- Roofing (shingles, underlayment, flashing)
- Siding and exterior trim (matched to existing)
- Windows and doors
- Insulation (walls, floor, ceiling)
- Drywall and paint (interior)
- Basic electrical (lights, outlets, switches)
- HVAC extension or mini-split
- Basic flooring
- Standard interior trim
- Site cleanup and debris removal
Commonly excluded (verify with your contractor)
- Custom cabinetry and counters: often line-itemed separately
- Custom tile work: base tile usually included, upgrades extra
- Hardwood flooring upgrade: LVP or carpet usually included as standard
- Appliances: refrigerator, range, dishwasher typically excluded
- High-end fixtures and finishes: standard fixtures included, upgrades extra
- Landscaping restoration: crews damage some landscaping; who pays for replanting?
- Connecting existing rooms: removing walls between the addition and existing rooms is often a separate scope
- Structural engineer fees: usually extra on complex projects
- Upgraded electrical panel: if the existing panel can’t handle the new load
Ask specifically about each item before signing. Unclear scope is the #1 source of budget surprises mid-project.
Pro Tip: When comparing quotes, ask each contractor for a written “scope of work” document that line-items exactly what is and isn’t included. Price comparisons on verbal scope are meaningless.
The Hidden Costs of Older Homes
Homes built before 2000 in Onslow County almost always surface unexpected issues when an addition starts. Common discoveries include:
- Outdated electrical panel that cannot handle the new load (panel upgrade: $2,500-$5,000)
- Knob-and-tube or aluminum wiring that needs to be addressed before permit approval
- Undersized HVAC that cannot serve the added square footage
- Inadequate existing footings or slab at the porch, patio, or sunroom tie-in point
- Non-code-compliant existing construction that gets flagged during inspections
- Rotted framing at the tie-in point between the addition and existing home
- Termite damage discovered during demo of existing walls
None of these are the contractor’s fault. They are consequences of the home’s age and construction history. But they all cost money to address, and they all show up as change orders during the project. Budget 10-15% contingency on any addition over a pre-2000 home.
Warning: Any contractor who quotes a fixed “all-inclusive” price for an addition on an older home without a contingency clause is either naive or hiding something. Hidden issues are inevitable; the question is whether they will be honestly communicated or quietly absorbed with cheaper substitutions.
Permit and Design Costs
Before construction even starts, you will pay for architectural drawings and permits. Typical costs in Onslow and Pender County:
- Basic architectural drawings: $1,500-$4,000 for a single-room addition or sunroom, $4,000-$10,000 for larger or more complex projects
- Structural engineer (if required): $1,500-$5,000
- Onslow County building permit: typically 0.5%-1% of project value ($500-$3,000 for most additions)
- Impact fees and connection fees: vary by jurisdiction, typically $500-$2,500
- HOA review fees (where applicable): $200-$1,000
Total pre-construction costs typically land between $3,500 and $15,000 depending on project complexity. These costs are usually paid to the contractor as part of the contract or directly to the county and architect as separate line items.
Timeline Expectations
Addition timelines run longer than most homeowners expect. Typical 2026 timelines for Onslow County:
- Pre-construction (drawings + permits): 6-12 weeks
- Screened-in porch addition: 4-8 weeks
- Three- or four-season sunroom: 8-14 weeks
- Single-room addition construction: 10-16 weeks
- Master suite addition construction: 14-22 weeks
That means a project you want finished by Thanksgiving should start design work in early summer, not September. Plan ahead.
Call Parade Rest Services at (910) 459-5078 for a free addition consultation. As a licensed NC General Contractor, we handle everything (drawings, permits, construction, and warranty) for homeowners throughout Jacksonville, Richlands, Hampstead, and Pender County. Visit our home addition contractors page for full scope details.