What to Bring to Your In-Home Design Consult in San Diego

In-Home Design Consultation Checklist for San Diego Homeowners

What to Have Ready for Your In-Home Design Consultation


When our designer or project consultant comes to your home, that visit is when we figure out what you want, what your house allows, and how to align it with a realistic budget and timeline. The more prepared you are, the faster we can move from “ideas” to “here’s your plan.”

Because San Diego homes often have HOAs, coastal rules, and older construction, having a few things ready on the day of your in-home consultation helps us provide better answers right there on-site.

This blog walks you through exactly what to have ready so that the first visit really counts. We’ll cover what photos to take, the kind of inspiration that’s most helpful, the basic home details we’ll ask about, and why things like HOA rules, coastal guidelines, and previous DIY work matter so much here. You’ll also see how to outline your must-haves vs. nice-to-haves, think about your budget range, and what questions to ask us while we’re there.

Use this as your prep guide before we arrive — and if you’d rather keep it simple, you can also download the free checklist version to keep on your phone or print out for the day of your appointment.

Here’s what to have ready.

Download Your Free Checklist

Prefer to listen instead? We walked through this same prep list in a podcast-style format — what to show us, what helps us price faster, and how to avoid extra back-and-forth. Hit play if you’d rather listen than read.


Key Takeaways

  • The more you prep, the more accurate your design and pricing will be on day one.
  • Photos + inspiration + basic home info = faster decisions.
  • HOA/coastal rules in San Diego can slow projects down, so having them ready helps a ton.
  • A clear must-have vs. nice-to-have list lets us design to your budget.
  • Being honest about your budget range helps you avoid designs you can’t afford.
  • You don’t have to print anything — phone photos and Pinterest are totally fine.

Why this matters: An in-home consult isn’t just a “look around” — it’s where we start building the real plan for your remodel. When you can show us the space, the style you want, and the rules your home must follow, we can skip the guesswork and start talking about actual solutions for your San Diego home. Now, let’s go through what to have ready.


What Your Designer Needs to Make That Visit Count

An in-home consult works best when we can see your space, your style, and your constraints all at once. That’s how we go from “tell me about your project” to “here’s what this could actually look like in your San Diego home” in a single visit. The checklist below isn’t busywork — it’s what lets us give you real ideas, tighter ranges, and a smoother path to permits and construction.

1. Existing Conditions We’ll Want to See

We’ll walk the space, but it helps if we can also see:

  • The rooms you want to remodel (kitchen, bath, primary, addition area)
  • Access points: side yard, garage, back yard, where materials would go
  • Any problem spots: cracking, water damage, walls you want to remove
  • Exterior areas, if you’re thinking about an addition, ADU, or outdoor space

If an area can’t be accessed that day (tenant space, locked garage, side yard with dogs), have a few photos ready to show us on your phone.

Designer and homeowners assessing existing conditions for a home renovation

2. Your Inspiration (Phone/Pinterest Is Fine)

You don’t have to print anything — just have 5–10 images ready to show:

  • Kitchens or baths you like
  • Color palettes (light, warm, coastal, Spanish-modern)
  • Tile/cabinet looks you’re drawn to
  • Indoor–outdoor ideas you want to copy

The key is telling us what you like in each image — the ceiling, the island, the cabinet color, the lack of uppers, the archway, the plaster hood. That’s how we translate “I like this vibe” into something that works in your house.

Homeowners sharing design inspiration photos on a smartphone with a consultant

3. Basic Info About Your Home

Have this information handy (or be ready to tell us):

  • The year your home was built
  • Whether you’re in an HOA (and if they need to approve exterior changes)
  • Whether you’re in a coastal/view-sensitive area
  • Whether the home has had additions or DIY work in the past
  • Any known issues: old plumbing, electrical panel at capacity, rooms that get too hot

This helps us design for reality, not for a plan that later gets slowed down by San Diego rules.

Reviewing blueprints and property history documents before a remodel

4. Your Must-Haves vs. Nice-to-Haves

This is one of the most useful things you can prep.

Must-haves might be:

  • Open the kitchen to the family room
  • Add a real shower to the guest/primary bath
  • Create more storage
  • Add a downstairs bedroom for parents

Nice-to-haves might be:

  • Built-in banquette
  • Specialty tile pattern
  • Panel-ready fridge
  • Outdoor kitchen at the same time

When we know what’s non-negotiable and what can be phased or value-engineered, we can shape the project to your budget.

Couple and designer prioritizing remodeling must-haves versus nice-to-haves

5. Your Realistic Budget Range

This is where homeowners help us the most.

You already have access to KDR’s blogs on San Diego kitchen costs, bath costs, whole-home remodels, additions, and ADUs — so you probably have a ballpark already. Tell us that range.

Why? Because if we know you want to stay, say, in the $120k–$150k range, we won’t design a $225k solution. And if you’re ready to invest more to get everything done at once, we can show you that path too.

It’s not about upselling — it’s about not wasting your time.

Discussing realistic remodeling budget ranges for a San Diego project

6. HOA or Community Rules (If You Have Them)

If you live in a planned community, townhome, or coastal area, have your HOA guidelines ready — even a PDF or email is fine.

That way we can:

  • Design to their color/material standards
  • Avoid exterior details they won’t approve
  • Tell you if we need to submit to them before starting

It’s a small step that saves weeks later.

Reviewing HOA community rules to ensure remodel compliance

7. Your Timeline Reality

Let us know if you’re trying to:

  • Be done before the holidays
  • Avoid construction during school testing
  • Remodel before listing
  • Combine interior and exterior work

We can align that with real San Diego timelines (permits, long-lead materials, trade schedules) and tell you what’s actually possible.

Discussing construction timelines, permits, and project start dates

8. Questions You Should Ask Us While We’re There

Use the in-home consultation to understand our process, not just the design.

Ask:

  • Who will be my main point of contact during construction?
  • Do you handle permits with the City of San Diego?
  • How do you handle change orders?
  • How often will I get progress updates?
  • When could you realistically start if I said yes this month?
  • What can I do to keep the project moving?

Good remodels = good communication.

Homeowners asking construction questions during an initial design consultation

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I really need to have a budget ready before the in-home consultation?

It helps a lot. You don’t have to know the exact number, but even a range tells us whether to propose a full reconfiguration or a lighter refresh. Without a budget, we either have to guess or come back to you later.

What if I don’t have HOA documents yet?

Bring whatever you have — even an email or link to your HOA guidelines. If you truly don’t have them, tell us you’re in an HOA so we don’t design something they’re likely to reject (like certain exterior changes or rooftop spaces).

I only have screenshots and Pinterest saves — is that okay?

Yes. Phone photos, Instagram saves, and Pinterest pins are all fine. Just narrow it down to 5–10 and tell us what you like in each image so we don’t guess wrong on style.

What if I’m not sure about my “must-haves” yet?

That’s normal. Start with the problems you want to solve — “no storage,” “closed-off kitchen,” “bath not functional.” We can help you turn that into a must-have vs. nice-to-have list during the visit.

Will you still come out if I’m remodeling in phases?

Yes. In fact, telling us you want to phase the remodel is important in that first meeting. We can design the whole vision once, then show you a smart order to build it without redoing work later.

Can you give me pricing at that first visit?

If you have photos, a clear scope, and a realistic budget range, we can usually talk through ballparks or likely ranges. Exact numbers come after design and selections, but good prep makes that pricing step faster.


Ready to Schedule Your In-Home Design Consultation?

Having these things ready — photos, inspiration, HOA rules, budget range, and your must-haves — helps us give you better ideas and a clearer path on day one.

Schedule your complimentary in-home design consultation by calling 858-271-1005, and we’ll walk through your San Diego home, talk through your goals, and outline the next steps.

If you’re still exploring ideas or want a clearer understanding of remodeling costs, timelines, and design options, we also offer free design and remodeling seminars for San Diego homeowners. It’s a great way to get your questions answered before starting the process. Apply to attend our next seminar and learn directly from our design-build experts.


Posted In - Home Remodel on Nov 25, 2025