Basement Remodeling Trends 2026: What Iowa Homeowners Need to Know
Iowa homeowners are finishing basements at a faster rate than in previous years, and the reasons have shifted. It is no longer just about adding a rec room. In...
Boone’s older housing stock tells a familiar story. Basements finished in the 1950s through the 1990s with no moisture barrier, outdated materials, and layouts that have not kept pace with how families live today. Drop ceilings, worn carpet, and walls concealing decades of moisture sit behind finishes that look fine until demo day.
Busy Builders tears out what is not working, corrects what the last contractor buried behind the drywall, and rebuilds your lower level into a space your household will use every single day.
Since 2020, Busy Builders has completed 1,285+ construction and remodeling projects across Central Iowa, including hundreds of basement remodels throughout the Des Moines metro and Boone County.
We specialize in basement remodeling in Central Iowa for homeowners whose lower level is already finished but no longer works. Wrong layout. Outdated systems. Water that has been returning behind the walls for years. Full rebuilds are common in Boone, where many basements were finished decades ago with materials and methods that did not account for Iowa’s moisture realities.
We approach every project with a written scope and a straight assessment before any demo begins.
Honest pricing, a clear plan, and no surprise charges on every basement remodeling project in Boone and across Central Iowa.
We tell you exactly what needs to come out, what can stay, and what must be corrected before new work begins. We will not upsell you on work your basement does not need. Boone homeowners deserve a straight answer from a registered contractor who shows up , and that is what we deliver every time.
We want to be the registered general contractor that homeowners in Boone, Madrid, Ogden, Ames, and across Boone County call first for basement remodeling and recommend without hesitation.
Every project we complete is a chance to earn that reputation one more time.
A basement remodel starts differently than a basement finishing project for an unfinished space. The lower level already has walls, flooring, and systems in place. Before any demo begins, we assess what is worth keeping, what needs replacing, and what must be corrected before any new work goes in.
We identify structural walls vs. partition walls, review permit requirements for Boone, and flag every electrical, plumbing, and moisture issue upfront. Many Boone homes built between the 1950s and 1990s have undersized panels, zero GFCI protection near wet areas, and fiberglass batt insulation pressed directly against foundation walls. Learn more about what affects basement finishing price in Des Moines before scoping your project.
You get a written scope of work and a fixed timeline before we touch anything.
Demo reveals what the prior contractor buried. In Boone basements finished before 2000, that often means water staining along the base of foundation walls, mold growing inside fiberglass insulation, and framing that was never protected by a moisture barrier.
Central Iowa’s expansive clay soil holds water against foundation walls under constant lateral pressure. Freeze-thaw cycles open new cracks every winter. Any active moisture source gets resolved before rebuilding begins. According to the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, 71.6% of Iowa homes test above the EPA action level of 4 pCi/L for radon. If mitigation is not already in place, we address it before the rebuild starts.
Read more about what to fix in your Iowa basement before any remodeling begins so you know what to expect at demo.
This is where the new floor plan takes shape. We add, move, or remove walls to create a layout that actually works for your household. In Boone, the most common request is opening up compartmentalized older layouts into connected zones for family living, a dedicated home office, or a private guest suite for multigenerational living.
Pressure-treated lumber is required on all wood-to-concrete contact points per Iowa and IRC code. Walls that hold up the house are properly supported before any removal happens. Iowa code requires a 7-foot minimum ceiling height for all habitable space. We plan every soffit and chase around existing beams and HVAC runs to maximize usable height throughout. See our guide to the best basement layouts for Iowa homes in 2026 for layout ideas before your consultation.
Many Boone basements have small original windows that no longer meet today’s code or natural light expectations. If a remodel adds a bedroom, Iowa code requires an egress window with a minimum 5.7 sq ft net clear opening and a sill no more than 44 inches above the finished floor. A basement bedroom without a compliant egress window cannot be marketed or appraised as a bedroom at resale.
Most egress window installations in the Boone area run $2,500 to $5,000 per window, including excavation and the window well. Even without a bedroom addition, window upgrades bring natural light into a below-grade space and improve ventilation year-round.
We handle all permit filing and inspection scheduling for window work. Learn more about common basement finishing mistakes in Des Moines homes, including the egress window errors that most often derail a resale.
A remodel is the right time to add or upgrade plumbing while the walls are open. Bathroom rough-in in the Boone area typically costs $3,000 to $7,000, depending on distance from the main drain stack. Wet bar drains and supply lines are far easier to run before walls close than after.
If an existing basement bathroom needs updating, we scope it alongside the remodel so work is not duplicated. All plumbing is pulled with required permits and inspected to code by a licensed plumber.
Explore our bathroom remodeling services or read our guide on what a basement bathroom costs in Central Iowa before finalizing your scope.
Older Boone basement electrical is often undersized and out of current code. Iowa’s NEC 2023 state amendment requires GFCI protection on all 125-volt, 15- and 20-amp basement outlets, finished or unfinished, not just near water sources.
Many Boone homes built before 2000 have undersized panels or zero GFCI protection near wet bars and laundry areas. A remodel is the right time to bring everything current. We add outlets, circuits, and dedicated lines for entertainment systems, home offices, and workshops while the walls are open.
All electrical is performed by licensed electricians, pulled with permits, and inspected to code. See our full guide on what to fix in your Iowa basement before any remodeling begins so nothing is missed during the electrical review.
Boone homes built between the 1950s and 1990s often have ductwork that was designed for a different layout than what the original finished basement used. Any wall move during a remodel can put existing vents in the wrong location or block supply runs entirely.
Iowa winters regularly drop below 0°F, and below-grade spaces must have adequate heat distribution to stay comfortable and code-compliant year-round. A basement that runs cold in January is not a usable space , and it is a sign the HVAC system was never properly sized or balanced for the lower level.
Any bathroom added during a remodel requires a code-compliant exhaust fan. That is not optional under Iowa code.
We run a load calculation before extending any ductwork to confirm your existing HVAC system can handle the updated square footage. After the basement work is complete, we balance airflow across the whole house so no room runs hot or cold.
Read about basement air quality and ventilation in Central Iowa to understand what proper mechanical planning looks like below grade.
Boone basements finished before 2000 commonly have fiberglass batt insulation pressed directly against foundation walls. That is a moisture trap. Fiberglass holds water against concrete and grows mold behind finished walls where no one sees it until demo day.
Iowa’s frost line sits at 42 to 48 inches. Below-grade walls need a material that resists cold transfer and blocks moisture vapor. Closed-cell spray foam or rigid foam board is the right call for foundation walls in Iowa’s climate. The U.S. Department of Energy confirms that continuous insulation against foundation walls outperforms cavity insulation for below-grade moisture control.
Spray foam on rim joists seals the most common air-leak point in any Iowa basement. We also add insulation between the basement ceiling and main floor to cut noise transfer between levels.
Read our cost-benefit analysis of spray foam insulation in Iowa for a full breakdown of materials and long-term savings.
Boone basements with any moisture history need mold-resistant drywall on exterior walls. Standard drywall in a below-grade application that has seen water intrusion is a problem waiting to reappear. Many Boone homes built in the 1960s and 1970s have basement walls that show efflorescence or staining that the original finish simply covered over.
Iowa code requires a 7-foot minimum ceiling height for all habitable basement spaces, including bedrooms and family rooms. Bathrooms and laundry areas are allowed at 6 feet 8 inches. Beams and ducts may project down to 6 feet 4 inches in non-habitable zones. We confirm ceiling clearance before any layout is drawn.
Ceiling finish options include drywall for the cleanest look, suspended tile for easy access to mechanicals, or open framing where height allows. We build soffits around ductwork, pipes, and beams to keep sight lines clean throughout every room.
Iowa’s expansive clay soil creates moisture pressure from below during wet seasons. Subfloor prep is not optional in any Boone basement remodel. We check the slab for active moisture before any flooring material goes down.
Luxury vinyl plank is the most practical choice for Iowa basements. It is fully waterproof, handles the temperature swings common below grade, and holds up to heavy daily use. It also outperforms carpet and solid hardwood when Iowa humidity shifts between seasons. Learn more about Iowa flooring options: LVP, hardwood, or tile for basements and which material holds up best below grade.
Tile works well in bathrooms, wet bars, and utility areas. Carpet is still popular for bedrooms and family rooms but requires a proper vapor barrier underneath in any Iowa basement application. We repair or replace subfloor as needed before any new flooring is installed.
Poor lighting is the most common complaint about finished basements. Boone homes with original 1970s and 1980s basement finishes often have undersized fixtures, minimal recessed placement, or lighting designed for a layout that no longer exists. We plan lighting room by room based on ceiling height, intended use, and natural light availability.
Recessed LED cans, pendant fixtures over bars and islands, under-cabinet task lighting, and smart dimmer controls all have a place in a well-planned remodel. Custom features include wet bars, home theaters, built-in shelving, entertainment walls, home offices, gym buildouts, and guest suites. Compare your layout options in our guide to basement gym vs. family room vs. guest suite, which pays off most.
Final finishes cover trim, baseboards, door casings, hardware, outlet covers, towel bars, and cabinet pulls. These are the details that separate a basement that looks done from one that actually is.
Most Boone basement remodels run 8 to 14 weeks from permit approval to final walkthrough. Full rebuilds run 12 to 20 weeks. See our full guide on best basement layouts for Iowa homes in 2026 for layout-specific timelines and cost context.
The final walkthrough is where we go through every room together before calling the project complete. We check every surface, every connection, and every finish detail side by side with you so nothing gets left behind after the crew leaves. If anything does not meet the standard set at the start of the project, we fix it before handoff. No punch list left open. No promises to come back later.
We test every plumbing fixture, electrical outlet, light switch, exhaust fan, and GFCI circuit before you walk the space. Recessed lighting trim, baseboard corners, door casings, cabinet hardware, and transition strips all get a final check at this stage. Boone homeowners who have dealt with contractors who disappear after the last check clears will notice the difference.
The crew removes all tools, materials, debris, and protective coverings before the walkthrough begins. Your basement is clean and ready to use on day one. We also hand over all permit documentation and inspection records at project close. Those records protect your investment at resale and with your insurance carrier.
Most Boone basement remodels run 8 to 14 weeks from permit approval to final walkthrough. Full rebuilds with bathroom additions, egress window installation, and moisture remediation run 12 to 20 weeks. We give you a written timeline before demo begins and update you at every phase transition. To get started, schedule a free basement remodeling consultation and we will walk through your lower level together before any scope is written.
Since 2020, Busy Builders has completed 1,285+ projects across Central Iowa, including hundreds of basement remodels throughout Boone County and the surrounding region. Our 99% satisfaction rate reflects what happens when every project starts with a written plan and ends with a walkthrough that confirms every detail is right. Boone homeowners can verify our Iowa DIAL registration at dial.iowa.gov before signing anything.
Basement finishing means converting a raw, unfinished space into livable area for the first time. Basement remodeling means updating, reconfiguring, or rebuilding a basement that already has some level of finish.
A remodel can mean a full demo and rebuild, a layout change, system upgrades, or a targeted finish refresh, depending on what the space needs. Many Boone basements finished in the 1960s through 1990s fall into the remodeling category because the prior finish concealed moisture problems or code issues that need to be corrected before new work begins.
Both services are available through Busy Builders. If your lower level is currently unfinished, see our basement finishing for unfinished spaces to understand which path fits your project.
Costs depend on how much of the existing finish needs to come out and what gets rebuilt. A mid-range basement remodel in Boone, layout changes, updated systems, new finishes throughout, runs $45,000 to $70,000. A full rebuild with custom features runs $70,000 to $90,000 or more. Costs vary by scope, materials, and complexity.
Bathrooms, egress windows, and moisture remediation are the three biggest budget drivers. Bathroom additions with existing rough-ins run $12,000 to $22,000. Slab trenching for new rough-ins runs $20,000 to $50,000 or more. Always budget 15 to 20% contingency. Boone’s older housing stock means demo frequently uncovers outdated materials and moisture concealed behind decades-old finishes.
For a detailed breakdown, read about basement finishing costs in Des Moines in 2026 and what affects basement finishing price in Des Moines. Busy Builders provides a written estimate before any work begins.
Most Boone basement remodels run 8 to 14 weeks from permit approval to final walkthrough. Full rebuilds with bathroom additions, egress window installation, and moisture remediation run 12 to 20 weeks.
Permit processing in Boone typically runs 1 to 3 weeks depending on scope. Moisture remediation, when needed, adds 1 to 2 weeks before framing begins. Bathroom rough-ins and egress window excavation are the two most common schedule variables on any Boone basement remodel.
We build every project with a written timeline and update you at every phase transition. You know where your project stands before demo starts and at every step after that.
Yes, for most scope levels. Permits are required in Boone when a basement remodel includes structural changes, new or relocated plumbing, electrical circuit work, HVAC modifications, or conversion of space to bedrooms or bathrooms. Cosmetic work, painting, flooring replacement, and fixture swaps, typically does not require a permit.
Skipping permits creates problems at resale, with insurance carriers, and during lender appraisals. Unpermitted basement bedroom conversions are among the most common issues flagged during home sales in Central Iowa. Busy Builders is a registered contractor verifiable at Iowa DIAL and handles all permit applications and inspection scheduling as part of every project. Iowa contractor registration requirements are governed by Iowa Code Chapter 91C.
Yes, and phased remodels are practical when budget or timing requires it. Many Boone homeowners start with one area, the bathroom, the family room, or a bedroom conversion, and phase additional work over time.
We scope partial remodels with the same full assessment, written plan, and permit process as complete projects. Phased work can be designed from the start so each stage connects into one cohesive finished space. Nothing looks like it was done in separate rounds when the plan accounts for the full scope from day one.
The one non-negotiable: moisture and radon are assessed and addressed before any phase of new finish work begins, regardless of how the project is staged.
Yes, when done with permits and quality finishes. Below-grade square footage appraises at a lower rate than above-grade living area. Since 2022, Fannie Mae has required appraisers to report finished basement space separately from a home’s gross living area under the ANSI Z765-2021 appraisal standard. Basement square footage typically receives 50 to 70% of above-grade per-square-foot credit. Plan for 60 to 75% return at resale per NAHB remodeling data, plus years of daily use.
Buyers in the Boone market are increasingly active, and an updated lower level stands out in a housing stock where most basements were finished decades ago with outdated materials. A rebuilt, permitted, fully functional lower level is not a negotiating point. An original 1970s carpet-and-drop-ceiling basement is.
Read more about how appraisers really value finished basements in Iowa before setting your budget expectations.
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