Cost to remove recessed lighting

Anonymous
We have a room with six recessed lights that we want to remove and put in a large central light fixture instead. So it would involve new wiring and then patching and painting the ceiling. How much should I expect to pay for this?
Anonymous
It will probably cost far more than it's worth. There are some cute kits you can buy that will turn recessed fixtures into pendant lights which might be a nice change for the space. Did you want to replace the lights with a fancy chandelier? Otherwise, I can't imagine your need to do this.
Anonymous
It the recessed lights are outdated, replace them with newer ones, lower the wattage in the bulbs, or add a dimmer.
Anonymous
If you can keep them and install a single fixture, do that instead. The cost to take out the recessed lights will be a lot. There is drywall and paint involved.
Anonymous
Why do you want to do this? Just curious. I think recessed lighting was the trend.
Anonymous
OP here. We're repurposing the room to be a dining area (was open space) and I'd like a single fixture over the table. It feels so weird to eat under a row of recessed lights. But maybe I will just add the fixture and leave the recessed ones where they are (and probably never use them).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We're repurposing the room to be a dining area (was open space) and I'd like a single fixture over the table. It feels so weird to eat under a row of recessed lights. But maybe I will just add the fixture and leave the recessed ones where they are (and probably never use them).


Yes, why not? We installed both recessed lights and a central fixture over the table in the dining room. Our room is north facing, and sometimes we want the additional light. They are on separate dimmer switches.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We're repurposing the room to be a dining area (was open space) and I'd like a single fixture over the table. It feels so weird to eat under a row of recessed lights. But maybe I will just add the fixture and leave the recessed ones where they are (and probably never use them).


That's the best idea - it will only cost hundreds, versus thousands in that case.
Anonymous
Ewww, keep the recessed
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We're repurposing the room to be a dining area (was open space) and I'd like a single fixture over the table. It feels so weird to eat under a row of recessed lights. But maybe I will just add the fixture and leave the recessed ones where they are (and probably never use them).


Great idea. We had one light fixture over our dining room table but recently added a few recessed lights in the room for when we need additional light (which is often!). Love the mixture of both lights.
Anonymous
It can get costly or ugly or both.
I think that the only right thing to do it is to just redo the entire ceiling.
otherwise you are looking at the small patches of drwall that even if installed
beautifully, patched and spackled and all that and painted over
they will have some univennes even micro one but
it will show every time a light will hit just so at certain time of the day
or with specific indoor light and you will be miserable every time you look
at this celing at it will definitely spoill the perfection.

It also can be an issue when selling the house as if I saw a ceiling
that has been patched and fixed, the first thing I would suspect
was not the recess light replacement but the water damage
and even if you told me it was lights, I still would be suspicous
so you can loose buyers down the line.


I would probably go with what others said, replace the recess with
more updated ones as you can tell the age as older ones are kind
fo more bulky and uglier then new ones, but when you do that
you need to keep the same openning as any modifications
will show in the celiing ifyou go smaller adn reduce the hole.

So having both, recess and putting Chandelier inside is an option.
Otherwise I would truly go with a new ceiling.

To get an estimate, just call few places or search internet
for cost of replacing ceiling for specific area in sq footage..
measure your room and calculate surface and then
see how much would cost to redo the ceiling for that area.

I would assume that it will go into thousannds..
My totally unsubstantiated guess would be based on how
much per hour a worker has to charge you and how many hours
the job will do.
When you replace ceiling you have a LOT of work:
you need to have someone and rip your old ceiling
and I assume just that for a room 10 by 10 ft would
take probably one day to do it right,
then your guy would need to collect and dispose the rubble,
then they need to go to home depot, buy a new sheetrock
and or drywall.. transport it to your house, bring it upstairs,
then install it, then tape it, then spachle it, then sand it
then pur primer on it then paint it..

you know what I mean?

Not to mention that if you live through it all all your house
will have a millimeter even white coat of dust that you
will be finding in tight places like cabinets and top of books
for years to come


If you wanted to patch just a holes then that would require
probably electrician to come first and remove them safely
and plug the electircity in the ceiling so you would not burn
your house by any short circuit.
Then you would need to have someone who is a master in plastering
come and put pieces of drywall into the holls, and then repeat the process
as above from that point.. tape, spachle, sand.. primer, paint.
and if you have many holes that will take a lot of gymnastic from
a guy just the same.

Sometimes it is cheaper to do over then fix.

Of course as a last resort you can always demolish the house
and start over
Anonymous
pp here

found this, might be helpful:

the cost of installing chandelier:

"How much does it cost to put up a chandelier?

Cost range: If you hire a pro, the installation cost will vary depending upon your ceiling height and the size of the fixture. Given that the average electrician charges between $40 and $100 per hour, the job should cost about $200 to $300 including installation parts and labor.May 7, 2014"



Cost to Hang Ceiling Drywall

"Unused Minimum Labor Balance of 4 hr(s) minimum labor charge that can be applied to other tasks. 0.0 hrs $0.00
Totals - Cost To Hang Ceiling Drywall 250 square feet $608.12
Average Cost per Square Foot $2.43 "


(I think that above estimate does not include removal of the old ceiling and disposing junk, and also it does
not specify the height of the celing as this also factors into cost. Lastly, cost varies per area,
if you live in expensive zip code then you will pay more then if you live in non affluent area)
Anonymous
The old rule of remodeling is: It will cost twice as much and take twice as long as you originally estimate.
Anonymous
I cannot stand recessed lighting. It makes a home look like an office building. I am looking for a new home now....and I will not buy one with recessed lighting. It sounds like it is expensive to take out.
Hanging lamps can be so beautiful...and give such nice light. Honestly, if I'm scrolling through homes on lines, I cannot stay on the page with all that industrial looking recessed lighting. I wish people were not encouraged to "upgrade their homes. ARgh!!


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