Home services cost in Ohio (2026)
Ohio runs 10% below the national median across home services — among the more affordable states for renovation. Below is typical pricing for the 8 most-searched home services in Ohio, with metro callouts for major cities.
Ohio at a glance
Midwestern states like Ohio run close to or below national average pricing, with freeze-thaw cycles being the main climate cost driver.
| Service | Price range | Typical | Unit | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garage Door Spring Replacement Most homeowners pay $200-$400 to replace a garage door spring. Torsion springs cost more than extension; double doors need two springs. |
$143–$342 | $221 | per spring | Full guide → |
| Garage Door Installation New garage door installation typically runs $800-$3,500 including labor, depending on size, material, and insulation level. |
$716–$3,145 | $1,350 | per door | Full guide → |
| Concrete Slab Cost Pouring a concrete slab costs $4-$12 per square foot installed, depending on thickness, finish, and reinforcement. |
$3.59–$10.77 | $6.30 | per sq ft | Full guide → |
| Window Replacement Window replacement averages $300-$1,500 per window installed. Energy-efficient and large windows cost more. |
$270–$1,350 | $540 | per window | Full guide → |
| Asphalt Driveway Replacement Asphalt driveway replacement averages $3.50-$8.00/sq ft. A typical 600 sq ft driveway costs $2,100-$4,800. |
$3.15–$7.20 | $4.50 | per sq ft | Full guide → |
| Roof Replacement Asphalt shingle roof replacement averages $5,500-$25,000 depending on size, pitch, and material. Metal and tile cost 2-3× more. |
$4,950–$22,474 | $9,900 | per project | Full guide → |
| Vinyl Siding Installation Vinyl siding installation runs $3.50-$12.00/sq ft. A 2,000 sq ft home typically costs $7,000-$24,000. |
$3.15–$10.77 | $6.30 | per sq ft | Full guide → |
| Foundation Repair Foundation repair costs vary widely: minor cracks $500-$2,000, settling $4,000-$10,000, major underpinning $15,000-$30,000. |
$1,823–$22,474 | $6,750 | per project | Full guide → |
Source: National medians × BLS Regional Price Parity (2022) applied to Ohio. State cost index: 0.90 (1.00 = national average). Last updated 2026-05-25.
Major Ohio metros — relative pricing
Within Ohio, metro-level pricing varies by labor market and cost of living. Multipliers shown apply to all 8 services.
| Metro | Relative pricing | vs state average |
|---|---|---|
| Columbus | 1.02× | Close to state average |
| Cleveland | 0.97× | Close to state average |
| Cincinnati | 0.99× | Close to state average |
| Toledo | 0.92× | 8% below state avg |
| Akron | 0.94× | 6% below state avg |
Climate and construction context in Ohio
Ohio sits in IECC climate zone 5A (cool-humid), shaping how exterior projects are scoped and priced. The dominant cost-driving hazards homeowners and contractors plan around are tornado activity, heavy snow load, freeze-thaw cycling, and flooding along the Ohio River. Footings typically reach 32 inches below grade to clear the frost line — standard in regional codes, with no unusual cost premium.
Licensing and permitting in Ohio
Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board requires licensing for the five major specialty trades; general contractor licensing is local. Permit timelines in most major Ohio metros run 3-5 weeks. Before signing a contract, verify your contractor's standing through the relevant state board and confirm whether your project requires a permit — unpermitted work creates problems at resale and can void insurance claims after a loss.
What drives Ohio pricing
Across the eight services tracked above, Ohio runs meaningfully below the national median (about 10% lower). In Ohio, household income tracks near the national median, leaving most homeowners price-sensitive on big-ticket projects. Columbus and Cleveland generally run above the state average. Combined with the climate and licensing factors noted above, expect quotes that cluster within the price band shown for each service; quotes well outside that band warrant a line-item review rather than a haggle.
How to use this Ohio data
Use these typical ranges as a sanity check on contractor quotes. When you receive quotes:
- If a quote falls within the range, it's market-priced. Compare scope and materials before deciding.
- If a quote is well above the high end, ask why — premium materials, hard-access site, or rush timing can justify it. Sales-driven markup cannot.
- If a quote is well below the low end, something's missing — usually tear-out, permits, or warranty. Get the line items.
For each service, open the Ohio-specific guide above. You'll get a calculator pre-set to your state plus 5–7 FAQs covering common contractor tactics.
About this data. National baseline of $7,500 derives from aggregated 2026 quote data across major lead-gen platforms. State-level figures apply Bureau of Labor Statistics Regional Price Parity (2022, all-items) to the national baseline. We refresh quarterly and welcome corrections — email [email protected] if a local quote you received falls materially outside our state range. See full methodology.