answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

85%

User Avatar

Wiki User

16y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How much percentage cost recouped for remodeled houses?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What are the advantages of buying old houses?

There are a number of reasons for buying older homes. Older homes are larger and cost less money. Older homes can be remodeled and sold for more money. Some older homes were built better. When land was cheaper homes were built on larger lots.


What is Beverage cost percentage?

Beverage Cost Percentage = Beverage Cost / Beverage Sales


Cost of houses in the 1920?

=answer it!=


What is percentage cost?

total use of food cost divided by net sales is food cost percentage


How many houses can you buy with 1 million dollars?

a single one million dollar home, or two $500,000 houses, maybe three that cost $333,333, or four that cost $250,000. not all houses cost the same.


How much do kohler faucets usually cost?

I have recently remodeled our bathroom the average cost of faucets including Kohler is about $200. Although there are more expensive models this seems to be the median price of a quality faucet.


Do cost segregation laws include improvements to real property?

Cost segregation identifies personal property assets that are grouped with real property assets. Remodeled real property is included in the segregation laws.


Where are low cost houses?

most cheap houses can be found in Kansas and Arkansas


What do Houses cost in Jamaica?

Houses cost anywhere from 50,000 to millions of dollars. It depends on sizes and square footage as well as location.


What is food cost percentage?

total use of food cost divided by net sales is food cost percentage


What is the labor cost percentage equation?

Lost-Cost percentage= Total labor Cost/Total Sales Rev


How do you find the cost of a item if you know the markup cost 130.50 and the markup percentage 58 percent?

mark-up a percentage of the cost. → mark-up price = cost + cost × percentage = cost × 100% + cost × percentage = cost × (100% + percentage) → cost = mark-up price ÷ (100% + percentage) → cost = 130.50 ÷ (100% + 58%) = 130.50 ÷ 158% = 130.50 ÷ (158/100) = 130.50 × 100/158 ≈ 82.59 (There are rounding errors in this as 82.59 × 158% ≈ 130.49, and 82.60 × 158% ≈ 130.51; 82.59½ × 158% ≈ 130.50.)