Specialty Trades & Niche Services
Antique Restoration in Australia: Costs, Quotes & Hiring Guide (2026)
Comprehensive guide to planning antique restoration, comparing quotes, understanding typical Australian pricing, and booking the right provider with clearer scope control.
In this guide
- What antique restoration usually covers
- How to scope antique restoration before requesting quotes
- Typical antique restoration costs in Australia
- What pushes the final quote up or down
- Questions to ask before you book
- Insurance, references, and proof of delivery
- Red flags before you approve the work
- Antique Restoration hiring checklist
What antique restoration usually covers
Antique Restoration sits inside Cockatoo's specialty trades & niche services taxonomy. Customers usually need it when the scope is specific enough to brief clearly, but broad enough that quote structure and provider quality still matter as much as headline price.
The best outcomes start with a tight written scope. Spell out the work area, access conditions, preferred timing, and anything that could complicate delivery so providers can price the same job instead of pricing different assumptions.
Start with the cost page for fast budget context, then pair it with the related blog explainer when you need a second pass on risks, timing, or shortlist decisions.
How to scope antique restoration before requesting quotes
Most quote variation problems come from ambiguous briefs, not bad arithmetic. A clearer request reduces back-and-forth, makes price ranges more comparable, and exposes providers who are guessing.
- Describe the exact antique restoration outcome you want, not just the broad service name.
- Attach photos, measurements, reference documents, or floor plans where relevant.
- List access constraints, preferred timing, stakeholder approvals, and cleanup expectations.
- Say whether the work is advisory, delivery-based, or part of an ongoing retainer or support model.
Typical antique restoration costs in Australia
A practical budget baseline for antique restoration is $350 - $6,800 per project. Use that as a planning range, not a guaranteed final price.
| Scope level | Typical range | What it usually reflects |
|---|---|---|
| Discovery or minimum scope | $190 - $5,300 per project | Inspection, diagnostics, prep work, or the smallest workable brief |
| Standard scope | $280 - $7,140 per project | Typical residential or business-ready brief with normal access and timing |
| Complex or premium scope | $370 - $9,860 per project | Higher-detail delivery, premium materials, urgent timing, or difficult site conditions |
| Cost driver | Why it matters | What to confirm |
|---|---|---|
| Access and logistics | Travel, parking, setup time, and equipment handling can materially shift labour costs. | Note parking, stairs, lifts, loading zones, and delivery windows. |
| Materials and inclusions | Some providers bundle materials while others separate them or mark them up. | Ask for labour and materials as separate lines. |
| Timing and urgency | Short deadlines, weekend attendance, or multi-stage coordination can raise the final quote. | Confirm normal vs urgent pricing before approval. |
What pushes the final quote up or down
There is rarely one "correct" antique restoration price. The useful comparison is how each provider handles the same cost risks.
- Complexity of the scope and how detailed the brief is.
- Site access, parking, lift access, and required setup or pack-down time.
- Whether materials, equipment hire, disposal, or aftercare are included in the quote.
- Urgency, weekend work, and coordination with other trades or stakeholders.
- Whether remedial work, premium finishes, or specialist safety controls are required.
When quotes are close, use process quality as the tie-breaker. The provider who explains assumptions, approvals, and handover clearly will usually be easier to manage than the cheapest provider with the vaguest brief.
Questions to ask before you book
These questions force scope clarity before money changes hands. They also make it easier to compare a fast quote against a careful one.
- What is included in the antique restoration scope, and what is excluded by default?
- What assumptions have you made about access, materials, and timing?
- How do you price variations if the scope changes after work starts?
- What proof of completion, handover notes, or certificates will I receive?
- Do you need permits, inspections, or specialist trade sign-off for this job?
Insurance, references, and proof of delivery
Ask for insurance, references, examples of similar recent work, and a clear definition of deliverables before you approve the provider.
- Public liability or professional insurance where relevant
- Named lead or primary contact for the engagement
- Example outputs, case studies, or recent references
- Signed scope, timeline, review rounds, and acceptance criteria
Red flags before you approve the work
Red flags usually show up before the work starts. If the quote feels vague now, the delivery experience will usually feel vague later too.
- No written proposal, scope notes, or engagement terms.
- Headline pricing with no inclusions, exclusions, or timing assumptions.
- Large upfront deposits before the scope or access conditions are confirmed.
- No variation process, rework policy, or acceptance criteria in writing.
- No plan for safety, cleanup, waste removal, or final handover.
Antique Restoration hiring checklist
Use this checklist before making a shortlist:
- Describe the antique restoration scope in plain language and attach photos where relevant.
- List access constraints, timing windows, and any required approvals.
- Confirm who supplies materials, equipment, permits, and disposal.
- Request a line-item quote with labour, materials, and variation terms.
- Collect at least three comparable written quotes for larger scopes.
- Verify insurance, references, and proof of similar recent work.
- Set start windows, completion criteria, and the sign-off process in writing.
- Keep all quote versions, approvals, and handover notes together.
Once your shortlist is ready, revisit the cost page and keep the blog explainer alongside the final proposals.
FAQ
How much does antique restoration cost in Australia?
Most antique restoration jobs sit around $350 - $6,800 per project, but the final quote changes with scope detail, access, materials, and timing.
What should be included in a antique restoration quote?
A strong quote should separate labour, materials, exclusions, timing assumptions, and variation rules so you can compare providers on a like-for-like basis.
How many antique restoration quotes should I collect?
For straightforward work, start with at least two or three written quotes. For larger scopes, insist on matching inclusions and acceptance criteria before comparing price.
What credentials should I check for antique restoration?
Check insurance, references, proof of similar work, and a named lead who will be accountable for the final outcome.
Where can I compare antique restoration costs and research options?
Use the dedicated cost page at /cost/antique-restoration for pricing context, then read the related blog explainer at /blog/antique-restoration-costs-and-hiring-guide before you lock a shortlist.
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