Siding replacement can transform curb appeal, but the real value is protection. Good siding sheds water, blocks wind, and helps protect the sheathing underneath from expensive damage. In 2026, homeowners typically pay $7,000-$22,000 for a full siding replacement, with premium materials and large homes pushing higher.
The material choice matters, but labor, trim work, and what is hiding behind the old siding are often what separate a reasonable quote from a shockingly high one.
Typical installed cost by material
| Material | Typical installed cost |
| Vinyl siding | $7,000-$16,000 |
| Fiber cement | $10,000-$22,000 |
| Engineered wood | $9,000-$18,000 |
| Natural wood | $12,000-$25,000+ |
| Metal siding | $10,000-$20,000 |
Why quotes vary so much
House size and shape. A simple rectangular ranch is faster and cheaper to side than a two-story home with gables, dormers, bump-outs, and lots of trim details.
Tear-off and disposal. Removing old siding and disposing of it costs money, especially if there are multiple layers or if special handling is needed.
Rot repair. Once the old siding comes off, contractors may find damaged sheathing, trim, or framing. Those repairs are often priced separately because they cannot be fully seen before demolition.
Weather barrier and flashing. A quality siding job should include house wrap or another weather-resistant barrier, plus proper flashing at windows, doors, and penetrations. This is where cheap bids often cut corners.
Material tradeoffs
Vinyl is usually the lowest-cost option and requires relatively little maintenance. Fiber cement costs more but offers a more solid appearance and good durability. Wood looks great but needs ongoing maintenance and repainting. Engineered wood sits somewhere in the middle, offering a wood-like look with lower upkeep than natural wood.
What should a siding estimate include?
A useful estimate should identify the siding product line, thickness or grade, trim package, house wrap, flashing scope, starter strips, soffit and fascia work if applicable, and disposal. It should also explain how hidden rot or substrate repairs will be handled if they are discovered after tear-off.
When replacement makes more sense than repair
Spot repairs are often enough when damage is isolated. Full replacement makes more sense when the siding is brittle, warped, repeatedly leaking, or fading badly across the whole house. If the existing siding has reached the point where repairs no longer match or hold well, replacement becomes the smarter long-term move.
Do not evaluate siding quotes on material alone. Installation details determine whether the house stays dry, and fixing a bad install later costs far more than doing it right the first time.
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