Compare office fit-out quotes in New York
New York fit-out contractors deal with some of the most demanding permitting, landlord, and site logistics in the country. NYC DOB permits routinely take 4-12 weeks for complex tenant improvements, and that delay belongs in your programme from day one. RFXapp collects bids from local contractors and standardizes them so you can compare what they actually include, not just the bottom-line number.
If you are looking for the best contractors in New York, the most reliable shortlist is one built around your own requirements and tested with a structured brief - not a generic ranked list. RFXapp helps you find and collect quotes from the right suppliers, and analyze them so you can compare what they actually offer, not just the headline price.
What to consider before you go to market
Getting comparable quotes starts with a well-scoped brief. These are the things most businesses overlook until they're already in the process.
Base building condition vs. tenant improvement scope
In New York commercial leases, "base building condition" (shell and core) is what the landlord delivers: concrete floors, exposed ceilings, perimeter HVAC, and base electrical service. Everything else - partitions, finishes, lighting, AV, kitchen - is your tenant improvement (TI) build-out. The landlord's TI allowance is a cash contribution toward that work and is often the most important financial negotiation in your lease. Know exactly what the allowance covers and what it excludes before you brief contractors, or the scope assumptions in each quote will be entirely different.
Acoustic performance
Open-plan offices with glass-front conference rooms and hard surfaces can become unusable without deliberate acoustic treatment. IBC Chapter 12 sets minimum interior environment standards, but those minimums rarely translate to a working office. NYC Building Code is stricter than the base IBC in several respects, and high-rise construction often creates additional noise transmission paths through shared HVAC systems and structural assemblies. If the contractor is not providing acoustic design as part of their service, budget for a specialist separately, before you write the brief.
Electrical and HVAC capacity in older buildings
Buildings in Midtown and Lower Manhattan from the 1980s and earlier frequently have electrical distribution panels running close to their amp capacity and HVAC systems with limited riser space for new ductwork. A contractor who quotes without an M&E survey is quoting on assumptions and will raise change orders when they open the walls. Commission a mechanical and electrical survey independently before tendering - it levels the playing field and removes the biggest single source of cost overruns.
Lease consent for alterations
Commercial leases in New York require the landlord's written consent before any structural, M&E, or significant layout changes. This is not a statutory process like a UK Licence to Alter - it is purely contractual, governed by your lease. But the practical effect is identical: the landlord's attorney reviews the contractor's design drawings, may require changes, and issues formal consent. This typically takes 4-8 weeks and requires the contractor's drawings to be at a sufficient stage before the review can start. Almost no contractor includes this timeline in their programme - it's your risk to track.
NYC DOB permitting timeline
For any work requiring a building permit - structural alterations, new partitions in some jurisdictions, significant M&E work - you need approval from the NYC Department of Buildings. Complex tenant improvement permits routinely take 4-12 weeks. NYC Local Law 196 also requires documented Site Safety Training (SST) cards for all workers on larger sites, which affects both scheduling and contractor overhead. Factor this into your programme before you brief anyone; a contractor who ignores it is setting you up for a delayed move-in.
Restoration obligations at lease end
New York commercial leases commonly contain restoration clauses requiring the tenant to return the space to its original base building condition when the lease expires. The more permanent and bespoke your fit-out, the more expensive this becomes. Before you specify anything structural or built-in, have your real estate attorney confirm what the restoration obligation actually covers - it may change whether certain design decisions are worth making at all.
Hidden costs that catch New York businesses out
These are the items that make two quotes look comparable on paper but $50,000 apart by the time you're on site.
Asbestos survey skipped to save time
Any pre-1980 commercial building in New York requires an asbestos survey before demolition or renovation work begins. This is a legal requirement under EPA NESHAP regulations and OSHA Standard 1926.1101 - not a discretionary step. If asbestos is found, removal must be performed by a licensed abatement contractor. Remediation in a Manhattan building typically costs $8,000-$50,000 and adds 4-8 weeks to the programme. Many contractors quote without commissioning this survey, meaning their timeline and budget assume clean results. Commission the survey yourself before going to market so every contractor is quoting on the same known conditions.
Preliminary and logistics costs in Manhattan
Site establishment in New York City - sidewalk permits, construction fencing, material hoisting, after-hours freight elevator access, temporary power, Dumpster permits - can add $20,000-$45,000 to a mid-size Manhattan fit-out. Some contractors itemize these transparently as preliminaries. Others roll them into contingency and charge them as change orders once work starts. Ask every contractor to break out their preliminaries in full before comparing headline numbers. In NYC, logistics costs are genuinely significant in a way they are not in most other cities.
Change orders priced at the point of maximum inconvenience
Change orders and unforeseen works get priced when you are mid-project and cannot switch contractors. Without a pre-agreed day-work rate and a capped change order mechanism in the contract, you are negotiating from zero leverage. New York construction costs already run $150-$300 per sq ft for a full Cat B equivalent - a 15% budget overrun on a $500,000 fit-out is $75,000. Pre-agreeing the rate is where most of that exposure gets controlled.
Questions that separate good contractors from great ones
Asking is only half the job. Below each question is what a good answer sounds like, and what should give you pause. Questions marked * are mainly relevant for larger structural projects - for a straightforward refresh (repainting, new carpet, furniture) you can skip those.
Good answer: They name a specific person and arrange a call within the week. The PM can speak to your brief without being prompted. They know the building, the DOB approval status, and the landlord consent timeline.
Red flag: "We'll allocate a PM once contracts are signed." That means whoever is pitching has no idea who will actually run your project.
Good answer: A specific day-work rate (e.g. $600-$750 per operative per day in NYC) and a clear explanation of what triggers a change order versus what they absorb. Some contractors will offer a capped change order percentage upfront - that is a good sign.
Red flag: "We'll price changes as they come up" or any reluctance to name a rate. That is a blank check.
Good answer: They manage both end-to-end, it is included in their fee, and they give you a realistic timeline based on the specific building's DOB history and landlord relationship.
Red flag: "Permits are your responsibility" or vague answers about who does what. For any significant TI build-out in New York, the contractor should be doing this.
Good answer: They immediately name specific items and the week in the programme when orders need to be placed. This shows they have thought about procurement, not just construction sequencing.
Red flag: A vague answer, or "we'll order once we're on site." That is how a 14-week project becomes 20 weeks.
Good answer: A specific story, told candidly, that shows they caught the problem early, told the client immediately, and had a resolution ready. The detail and honesty matter more than the outcome.
Red flag: "All our projects run smoothly" or a story where every problem was someone else's fault. Neither answer is believable, and the second tells you how disputes will go.
Good answer: Twelve months minimum, a named contact for aftercare, and a clear process for logging and responding to defects - for example, 48-hour acknowledgment and a 5-day resolution target.
Red flag: "The site manager deals with it" with no further process. If that site manager has moved to the next job, your snags sit for weeks.
Where you have more negotiating room than you think
Fit-out contractors have more flexibility on price and terms than they lead with. These are the levers that actually work once you have competing quotes in front of you.
Portfolio and photography rights
A well-executed fit-out in a desirable Manhattan building is genuine marketing material for a contractor. Offering photography rights and permission to use the project in their portfolio - confirmed in writing before you sign - is worth real money to them. Get a written price reduction in exchange, not a vague assurance of goodwill.
Programme flexibility
Contractors price risk into tight programmes and inconvenient start dates. If you can offer genuine flexibility on when the project starts - even a 3-4 week window - you become a gap-filler between their other jobs, which is worth a meaningful discount. This only works if the flexibility is real; experienced contractors figure out quickly when a client is bluffing.
FF&E procurement
Furniture, fixtures, and equipment - desks, chairs, kitchen appliances, AV screens - attract a contractor markup of 20-30% when they procure it. Asking them to exclude FF&E from scope and procuring it yourself through commercial dealers or trade suppliers removes a significant margin layer. The contractor builds and installs; you buy the materials. Works best when your brief is specific enough that they can price the installation separately without ambiguity.
Early retention release
Standard construction contracts retain 5-10% of the contract sum for 12 months after practical completion. Contractors, especially smaller firms, treat this as a real cash flow constraint. Offering to release retention at 6 months in exchange for a price reduction, or eliminating it for a bonded defects warranty, is a legitimate trade. Only do this if you are confident in the contractor's work quality and financial stability.
Cap and pre-agree change orders
Negotiate a day-work rate and a maximum change order percentage - typically 10-15% of contract value - before signing. Any changes above that threshold require written approval before work starts. At New York construction costs, this is not academic: a 15% overrun on a $600,000 fit-out is $90,000. Pre-agreeing the mechanism is the most important commercial protection you can put in the contract.
Milestone-linked payments
Rather than time-based drawdowns, tie payment milestones to specific deliverables: DOB permit issued, structural partitions complete, M&E first fix signed off, kitchen practical completion. Contractors who need regular cash flow will prioritize hitting those milestones. It also gives you a clear basis for withholding payment if something is genuinely incomplete, rather than relying on end-of-project disputes.
From "I need to find a fit-out contractor" to deal done
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Other things New York businesses source on RFXapp
Most of our users run 5-10 separate buying projects a year. This is often how they find us, but it's rarely the last thing they use us for.