Kitchen & Bathroom Fitters in Milton Keynes

Kitchen and bathroom fitters in Milton Keynes plan and install fitted kitchens and bathrooms, handling everything from measuring and design to fitting units, worktops, tiling, plumbing and waste connections. They often coordinate related trades such as electricians and plasterers to complete a room. Each listing on this page shows contact details, opening hours, reviews and a short summary of what customers say.

3 matching kitchen & bathroom fitters

Checking a fitter's trade credentials

Kitchen and bathroom projects often involve gas, water and electrical work, so it helps to confirm who does what. Any gas appliance work, such as moving a boiler or fitting a gas hob, must be carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer, and notifiable electrical work should meet Part P of the Building Regulations, usually through a scheme such as NICEIC or NAPIT. Plumbers may hold WaterSafe or CIPHE membership, and some fitters belong to TrustMark or the British Institute of Kitchen, Bedroom and Bathroom Installers, which you can verify against the relevant register.

Quotes, contracts and guarantees

Ask for an itemised written quote that separates labour, materials and any subcontracted trades, and check whether removal and disposal of the old kitchen or bathroom is included. Confirm the fitter carries public liability insurance, agree a payment schedule rather than paying large sums up front, and get any guarantee on workmanship in writing. For larger renovations it is worth confirming who is responsible for building control sign-off where structural or notifiable work is involved.

Do I need building regulations approval for a new bathroom?

A like-for-like bathroom refit usually does not, but notifiable electrical work, new drainage, structural changes or converting a room into a bathroom can require building control involvement. Check with Milton Keynes Council or ask your fitter to confirm before work begins.

Should the same company handle plumbing and electrics?

Some fitters do everything in-house, while others bring in specialist trades. Either approach is fine, but make sure gas work is done by a Gas Safe engineer and notifiable electrical work meets Part P, and ask for the relevant certificates on completion.