Every Wright’s project ends with a review.
Every star below comes from a real homeowner with a verifiable Google profile. No paid placements, no scripted testimonials, no names made up to fill out a page.
Real reviews, in the homeowner’s own words.
Most contractor review pages mix three or four real testimonials with dozens of made-up ones. The made-up ones use first names with last initials, attribute themselves to nearby towns, and praise specific service categories the company wants to rank for. Anyone reading carefully can spot them. Wright’s doesn’t do that. The reviews on this page are every Google review the company has received, quoted as the homeowner wrote them. Some are detailed. Some are short. Some include typos. All of them are real, and all of them sit on real Google profiles a prospective client can verify in under a minute. For more proof of the work itself, the featured project portfolio documents finished Wright’s projects in detail. Reviews tell you what homeowners thought. The portfolio shows you what they got.The verification standard for this page
- Written by a real customer on the customer’s own Google account.
- Quoted exactly as the customer posted it. No edits for grammar, no edits for length.
- Tied to a project Wright’s actually completed for that customer.
- Five stars, every one of them, since the company opened.
- Verifiable by anyone who searches the company name on Google.
Five patterns the team noticed reading every Google review in sequence.
Reading thirty reviews from thirty households doesn’t generate marketing copy. It generates a list of the things real customers consistently noticed about working with the company. Not what the company claims about itself, but what the people who paid for the work chose to write about it. The patterns below are the five that came up most often.
Communication appears in roughly half the reviews.
Customers consistently mention clear communication, fast responsiveness, and the absence of guesswork during the build. The word “communication” appears more often than any specific service category. The pattern reflects how the team runs projects on JobTread, with daily photos and a shared schedule. The design-build process page covers how that workflow is structured.The team gets named, by name, repeatedly.
Connor, Will, Lupe, Kevin, Mason, and Jayden each show up across multiple reviews. The pattern is unusual for a contractor: clients remember and credit specific people, not just the company name. That reflects a build model where the same crew works the same projects from demo to walkthrough, rather than rotating subcontractors who never become familiar.The project mix is wider than most contractor portfolios.
The reviews span kitchen remodels, bathroom renovations, basement finishing, deck construction, attached-garage conversions, tile showers in 150-year-old homes, drywall work, structural truss repair, and a commercial daycare renovation. Most design-build firms specialize narrowly. This one doesn’t.Homeowners with older houses say the work held up.
Multiple reviews mention pre-1960 housing, including one from a 150-year-old home and another from a 1960s bathroom remodel. Older homes carry hidden surprises that newer construction doesn’t, and the reviews suggest the team navigated those surprises without the kind of cost or schedule blowouts that older-home renovations often produce.Quote-stage reviews exist, separate from build-stage reviews.
Several reviews are from homeowners who only received a consultation or quote, not a completed build. They still describe the team as professional, considerate, and worth recommending. That pattern is worth pausing on: customers who didn’t end up paying for a project still left five stars. That’s a credibility signal most contractor review walls don’t carry. For homeowners considering an initial conversation, the project quote page covers what a consultation looks like before anything gets quoted.How to read any contractor’s review page, including this one.
Most prospects browse three to five contractor review pages before booking a consultation. Below is the short checklist Wright’s would apply to a competitor’s page if the team were the customer trying to decide.
Click the reviewer’s name.
Real Google reviews link to real Google profiles. If the contractor’s site shows reviews that don’t link anywhere, or shows “testimonials” with first names and city attributions that can’t be verified, that’s a red flag. Every five-star rating on this page came from a Google profile that anyone can find by searching Wright’s Renovations on Google.Read three reviews in a row.
Real reviews have variation in length, voice, vocabulary, and typos. Fake reviews tend to repeat the same praise patterns and the same sentence structures. If three consecutive testimonials sound like the same person wrote them, they probably were. Real reviews are messy. Made-up ones are uniformly polished.Look for the specific project.
Real reviews usually mention what the project was. A 1960s bathroom remodel, a basement finish in a Plymouth condo, a deck with a custom fire pit, a tile shower in a 150-year-old home, structural truss work the homeowner’s engineer specified. Fake reviews tend to praise generic “quality work” or “professional service” without naming the actual project or the actual constraints the project ran under. Specific is real. Generic is suspicious. Apply this check to the reviews above and the breadth of project types named gives a useful read on what the team actually does day-to-day.Count the team members named.
Real customers mention real people. Connor, Will, Lupe, Kevin, Mason, Jayden, and others appear by name across the reviews above. Fake reviews almost never name specific team members because the writer doesn’t actually know who works for the company, and a generic AI-generated testimonial defaults to praising “the team” or “the contractor” rather than a named person. Multiple named team members across multiple reviews is one of the highest-confidence signals that the reviews are written by people who actually worked with those individuals. The pattern also says something about how the company runs: the same people show up on enough projects that customers learn their names. See the company page for the leadership behind those names.Ask for references the contractor didn’t pick.
A contractor offering pre-selected references is normal. A contractor willing to share a list of the last five projects regardless of how they went is honest. Wright’s uses JobTread to document every project, which means the company can show the schedule, the change orders, and the photos for any recent build the homeowner asks to see. The featured portfolio is the curated version. The JobTread record is the unedited version.Search for the contractor’s name plus “complaints” or “issues.”
A contractor with zero search results for these terms is either new, lucky, or has scrubbed its reputation. A contractor with a few thoughtful responses to legitimate concerns is more trustworthy than one with no record at all. Healthy companies have measured disagreements with some clients and handle them in public. That signal beats a wall of uniformly perfect reviews from anonymous accounts.Apply the six checks above to this page. The reviews link to verifiable Google profiles, the lengths and voices vary, the projects are specific, the team is named repeatedly across multiple unrelated households, and the company will share unedited JobTread records on request when a prospective client asks. Apply the same six checks to any other contractor under consideration. The contrast tends to be telling, and the time investment to run the checks is roughly fifteen minutes for any given contractor’s website. For more context on how Wright’s runs projects in a way that produces these kinds of reviews, see the design-build process page and the featured project portfolio.
Every five-star Google review, in the order Google shows them.
Kitchens, bathrooms, basements, decks, additions, garages, commercial projects, drywall work. The customers, the work, and the words. Quoted exactly.I had Wright’s Renovations out to remodel my 1960s outdated bathroom, and everything came out beautifully! From the start, the communication was excellent.
Wright’s Renovations took our new condo that was stuck in the early 1990’s style-wise and updated it to a modern look. It was an incredible transformation.
Wright’s Renovations completely renovated our new Plymouth Condo and did an awesome job! They made the entire process seamless.
Talked to a lot of teams before we chose Wrights. Love the results! Worked with my vision, budget and schedule. We are very happy with the outcome.
We had a wonderful experience with Wright’s Renovations, start to finish. They renovated our attached garage into two beautiful new spaces.
I recently had the pleasure of working with Wright’s Renovations on a project to transform my two neglected porches into something stunning.
I have to use caps just so you know I’m serious. BOOK WRIGHT RENOVATIONS TODAY! I wish I could give more stars than five.
Wright’s recently completed work on our deck along with a couple other small outdoor projects. We couldn’t be more pleased.
We absolutely love our new kitchen! Connor and Kevin and the rest of the team were amazing!! Truly a great team to work with.
Wright’s Renovations did a great job on our first floor renovation. Their clear communication and quality of work were great from start to finish.
Look no further if you are wanting a contractor that is professional, communicates and delivers what is promised. We highly recommend them.
They could not help but gave suggestions that were very pleasant. A very professional team to interact with.
Connor and his team did an amazing job with our basement remodel. Transparent, honest, fair, and communicative throughout.
Our master bathroom was mangled by previous owners. Wright’s fixed everything: cracked tiles, leaks, and uneven floors. It looks perfect now.
Great service, quick and fast thanks to Will. I really appreciate the responsiveness and professionalism shown by the team.
Appreciate Will for coming out and doing the quote for us. He was professional and quick, while considerate of our circumstances. Would recommend.
We are so happy with our basement project! Connor and Will took our concept and brought it to life! The entire team was fantastic.
Wright’s Renovations did a great job with our new tile shower. We have an old home (150+ years) so it’s always scary, but they handled it perfectly.
Wright Renovations was the ‘Wright’ choice, hands down! This was my very first renovation, and they made it incredibly smooth.
Lupe was great, very professional and friendly, always left the home clean. The overall experience was about the best I’ve ever had with construction.
From start to finish my experience with Wright’s Renovations was very professional. They constructed my vision into a reality.
We are happy with the results. Everything we had hoped for! Good communication, follow through and attention to detail. Friendly quiet crew.
We recently had the pleasure of working with Wright’s Renovation for a complete remodel of our primary bathroom, and we couldn’t be happier.
Connor, Will, Lupe, et al. did a great job of renovating the Bilingual House Packard Child Care Center. Professional and efficient.
I highly recommend Wright’s Renovations because they deliver what they say they will and a whole lot more. They built us a masterpiece.
We recently had Wright Renovations finish our basement, and we couldn’t be happier with the results! A top-notch team.
We recently hired Wright’s Renovations to update our kitchen counter tops and do a full bathroom remodel. They did an excellent job.
We contracted Wright’s for some demo and drywall installation, and we couldn’t be happier. Professional, clean, and fast.
Mason, Jayden and the crew replaced the drywall in our garage. They worked hard and left a clean, organized work space.
We were advised by a structural engineer to have truss work completed. Connor and his team handled this complex job perfectly.
