Structural beam installed after wall removal Durham Region
General Contracting · Structural

Wall Removal & Beam Installation

Open up your main floor the right way. Cornerstone removes load-bearing walls and installs engineered beams across Durham Region and the GTA — with stamped drawings, permits, and a fixed price, so the wall comes down safely and your home stays sound.

The Reason People Call

Open Up the Space You Already Have

One wall is often all that stands between a closed-off, dated main floor and the bright, open kitchen-and-living space everyone wants. Taking it out connects the rooms, floods the space with light, opens up sightlines to the kids, and makes a home feel dramatically larger — without adding a single square foot.

It's one of the highest-impact renovations you can make to a home, and one of the best for resale. But it's also the one where what you can't see matters most. If that wall is holding up your house, removing it without the right beam and the right approvals isn't a renovation — it's a risk to your home and everyone in it.

First, The Big Question

Is It Load-Bearing or Not?

Every wall is one of two things. Knowing which is the first step — and it's not always obvious from looking.

Load-Bearing Wall

Carries weight from the roof, floors, or structure above and transfers it down to the foundation. You cannot simply remove it — a beam has to take over its job, sized by an engineer. This is the wall that needs the full process.

Partition Wall

A non-structural divider that only separates rooms and holds nothing above it. It can usually come out without a beam — though plumbing, wiring, or ductwork hidden inside can still add scope. Simpler, but still worth confirming first.

Never assume. A wall that looks flimsy can be load-bearing, and a solid-looking wall can be a simple partition. We confirm exactly what a wall is doing — by reading the load path from the basement up — before anyone touches it.

Clues to Watch For

Signs a Wall Might Be Load-Bearing

None of these confirm it on their own — only a proper assessment does — but if you notice any of them, treat the wall as load-bearing until it's checked.

  • It runs perpendicular to the floor joists above or below — walls that cross the joists usually carry them.
  • There's a beam or post directly below it in the basement, lining up with the wall above.
  • It sits near the centre of the house — central walls often carry the main structural span.
  • It stacks with a wall on the floor above, suggesting a load path running straight down.
  • It's an exterior wall or was once one before an addition — almost always load-bearing.
  • The wall is thick or unusually solid, or framed with heavier lumber than nearby partitions.

These are starting clues, not a verdict. Homes get renovated, added onto, and re-framed over the years, so the only reliable answer comes from tracing the actual load path — which we do as the first step on every wall removal, before any plan or price is set.

The Beam Takes Over

A Beam Carries the Load

When a load-bearing wall comes out, an engineered beam goes in to carry the weight the wall used to hold. The beam is sized by a structural engineer for your specific home, then supported on each end by posts that run down to proper footings — so the load has a clear, continuous path all the way to the foundation.

We use LVL (engineered wood) or steel beams depending on the span and the load. LVL is lighter, easier to handle, and well-suited to moderate spans; a steel beam is slimmer for the same strength and spans farther, which helps when ceiling depth is tight or the opening is wide. The engineer specifies which — you don't make that call alone. Before the wall comes out, we build temporary support on both sides to hold the structure while we work, so nothing above ever loses support for a moment. You can see a real steel-beam install in our Bowmanville whole-home renovation.

Cornerstone installing a structural beam after removing a load-bearing wall in Bowmanville

A Choice That Changes the Ceiling

Flush Beam or Drop Beam?

Once you know a beam is needed, there are two ways to install it — and it changes how your finished ceiling looks.

Inside the ceiling Flat ceiling

Flush Beam

The beam is tucked up inside the floor above, so the ceiling stays flat and smooth — the clean, fully open look most people want. It costs more, because the joists above have to be cut and re-hung off the new beam.

Hangs below Visible beam

Drop Beam

The beam hangs below the ceiling, visible as a band across the opening. Often faster and more affordable, since the beam sits below what's already there. Some homeowners even like it as a feature, wrapped in wood or trim.

Budget & Timeline

What Wall Removal Costs in Durham Region

Every home is different, but here's the honest range for the three scenarios we see most. Your exact number comes after we read the load path and scope the finishing — and it's fixed in writing before any work starts.

Non-Structural

Partition Wall Removal

$500 – $2,500

Timeline: one day to about a week. No engineer or beam needed; cost climbs if plumbing, wiring, or ducting hidden inside has to be rerouted.

Load-Bearing

Drop Beam

$7,000 – $15,000

Timeline: roughly one to two weeks plus permit time. Includes the engineer, stamped drawings, permit, temporary shoring, and a visible beam across the opening.

Premium Finish

Load-Bearing — Flush Beam

$12,000 – $20,000+

Timeline: two to three weeks plus permit time. Joists are cut and re-hung off the beam for a completely flat ceiling — more labour, the cleanest result.

Ranges are typical Durham Region pricing for the structural work and standard finishing; wide openings, long spans, steel beams, or extensive finishing can run higher. Permit fees vary by municipality and are confirmed in your proposal. The figure you approve is the figure you pay — backed by our Price Lock Guarantee.

Why It Has to Be Done Right

Stamped Drawings. Permits. Inspections.

Removing a load-bearing wall is structural work, and in Ontario that means it needs a building permit and engineered drawings. We handle both — a structural engineer sizes the beam and stamps the drawings, we pull the permit, and the work is inspected. That's not red tape; it's the proof your home is safe and the record that protects you.

Skipping it is where homeowners get burned — and the savings never turn out to be real. The risks below are exactly why we never cut that corner, on any job.

Stamped structural engineer drawings for beam installation

The Real Cost of Cutting Corners

What an Unpermitted Wall Removal Risks

A contractor who removes a load-bearing wall without a permit and stamped drawings isn't saving you money — they're handing you a liability that can surface years later, at the worst possible time.

Your Insurance Can Be Denied

An undisclosed structural change is a material change to your home. If a claim ever traces back to unpermitted work — a sag, a crack, a collapse, even an unrelated loss — an insurer can have grounds to reduce or deny it. Permitted, inspected work keeps your coverage clean.

It Can Sink a Future Sale

Unpermitted structural work routinely surfaces in a buyer's home inspection or a title/permit search. It can stall the deal, drop your price, or force you to open the wall back up and retro-permit it to prove it was done right — on the buyer's timeline, not yours.

You Carry the Liability

Without stamped drawings, there's no engineer standing behind the beam size and no inspection confirming the work. If the structure ever moves or fails, that exposure lands on you as the homeowner — not the contractor who's long gone.

The Municipality Can Order It Undone

Building without a required permit can trigger a stop-work order or an order to uncover and correct the work after the fact — meaning the finished wall, ceiling, and flooring come back off so the structure can be inspected. The cheap route becomes the expensive one.

We pull the permit and provide stamped engineered drawings on every load-bearing removal — so the work is safe, inspected, and documented, and your home, your coverage, and your resale stay protected. Always confirm current permit requirements for your project with your municipal building department; we handle that for you on every job.

How We Build It

The Cornerstone Process

Assess the Load Path

We confirm whether the wall is load-bearing by reading the structure from the basement up — beams, posts, and how the load travels to the foundation — so we know exactly what the wall is doing before we plan a thing.

Engineer & Permit

A structural engineer sizes the beam and produces stamped drawings. We pull the building permit and schedule the inspections. You get a fixed-price proposal before any work begins.

Temporary Support

We build temporary shoring on both sides of the wall to carry the load safely, so the structure above is never left unsupported during the work.

Remove & Install the Beam

The wall comes out and the engineered LVL or steel beam goes in, set on posts that carry down to proper footings — flush or drop, as you've chosen.

Inspect & Finish

The structural work is inspected and signed off, then we close everything up — drywall, ceiling, flooring, and finishes — so the only thing you see is the open space you wanted.

The Upside

Why It's One of the Best Renos for Resale

Open-concept main floors are still what most buyers are looking for, which is why removing the right wall tends to return well at sale. It modernizes a dated layout, makes the whole floor feel larger and brighter, and photographs far better in a listing — all without the cost of an addition. You're not adding square footage; you're making the square footage you already have feel like more.

The catch is that the value only counts when the work is permitted and documented. A clean permit history and stamped drawings turn the renovation into a verifiable improvement a buyer and their inspector can trust. The same job done without paperwork becomes a question mark that works against you at exactly the moment you're trying to sell. Done right, it's an asset on the listing — see a real before-and-after in our open-concept wall removal in Whitby.

What to Expect

Done Once, Done Right

What It Costs

Cost depends on the span, whether you choose a flush or drop beam, an LVL versus steel beam, and how much finishing follows. Engineering and permits are part of the scope, not a surprise. You get a fixed price in writing before any work begins.

On Time, Guaranteed

Structural work runs on a committed schedule with a defined start and end date, backed by our $300/day on-time guarantee. You know when the wall comes out and when your open space is finished.

One Contractor, Every Trade

Engineer, permits, demolition, structural beam, electrical and plumbing re-routes, drywall, and finishing — all handled under one contract. No juggling trades, no gaps where things fall through.

Dust & Site Protection

Sealed dust containment, HEPA air scrubbers, floor protection, and a daily cleanup — structural demolition is messy, so we collect it at the point of cut before it spreads through your home.

We remove walls and install beams across Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmanville, Courtice, Clarington, Uxbridge, and the broader GTA.

Common Questions

Wall Removal FAQ

How do I know if a wall is load-bearing?
You confirm it by reading the structure, not by guessing from the room. We trace the load path from the basement up — looking at the beams, posts, and the direction the floor joists run — to see whether the wall carries weight from above down to the foundation. A wall that looks minor can be load-bearing, and a thick-looking wall can be a simple partition, so we always verify before planning anything. For a deeper walkthrough, read Can I Just Knock This Down?
How much does it cost to remove a wall?
A non-load-bearing partition typically runs $500–$2,500. A load-bearing removal with a visible drop beam runs about $7,000–$15,000, and a flush beam (hidden in the ceiling for a flat finish) runs $12,000–$20,000+. The range depends on the span, beam type, and how much finishing follows. Engineering and permits are included in the scope, and you get a fixed price in writing before any work starts.
How long does a wall removal take?
A simple partition can come out in a day to a week. A load-bearing removal generally runs one to three weeks of on-site work depending on the beam and finishing, plus permit processing time beforehand, which varies by municipality. We give you a committed schedule with a start and end date, backed by our $300/day on-time guarantee.
Do I need a permit to remove a wall?
If the wall is load-bearing, yes — removing it is structural work that requires a building permit and engineered drawings in Ontario. A purely non-structural partition with nothing in it often doesn't, but plumbing, wiring, or ductwork inside a partition can still trigger requirements. We confirm exactly what's needed and handle the permits and inspections as part of the job.
What happens if a wall was removed without a permit?
It can come back to bite you in a few ways: an insurer can have grounds to deny a claim tied to undisclosed structural work, the missing permit commonly surfaces during a home sale and can stall or lower it, and the municipality can require you to uncover and retro-permit the work to prove it was done correctly. If you've inherited an unpermitted removal, we can assess it and help bring it into compliance.
What's the difference between a flush beam and a drop beam?
A flush beam is tucked up inside the floor above so the ceiling stays flat and fully open — the clean look most people picture, and it costs more because the joists are cut and re-hung off the beam. A drop beam hangs below the ceiling, visible as a band across the opening; it's usually faster and more affordable, and can be wrapped as a feature. We help you weigh the look against the budget, and our guide Flush Beam or Drop Beam? walks through it in full.
Is it dangerous to remove a load-bearing wall?
It's dangerous only when it's done wrong — without proper temporary support, a correctly sized beam, or a continuous load path to the foundation. Done properly, with engineered drawings and temporary shoring during the work, it's safe and routine. The danger comes from contractors who skip those steps to save time or money.
Can you remove the wall and finish the whole space?
Yes — that's the advantage of one contractor for the whole job. We handle the engineering, permit, demolition, beam, any electrical or plumbing that has to move, and all the finishing — drywall, ceiling, flooring, and paint — under one contract, so you end up with a finished open space, not just a hole where a wall used to be. See a real example in our open-concept wall removal in Whitby.

Ready to Open Up Your Home?

Start with a free project diagnostic. We'll assess whether your wall is load-bearing, walk you through the beam and the options, and deliver a detailed proposal with a fixed price — engineering and permits included — before any work begins.