Buyer Beware: Updated 2026 Home Remodeling Scams Targeting Seniors in New Hampshire – FAQ
Buyer Beware: Updated 2026 Home Remodeling Scams Targeting Seniors in New Hampshire – FAQ
By Attorney Joseph Kelly Levasseur @LevasseurLawNH on X | josephkellylevasseur.com Posted: April 6, 2026
In 2026, home remodeling scams—especially high-pressure in-home sales for bathrooms, kitchens, windows, and showers—are exploding across New Hampshire and New England. Fraudsters target seniors because many are homeowners with equity, live alone, and want to age in place safely. I just helped an 80-year-old couple in NH cancel a $22,471 tub-to-shower contract signed under heavy pressure.
Thankfully, no money changed hands, and they exercised their 3-day right of cancellation in time.
This FAQ explains the exact tactics these companies use, the red flags to watch for, and your legal rights under New Hampshire and federal law. Share it with your parents, grandparents, or anyone over 65 who owns a home.
FAQ: Home Remodeling Scams in 20261. What are the most common high-pressure tactics used on seniors?
Salespeople (often called “Design Consultants”) are trained professionals who follow a proven script. The most frequent tricks include:
|
Tactic
|
What It Sounds Like
|
Why It Works on Seniors
|
|---|---|---|
|
Personal Story
|
“I'm a divorced dad and need to pick up my kid soon…”
|
Builds fake trust and urgency
|
|
Artificial Urgency
|
“This price expires tonight—tomorrow it's full price”
|
Creates panic before you can think
|
|
The Big Drop
|
“Normally $29,500… but for you today only $22,471”
|
Makes you feel like you're getting a deal
|
|
Supervisor Call
|
“Let me call my manager for an even better offer”
|
Second bite at the apple
|
|
Fear of Contractors
|
“Small local guys are uninsured and unreliable”
|
Discourages shopping around
|
|
Rushed Contract
|
“Just initial here, here, and here—I'll explain later”
|
Prevents you from actually reading it
|
These are not isolated incidents. Complaints against companies like Home Remodel Businesses frequently use aggressive tactics aimed at elderly homeowners.
2. Why do these companies target seniors specifically?
Seniors often have paid-off homes, fixed incomes, and a desire to stay independent. Scammers know:
- Many hesitate to say “no” to a polite, well-dressed salesperson in their living room.
- Vision or hearing issues can make it harder to read fine print.
- The promise of a safer, walk-in shower or updated bathroom feels urgent for aging in place.
In 2026, reports from the NH Insurance Department and consumer watchdogs show a surge in these in-home pitches.
3. What is the 3-Day Right of Rescission, and does it apply in New Hampshire?Yes — strongly. Under New Hampshire law (RSA 361-B) and the federal FTC Cooling-Off Rule, you have until midnight of the third business day after signing an in-home contract to cancel for any reason with no penalty. The seller must give you a Notice of Cancellation form. In the recent case I handled, the contract explicitly listed the deadline as April 7, 2026 for a contract signed April 3.
Pro tip: Email + overnight mail the cancellation notice creates an iron-clad record.
4. What red flags should seniors (and their families) watch for?
- Salesperson refuses to leave the house until you sign.
- “Today-only” pricing or huge “discounts” from an inflated “1-year price.”
- Pressure to sign before you get other quotes.
- 0% down / financing pushed hard without full disclosure of interest rates.
- Contract buried in pages of fine print with one-sided warranties.
- No written estimate or work order before signing.
Usually yes during the 3-day window—even if the company claims they've ordered materials. Once the window closes, cancellation becomes much harder and may require legal help. That's why acting immediately is critical.
6. What should families do if a loved one already signed?
- Check the exact signing date and deadline (count business days—weekends don't count).
- Do not call the salesperson—go straight to written notice.
- Email the company's customer service and overnight the signed cancellation form.
- Contact a consumer-protection attorney immediately if the company pushes back.
- Never make a decision the same day a salesperson visits.
- Always get at least three written bids from licensed, insured local contractors.
- Have a trusted family member or attorney review any contract before signing.
- Post a “No Solicitors” sign and instruct caregivers not to let strangers in.
- Register your phone with the National Do Not Call Registry (and tell seniors to hang up on unknown callers).
High-pressure in-home remodeling sales are legal—but the deceptive tactics that prey on seniors are not. New Hampshire law gives you powerful protections, but they only work if you use them quickly. At Levasseur Law NH, we regularly help seniors and their families cancel these contracts and, when necessary, pursue complaints with the NH Attorney General's Consumer Protection Bureau.
Need help reviewing a contract or sending a cancellation notice? Call our Manchester office at (603) 622-7575 or visit josephkellylevasseur.com for a free consultation. Protect your home equity. Protect your peace of mind.
Attorney Joseph Kelly Levasseur
Personal Injury • Consumer Protection • Senior Advocacy
Personal Injury • Consumer Protection • Senior Advocacy
