Cadence Homes with Stainless Steel Appliances

Stainless steel appliances ship standard in almost every new build across Cadence, so the real question for buyers isn’t whether a kitchen has them but which generation of builder-grade package is sitting behind those finishes and what that means for warranty coverage and resale photos five years from now.

Why Stainless Steel Appliances Matter in Cadence

Because Cadence has been delivering new phases continuously, a “stainless steel kitchen” can mean a 2018 builder-basic package in an early phase or a 2023 upgraded package with a gas range and counter-depth refrigerator in a newer section, and the difference in remaining manufacturer warranty and energy efficiency between those two is significant. For move-up families and remote workers who want a kitchen that looks current in listing photos without an immediate renovation, knowing the appliance generation matters as much as the finish itself, especially when comparing against homes near Cadence Homes with Granite Countertops where the appliance package was often bundled with a specific counter upgrade tier at the time of original sale.

What to Inspect Before You Make an Offer

  • Ask the seller or listing agent for the original builder appliance package sheet, which will show model numbers and original installation date to determine remaining manufacturer warranty
  • Confirm whether the range is gas or electric and whether the home’s gas line was capped or active, since some Cadence floor plans were built electric-ready but gas-converted by the first owner
  • Check that appliance finishes actually match across the kitchen, as first owners sometimes replace one failed appliance with a different brand or finish tone
  • Verify the dishwasher and microwave installation meets current energy-code standards if either was swapped post-construction, since aftermarket units may not meet the home’s original Energy Star certification
  • Inspect behind and under appliances for any signs of the home’s first-year settling cracks in cabinetry, which is common in brand-new construction during the first heating and cooling cycle

The Most Common Buyer Mistake in Cadence

Buyers often treat a matching stainless steel package as a sign the whole kitchen is move-in ready, while overlooking that the cabinetry tier in many entry-level Cadence floor plans is the builder’s base option, which can look noticeably different in person than in marketing photos shot with upgraded cabinet finishes. A buyer focused entirely on the appliances can end up surprised by laminate cabinet boxes or a smaller pantry than expected once they’re past the photos and standing in the actual kitchen.

Resale Perspective & Market Reality

With Cadence’s town center still adding restaurants and shops, buyers are increasingly drawn to homes where the kitchen feels current without requiring an appliance refresh, and listings with a documented recent appliance package (within the last three to four years) have tended to attract offers faster than identical floor plans with original-build appliances approaching the end of their typical service life. This is especially true for resale buyers comparing against Cadence 55+ Homes, where appliance condition carries extra weight for buyers who don’t want a renovation project.

Local Cost Context

A full stainless steel appliance package replacement (range, microwave, dishwasher, and refrigerator) typically runs into the thousands of dollars at current Las Vegas valley pricing, so a home with a recently updated, matching package effectively has that cost already absorbed into the sale price rather than sitting on your post-move to-do list. While appliances aren’t HOA-funded, the same dues that maintain Cadence’s wash trails and Cadence Cove Park also help keep the broader community desirable enough that kitchen upgrades pay off at resale rather than disappearing into a declining area.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Cadence builder-grade appliances carry a manufacturer warranty that transfers to a second owner?

Most manufacturer appliance warranties are tied to the appliance’s serial number and original purchase date rather than the homeowner, so a second owner typically inherits whatever time remains on the original one-year (or longer, if purchased) manufacturer warranty, but it does not reset at resale.

Were Cadence homes built with gas or electric ranges as the standard appliance package?

This varies by builder and phase within Cadence; some sections were delivered with electric ranges as the energy-code-compliant standard, while others offered gas as an upgrade option, so confirm the utility hookup type for the specific home rather than assuming based on neighboring listings.

For comparison, North Las Vegas Homes with Stainless Steel Appliances shows how appliance-package generations play out in a different part of the valley with its own new-construction timeline.

0 Property
Sort by:

No listing found.