Power Home Remodeling Secures Growth Investment from Bain Capital, Sixth Street, and Harvest Partners to Scale Direct-to-Consumer Home Services
Power Home Remodeling just pulled fresh capital into the driveway, and it is not the quiet kind. Bain Capital, Sixth Street, and Harvest Partners Structured Capital stepped in with a growth investment that says one thing loud enough for the neighbors to hear. This isn’t a tune-up. It is a full exterior overhaul for a company that has been building momentum since 1992, when Jeff Kaliner and Adam Kaliner started turning curb appeal into a science.
Chester, Pennsylvania is not where people expect a national operator to quietly stack wins, but Power Home Remodeling never asked for permission. Over 1M homeowners later, the model is simple and ruthless in execution. Go direct, own the customer relationship, and make energy efficiency feel less like a lecture and more like an upgrade people actually want. Windows, roofing, siding, doors. The outside of the house becomes the front line of performance, and Power makes sure it performs.
Now the capital shows up, and it is not just money, it is alignment. Bain Capital and Sixth Street do not wander into deals for sightseeing. Harvest Partners Structured Capital already knows the floor plan and decided to double down. When existing conviction meets new firepower, you usually get acceleration, not hesitation.
Inside the house, the leadership bench is built for scale. Asher Raphael and Corey Schiller operating as Co-CEOs brings that operator instinct you cannot fake. Adam Kaliner and Jeff Kaliner set the foundation, and the next layer is all execution. Kevin Wiggins handling the numbers, Marc Sule pushing the tech backbone through Nitro, Kerry McGovern shaping the brand voice, Mick Lynch driving delivery. No passengers in that lineup.
The interesting part is not just that they raised. It is how they earned the right to raise. A direct-to-consumer engine, a proprietary system that keeps the machine tight, and a culture that keeps showing up on best workplace lists. You do not get that combination by accident. You get it by obsessing over the details most companies outsource or ignore.
This is what scale looks like when it is built, not bought. The kind that compounds quietly until capital has no choice but to follow. And now that it has, the question is not whether Power Home Remodeling grows. It is how far they are about to push a category that most people stopped thinking about years ago, right before it started getting interesting again.









