Despite widespread recognition that housing renovation is influenced by “neighborhood effects”, virtually all empirical studies have failed to identify a positive feedback effect between renovation activity and neighborhood quality. By explicitly modeling the spatial interdependence of households' renovation decisions and analyzing a detailed block-level data set, this study finds strong empirical evidence that endogenous neighborhood effects exist as expected. Moreover, by considering four different parameterizations of a “neighborhood set” and comparing the results of these spatial econometric models with a standard OLS estimation, this paper provides insight into some common methodological issues encountered when modeling neighborhood effects.