Money Matters
Dear Community,

Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.

If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.

Thank you.

Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.

^A few questions about building your own house

We are most likely going to purchase land and build our own house.  We are not sure yet whether we will go with a builder or if we will buy a modular home.  We can see the benefits (MM and otherwise) of both.  We are just starting the process but will do much research before jumping in.

Anyone want to educate me on loans for land and new construction?  I know that some builders will take out the loan or pay for the house themselves and then you take over the mortgage when it is finished.  I think there are also other ways of doing it and would love to understand our options.

My dad is going to be our GC.  Since we aren't the best decision makers and want everything to run as smoothly as possible, how should we go about budgeting for everything inside?  Just go start pricing things out?  I would love to have things chosen far in advance so we aren't doing things on the fly, though I know that some of it will be that way.

 What do you wish you did differently?  We'll take suggestions of any kind (for example: "I wish we didn't go with a modular." OR "I wish we put a light over our sink"

I'm sure I'll have more rambling along the way.  Thanks in advance!!

 

Re: ^A few questions about building your own house

  • This is information I received directly from our mortgage broker:

    My company does not provide Construction Financing (which is usually referred to as Interim financing). Most builders have a relationship with a bank that provides this type of financing, but of course, you can also call around to banks and choose your own.

    Once construction is done, then you need to get ?permanent financing?, which will be your regular mortgage loan, which is what I can provide.

    With new construction, the bank will control what the builder does. Every time the builder completes a certain project he can then request for another ?draw? for more money to continue the project. They are never given the full amount needed for construction up front. You usually only pay the monthly interest on the loan while construction is being completed. Most people building a home will usually buy their lot/land first. Once they have a contract with the builder, then you will get your construction financing. At that time the bank will payoff your land loan (if you have one) and add that to the financing.

    But?? if you are building a home in a subdivision for a big builder such as DR Horton, etc.., the builder usually builds the home for you based on the contract you sign with them. They do their own financing, and then you would get a mortgage through me or another mortgage company.

    imageimage
  • Awesome, thanks for sharing Pom!  Have you decided which house to move forward with (or am I confusing you with someone else?)
  • If your dad is going to be your GC, then how are you working with a builder?  The builder is the GC (general contractor that manages all the other subcontractors).  Either your father is the builder/GC or you are working with the builder/GC. 
    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • imagecount the stars:
    Awesome, thanks for sharing Pom!  Have you decided which house to move forward with (or am I confusing you with someone else?)

    I think we going to build.  It seems like the best fit for us. 

    imageimage
  • imageRubyTue:
    If your dad is going to be your GC, then how are you working with a builder?  The builder is the GC (general contractor that manages all the other subcontractors).  Either your father is the builder/GC or you are working with the builder/GC. 

    My dad will not be building the house.  He will be doing the GC work (such as hiring the flooring people, electrician, plumber).  He will work with the builder on timing but will be doing all of the hiring himself (which should save us 10-20%)

  • We just bought land but haven't signed a contract with our builder yet.  Any equity you have in the land can be used as a down payment in the construction loan. We plan to pay off our land first and then it'll cover the whole 20% down payment. 

    The bank we plan on using does a "one time close" that converts to a 30 year fixed mortgage when construction is complete. Some banks will make you do a second closing after the building is finished. During the construction time, the builder can request draws from the approved loan amount. We would only pay interest on the draws during construction. 

     Spend your money on structure not all cosmetics if you are forced to choose--bumping out walls, bigger garage, fireplace, etc versus paint color upgrades, etc.  

     

    ETA: with our builder we will pick out everything before they break ground. So there will be no delays waiting on us to make decisions. 

  • we custom built our home (with a builder) and I just want to let you know that building a home takes a lot of your time!  Every day I was at the site ( and was expected so that any questions they had could be answered)

    Every weekend and many week nights were spent running to Lowes, Home Depot, lighting showrooms, etc... picking out things we wanted. 

    I am not sorry we did it, but I am not too sure I'd do it again just because it consumed our lives for a LONG time!

     

  • imagecount the stars:

    imageRubyTue:
    If your dad is going to be your GC, then how are you working with a builder?  The builder is the GC (general contractor that manages all the other subcontractors).  Either your father is the builder/GC or you are working with the builder/GC. 

    My dad will not be building the house.  He will be doing the GC work (such as hiring the flooring people, electrician, plumber).  He will work with the builder on timing but will be doing all of the hiring himself (which should save us 10-20%)

    I'm not sure if production builders would allow this. You might have to find an independent or custom builder that will let your dad hire the subcontractors. Lennar, Ryland, Toll Brothers, etc.  hire their own contractors for liability and quality control so I'd be very surprised if they let you use your own people.

    image
  • imagensfw:
    imagecount the stars:

    imageRubyTue:
    If your dad is going to be your GC, then how are you working with a builder?  The builder is the GC (general contractor that manages all the other subcontractors).  Either your father is the builder/GC or you are working with the builder/GC. 

    My dad will not be building the house.  He will be doing the GC work (such as hiring the flooring people, electrician, plumber).  He will work with the builder on timing but will be doing all of the hiring himself (which should save us 10-20%)

    I'm not sure if production builders would allow this. You might have to find an independent or custom builder that will let your dad hire the subcontractors. Lennar, Ryland, Toll Brothers, etc.  hire their own contractors for liability and quality control so I'd be very surprised if they let you use your own people.

    Ah, yes.  We have a custom builder that we will use if we decide not to do modular - he built my parent's house.

  • Call a mortgage loan officer at the bank (or a few banks) you are considereing using.  They're very helpful.  All banks can have different procedures.  In our case (haven't built or have land yet) H and I were going to buy land from my dad with cash.  Because the land is paid for free-and-clear AND my H and dad were going to be the GCs, when we decide to build, we let the bank see the plans for the house.  They decide how much they are willing to loan (in our case it will be much more than it will actually cost since it will cost less to build).  ANYWAY, we'd basically be given a "construction line of credit" (the construction loan).  On the day we take the first draw from the LOC is the day it begins acruing interest.  With our construction loan (and I think all/most) you only pay interest.  Anyway...once the house is ok'd to occupy, we "close" the construction loan and roll the balance of that "LOC" into a trad'l mortgage.  I think it's excellent and can provide a cheaper way of building a house (IF you can get the land w/cash).
  • i suggest you read this articles to make up you mind on a few matters http://blog.armchairbuilder.com/ . personally i would build it myself, having a family member as a GC is an amazing opportunity as well. Try to stay calm and take things one by one. Decide on a floor plan layout first, make sure you know your budget and you don't go overboard. also set some sort of deadline when you want your house to be finished. about the rest you can do some research online or even ask your local builder for advice 
  • abrewer5abrewer5 member
    Fourth Anniversary 100 Love Its 100 Comments Name Dropper
    edited April 2014

    Deleted because I didn't realize this was a zombie thread... oops!

Sign In or Register to comment.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards