Buying A Home
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how close are new construction prices to website?
DH and I are really getting excited about the idea of building our next home. We are looking at Ryland (for what its worth) and are wondering if anyone has any experience with a production builder. We know that upgrades will obviously be extra, however we were curious what extra fees are tacked onto the price on the website. Anyone know? Do the website prices reflect the lot? Any info would be AWESOME!!
"Be the Lego Lady"
Re: how close are new construction prices to website?
We looked at a Ryan home. The base price on the website was 198.
Upgrades we considered:
Upgrading the elevation: $2000
Upgrading the kitchen cabinets to maple: $1,150
Upgrading to 42" cabinets: $700
Gas hookup for range: $250
Appliance upgrade: $600
Fireplace: $3,300
Master Bath Upgrade: $2,990
Wood banister on stairs instead of halfwall: $350
Recessed kitchen lighting: $600
Rough-ins for overhead lights: $700
Premium lot: $3000
We didn't even do things like granite, upgraded carpet or hardwood floors or anything like that. By the time we picked out just the structural stuff that couldn't be easily changed later, we were looking at 30K.
"The House We Built."
A journey of building the dream.
The price on the website is not always reflective of the lot. Most lots have a premium attached to it. For example we picked a lot that was capable of having a walk out basement, so the premium was higher on this lot.
Like others have said the price goes up from there with the upgrades.
DH and I are currently building a Ryland house. We have 3 weeks til we move in!
The price on the site includes ONLY base items and does not include the lot price. When it was all said and done with our lot premium and all upgrades we are $90k over the base price listed on their site. We did all the upgrades that were in the model house as we plan to live there for a long time and want it all done now. (added on morning room, hardwood floors, vaulted ceiling, upgraded carpet, upgraded to silestone, etc).
The process for us has been very easy.
Let me know if you have any other questions.
We built with Ryland in 2009.
The price listed on their website is the "base price" of the home without any upgrades. Depending on your price point, standard inclusions vary. The higher end communities might include stone countertops and stainless steel appliances, for example, but ours did not. The base price is for a bare-bones, very very basic house.
For us, it included the house (duh), laminate countertops, vinyl flooring for kitchen/bathrooms, carpet for the rest of the home, an automatic open garage door with 2 remote openers, and a basic lighting package which did not include overhead lights in the living room or bedrooms. It included a standard kitchen appliance package (dishwasher, fridge, range and microwave) in either black or white. All of the "base price" included finishes were polished brass. It did not include a washer and dryer. Electric hookups for dryer/stove were in the base price, gas hookups were an additional charge.
The base price did include sewer hookups, landscaping (trees, plants and sod) and an in-ground sprinkler system.
It does not include the lot premium but we asked them to waive it and they did.
They usually run one big sale every 4-6 weeks and their standard discount/seller concession is about $20K. They gave us 10% off the base price (a sale they had), paid all closing costs, waived the lot fee and gave $8K towards free upgrades. That was contingent on using their mortgage company and after we closed they sold the mortgage to BofA immediately (they told us this would happen).
Let me know if you have more questions
We built with Ryan - closed yesterday. The base price of our house did not include the lot premium. Houses in our neighborhood came standard with full basements, full brick fronts, sod in the front, and landscaping.
I think our total upgrades were around 60K - but we had big ticket upgrades:
-Add 3rd car garage
-Finish basement with full bath and media/theatre room
-Added 400 sq ft on the main floor (and also added that much in the basement) - breakfast room, home office and 4 ft extension on family room
-Fireplace
-Some upgraded carpet, padding and laminate flooring (base flooring was cheap carpet and vinyl floors)
I have a price sheet with options list - I'm in Indiana with a different builder, but if you want it, send me a PM and I'll PDF it to you so you can see how much production builders charge for upgrades
Thank you!!!!!
This seriously helped a lot! We can afford about 20k above the base price of the second elevation, so I'm thinking we may ask them to waive the lot premium and wait for a sale that offers a good about of incetives
Luckily for us the neighborhood we are look at comes with hardwood on the entire first level, ss appliances, granite counter tops, recessed lighting in the kitchen/family room, and fireplace. I think we can probably get away with only using their incentives and save the $20k to finish the basement later
I'm also going to talk to a custom builder who builds in the same neighborhood and see if they can match or exceed what we can get with Ryland
Thanks again ladies!
"Be the Lego Lady"
Just noticed you are in the twin cities. Which development are you looking at? We had no luck getting them to waive anything, but we also we on a waiting list for a wooded lot and one became available due to someone financing falling through and there were 14 ppl behind us on the list.
"Be the Lego Lady"