A brand-new home is a wonderful thing to buy, and the model is built to make you fall in love and stop comparing. Here is the part the model never mentions: the friendly person at the sales desk is paid by the builder to protect the builder. You can have your own agent standing on your side of the table, and in almost every case it costs you nothing, because the builder already sets money aside to pay the buyer's agent. We walk you through all of it in plain language. The base price versus the real all-in number once you add the lot premium and the design center, the lender incentive and what it quietly costs you, the builder's contract that was written to protect the builder, the inspections you should still get even on a new home, the warranty and the punch list, the HOA and special-district fees, and the honest truth about reselling while the builder is still finishing homes down the street. No hype, no pressure, and no rushing you into a contract you have not read.
A few new-construction homes worth a look, from quick move-in inventory to build-to-order, with fresh listings every week and the honest all-in price, after the lot and the options, shown before you sit at the sales desk.
The model home is staged to be the prettiest thing you have seen all month, and the sales desk would love for you to stop looking anywhere else. Our job is the opposite. We line the builder up against the other builders in town and against good resale homes, so you choose this house because it truly is the best fit and the best value, not because the lighting and the furniture got to you. You can love a new home and still keep your eyes open, and we make sure you do both.
The number on the sign is the base, and almost nobody buys the base. The lot you want carries a premium. The kitchen in the model is a wall of upgrades. The design center is where the price quietly climbs, choice by choice, until the all-in number is well past where you started. We sit with you before you ever pick a finish and build the real budget, so you spend on the things that matter to you and skip the markups that do not, and the number at signing is one you saw coming.
Builders love to offer money toward closing or a stack of free upgrades, and most of the time you only get it if you use their lender and their title company. Sometimes that is a fine deal and we will tell you so. Sometimes a different lender beats it even after you give up the incentive, and we will tell you that too. We help you do the actual math instead of taking the offer at face value, because a real comparison is the only way to know whether the incentive is a gift or just a way to keep you from shopping the loan.
The money, the build, and the long game, all in plain language. We go line by line together so nothing about buying new is a mystery.
The base price versus the real all-in once the lot premium and the design-center options are in, the builder's lender incentive and what it actually costs you compared to shopping the loan yourself, how a construction-to-permanent loan works and how a rate lock holds up over a long build, the earnest-money deposit and what is at risk, and the appraisal question in a brand-new community where there are few resale comparisons to lean on.
The builder's contract read page by page, the change-order and timeline-slip rules, the difference between a finished inventory home and a build-to-order, your own independent inspection before the drywall goes up and again at the end rather than trusting only the builder's quality check, the final walkthrough, the punch list of fixes, and the warranty: the one-year fit and finish, the systems coverage, and the longer structural term, and what each one really covers.
The HOA dues and the rules, any special district or bond like a CDD or Mello-Roos that rides on your tax bill, the reality of living in a community still under construction with model traffic and amenities that arrive later, what the builder controls until enough homes sell, and the honest resale picture: selling a few years in while the builder is still offering brand-new homes with fresh incentives a few streets over.
New construction is not one thing. Here are the shapes it usually takes, with the plain pros and cons of each so you pick the one that fits your timeline and your budget.
So we slow down and walk the whole path in order. How to register at the sales office without giving up your right to your own agent, how a build-to-order contract differs from a normal purchase, how the design center works and where the markups hide, how a construction-to-permanent loan and a long rate lock fit together, what the appraisal does in a community with few resale comps, and what actually happens at closing so the day you get the keys holds no surprises.
Along the way we cover the parts new-build buyers worry about most. The earnest money and what is at risk if life changes, the pre-drywall walk and the independent inspection that catch what a final once-over cannot, the punch list and how to make sure it gets finished, the warranty and how to use it, and the plain truth about the HOA, the fees, and reselling while the builder is still selling. Real answers before you commit, not after.
Start With a Free New-Construction WalkthroughTell us where you are, just browsing model homes, weighing a builder against a resale, or close to signing, and we will lay out the real all-in numbers, read the contract with you, and stand on your side of the table from the first tour to the keys, at no cost to you and with zero pressure.
Get a Straight New-Construction Plan