BUDGETING
What should I include in my budget for a construction loan?
Besides understanding the actual costs of the home, what else can I expect to pay in terms of interest rates and additional fees?
Rhonda Croft:
The biggest things are the soft costs – people forget all of those. These include costs that are involved with construction – closing costs, permits, engineering costs, and survey costs. For instance, if you have to do a survey on your land for any reason, those can all add up. In some areas, you can do a building permit literally for $150.00, and in other areas, such as where I live in Colorado, I’ve seen permits to the tune of ten grand. So it depends on where you live.
Tom Coronato:
We’re going to ask a lot of questions that you may not know the answer to, and it’s perfectly fine that you don’t know the answer.
The probing questions that I will have are, do you own the land, and if you do, how much is it worth? If you don’t know, that’s fine –
we can get on Zillow and Redfinrealtor.com and figure that part out. The next question I’m going to ask is, what do you think your
budget is, and your response should be, as cheap as possible.
If it’s $100,000 for the land and $300,000 to build, you can say, okay, $400,000 total. And then we have to say, if you were building
for $400,000, what do you think it’s worth? And you’re going to say, I don’t know. Well, again, perfectly acceptable answer – let’s get
on Zillow. What are you building – a 1500 square-foot building, 3-bedroom, 3-bath, let’s find the town that you’re in. If you are the
only $400,000 house in that town, you may have a problem. If many houses are 3-bedroom 3-bath, 1500 square feet at $500,000,
no problem, because you have excess equity.
Bob Tuttle:
If you own the land, which is a bonus, it depends what stage the land is in – is it approved or unapproved? Is there water and
sewers, or is it on septic? Is there a road, is there power? So, there are all kinds of questions just about the lot itself.
The rule of thumb for cost to build right now is about $300.00 to $350.00 a square foot. If you own the land, you might be like
$250ish per square foot. So, if you already own the land, more times than not you won’t have to pay PMI, because the appraisal
should be high enough that your house should be less than 80% of the value of the land.