Building Your Home: An Insider's Guide
By Carol Smith
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About this ebook
Carol Smith
Carol Smith is an award-winning journalist and editor for NPR-affiliate KUOW in Seattle. Previously, she worked for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the Los Angeles Times. Her newspaper work has won dozens of national and regional awards and has been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize a remarkable seven times, and her writing has appeared in more than a dozen literary journals. She was recently named Editor of the Year by Public Media Journalists Association.
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Building Your Home - Carol Smith
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Introduction
With so many books available for people wanting to have a home built, why write another? Because the books on the shelves leave some things unsaid, I travel all over this country and abroad, providing training programs for home builders. My main focus is customer satisfaction: philosophy, objectives, systems, and staff skills. I’ve interviewed thousands of homeowners who’ve described varying levels of satisfaction.
For years I’ve watched home builders and their buyers struggle through unnecessary misunderstandings and conflicting interpretations. I’ve seen builders with the best of intentions make mistakes because they habitually fail to see things from their customer’s point of view. I’ve encountered a few builders more concerned with profit than integrity who made enemies for the entire homebuilding profession. I have also seen buyers manipulate what builders tell them to get more than their fair share, using customer satisfaction as a tool rather than a mutual goal. Still other buyers end up dissatisfied because they did not look, read, or listen carefully enough. Most often, the problems I observed arose because good people buying new homes were upset with good people building new homes, all because the two groups did not communicate clearly, or enough.
This book brings you an industry insider’s perspective on what buyers should expect, what questions they should ask, and who is responsible for what tasks. My objective: to help home buyers become informed customers who understand the building process and the product they are buying. With a realistic perspective, buyers are more likely to succeed in matching their vision of that ideal home with the site, design, builder, and budget that comes closest to creating that home.
Builders and home buyers in our country use many ways to finance, build, deliver, and close a new home. Builders in the area where you want to live may do things a bit differently from what you are familiar with or from what is presented here. I’ll discuss typical methods, forms, and steps in the process. You should expect regional variations and additions. But one thing remains the same wherever you are: the process begins when you decide you want to build a new home.
1
The Decision to Build
Some say the decision to build a home starts when you select a location. Others suggest that the process begins with an appealing floor plan. For many, money is the common motivator. Quite simply, the decision to build a new home begins when you become dissatisfied with your current home. Too big, too small, too near, too far, too plain, too old. No place to park the cars. Not enough room for the kids to play (or sleep). Not enough windows. Too much yard. Rent is not tax-deductible. Perhaps your current home is five states from the new job—or the new grandchild.
Reasons to Move
Consider your reasons for moving. What do you intend to accomplish by having a home built? Being involved from the beginning in the construction of your new home provides a unique sense of ownership. Not only will the home you build be new, it also will reflect your personal tastes. This home will belong to you and your family in a special way.
What do you expect to have in a new home that you do not have now? What features and characteristics do you want to duplicate? Equally important, what things do you want to avoid? As you begin to consider such questions, you have begun the exciting process of building a new home.
Selecting a resale home might satisfy many of your reasons for moving. Yet over a million families purchase a newly built home each year. The homebuilding experience appeals to many of us. Some families select new homes that are ready to move into; others begin with a blank sheet of paper and become intimately involved in every step of design and construction. Most home buyers fall somewhere between the two. And all share the anticipation, excitement, and work of moving into a new home.
I Know What I Like
In terms of the product and the process, you have more choices than ever before. Each affects many others—physically, financially, or both. Along with the practical choices, a new home involves subjective elements; details of your home reflect your values and taste. You need information and introspection to arrive at decisions that meet your requirements while you stay within your budget.
Selecting or developing a design that will serve your family now and for years to come requires an analysis of your current lifestyle and anticipation of your future needs. Whether you work from existing plans or a blank sheet of paper, coordinating decisions about size, shape, traffic flow, and finish materials can seem overwhelming. Next, how can you tell if your home is well built? Value and quality are especially complicated issues when the product is a new home.
The experience of building a home is complicated, exciting, scary, fun, expensive, gratifying, time-consuming, and wonderful—sometimes all in the same day.
One of the most complex handcrafted products available in our world, a home contains tens of thousands of parts, assembled by dozens of people. The most accomplished production builder does not produce two alike. Design, selection, and quality issues arise in every home. Some opinions on these issues come from factual knowledge; others involve subjective views that come from years of experience. Opinions differ with the knowledge and experience of each architect, designer, builder, real estate agent, and home buyer. Fairly judging the final product requires an understanding of the properties of the materials, methods of installation, and the way all the parts interact.
Knowledge
Your knowledge of new home construction expands as you listen, read, and observe; lack of understanding can lead to disappointment. Like all professions, the homebuilding industry has its own jargon. If you familiarize yourself with its terminology, you’ll find asking questions and evaluating answers easier. No matter how much you think you know about new home construction now, you’ll find you know much more by the time you move into your newly built home. Fortunately, you don’t need to become an expert in every aspect of home construction. Many professionals are available to help you reach your homebuilding goals. At times you may defer to these professionals’ judgment.
Investment
Your home is usually your family’s biggest investment and often its best. Not only does a home provide a place to live for many years, it can provide equity in later years. The equity Americans have in their homes accounts for more than half the total net worth of the typical homeowning family.
The financial arrangements you make at the time of purchase affect the long-term value of your investment as well as your monthly budget. The lending profession is constantly restructuring its products to fit a variety of customer situations. Thirty-year, fifteen-year, and adjustable rate mortgages are just the beginning. Each loan program offers advantages and disadvantages, depending on your financial goals. You’ll also want to keep in mind the tax implications of these financial arrangements.
Time and Emotion
Building a new home puts significant demands on your time. Meetings consume much of that time. Many of these meetings will occur during normal business hours, Monday through Friday. Home buyers clearly expect to be kept informed along the way, and they want opportunities to be involved and to ask questions. Builders have responded by offering routine scheduled meetings. While these meetings are extremely helpful to buyers, staffing limitations and other practical details often prevent holding them in the evenings or on weekends.
Regardless of how many meetings you expect, plan on more. However many decisions you expect, expect more.
However much worry and fun you think the process will bring, get ready for more of both. Many compare the building process to a roller coaster ride, a series of highs and lows. For instance, when you stand in your newly framed family room deciding where to put the sofa, the loan application paperwork seems less annoying than when you filled it out.
Applying Logic to Dreams
The actual construction of your home follows a logical sequence. The planning that leads to building could be logical, but it’s rarely that simple. A common question is which do you find first: the lot, the builder, a real estate agent, a lender, or an architect? The answer is yes. You can build a home with any and all of these choices as the starting point. Whether you decide to work with a production, semi-custom, or custom builder, the process of building involves many subjects: budget, builder, budget, location, budget, floor plan, budget, elevation (exterior views of a home), budget (Figure 1.1).
Figure 1.1 Will an Elegant Stairway Fit into Your Budget?
Reprinted with permission from Advanced Custom Home, Inc., Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.
In what order do you make these decisions? Springfield, Missouri, custom builder Sam Bradley correctly observes, You do a little of all of it at once.
Some buyers consider the decision for years before they build a home; others take shortcuts that can result in problems. Bradley advises prospects to take their time. Prospective clients come to me with nightmares—blueprints that don’t fit on the lot they’ve purchased. In that case, do you throw away the lot or the blueprints?
Logic suggests that you establish your budget before making design decisions. But no one has found a way to keep visions of the front elevation from flashing through your mind as you discuss mortgage rates. The tangle of memories, current needs, schedules, and costs means that you make few of your new home decisions in isolation or in a predictable sequence (Figure 1.2). Washington, D.C., area home buyer Zoe LaGassa described it well: You may be looking at a site but thinking about how you always wanted a red sink in your kitchen.
Building a home is an once-in-a-lifetime experience for many customers. Finding a comfortable balance among quality, features, and price is a tremendous challenge. Your efforts should result in a home you enjoy and in which you take pride. Ultimately, when you finish unpacking, we hope that you look at your new home, think over the homebuilding experience, and conclude, Building this house was the best thing we ever did.
Figure 1.2 Do You Want a Balcony for Your Bedroom?
2
Financing
How Am I Going to Pay for This House?
John and Mary’s home was completed under budget and ahead of schedule. They selected new furniture with the savings. A carpet sale allowed them to order the highest grade carpet at the cost of standard grade. This savings paid for their kitchen appliance upgrades. Big Muscle Moving agreed to move them at a reduced cost since it had a truck in the area. As a welcome gift, New City Gas & Electric contributed 90 days of free service. Green Bucks Mortgage lowered its interest rate because its loan quota for the month had been met. Because John and Mary were so pleasant to work with, their builder waived any profit. The closing coordinator called to say the settlement figures had changed again. Once more the cash John needed for closing was reduced, this time by $875. One more phone call, John thought with a grin, and they’ll give us money at closing. He decided to write letters of appreciation just as the buzz of the alarm clock jolted him awake….
John’s dream sequence is so out of touch you may wonder if a mere alarm clock is sufficient to return him to reality. For most people a home represents the biggest financial and physical purchase they ever make. Predicting the exact cost is at best a guess until all your choices are finalized. Even then, unexpected circumstances such as poor weather, a large rock on the site, or falling in love with a hand-painted tile can affect the most meticulous budget. Information, planning, and self-discipline offer your best assurance of keeping costs under control. As you begin to think about your new home, think about how you are going to pay for it. By considering finances from the beginning and as part of every decision, you make smarter choices and avoid disappointments.
Your Assets
Survey your financial assets by listing available cash such as checking and savings accounts or CDs near maturity. Will additional cash accumulate during construction of your home—a salary increase, bonus, profit-sharing distribution, tax refund, or other reliable source? The cash you have on hand or readily available is referred to as your liquidity. Some liquidity is essential at the beginning stages, through the building process, and after completion of the new home. You are likely to need cash for loan application fees, the down payment, closing fees, move-in costs, and settling expenses such as landscaping and window coverings (or at least sheets and push pins).
Next consider assets you can turn into cash. The classic example is the equity in a home you already own. Equity is the amount that would remain after subtracting the present mortgage balance and the sale expenses from the price you get when you sell the home. Other assets might include a cash gift from a family member, an inheritance, maturing bonds, or the cash value of an insurance policy. This time might be just right for you to auction off that Van Gogh you picked up for $15 at a garage sale.
Another potential asset is sweat equity—construction work you perform yourself. If you enjoy cabinet building and are highly skilled at it, you may want to build and install the ones for your new home. Have the value of this labor credited to you or use your skills to reduce the price of the home. However, sweat equity agreements are not without risks, and many builders prefer not to use them. If interested, ask potential builders about their policy on these types of agreements early and document any such agreements in the contract.
Finding a Lender
When people need to borrow money, many of them think first of their banks. When the money is for a home, mortgage companies come to mind next. Both are possibilities, but explore all options, including savings and loan associations, commercial banks, credit unions, and mortgage brokers. Most states have housing finance agencies that work with low- and moderate-income households. Insurance companies and even department stores are getting into the mortgage-lending business. The builder or real estate agent you work with may have suggestions on obtaining financing.
Prequalifying
Ask one or more potential lenders to prequalify you for your home purchase. Prequalifying means your financial position has been informally reviewed to determine how much money you can borrow. It provides several benefits:
No matter what type of home you seek, prequalifying provides you with critical planning information. By knowing your budget from the beginning, you can avoid time-consuming and disappointing cutbacks in your new home plans.
If you begin with buying land for a home, prequalification figures can help you make the right choice. Buying a lot can alter your cash position and therefore your house budget. Without some preliminary guidance, you could end up with a lot but not enough financial leverage to build on it.
Prequalifying can identify details in your financial picture that might interfere with your plans. Discovering them early prevents a mad scramble through dusty boxes of financial records two days before closing and leaves time for more mundane tasks—such as packing.
As part of your prequalifying activities, carefully review your credit report. You may find some errors. I once discovered our credit report included a $6,500 loan from a bank we never heard of in a city where we’d never lived. If your credit report includes inaccurate information, the sooner you begin correcting it the better. (For more information on this topic, see Figure 2.1.)
Figure 2.1 Establishing Credit
Do not confuse prequalifying with preapproval, which requires formal application and complete processing. Prequalifying does not obligate you to do business with a particular institution. Neither does it commit the lender