I’m in the process of building. They just just excavated the lot last week. So I’ve been looking for a video like this one. This one was the best!! Thanks a lot
@@sidneywynn4089 That's awesome. I've got loads of videos to guide you through the home build process. When they're done framing, you'll want to watch the video on the 4-way & then I have another video for the final walk through & etc. Best of luck & please let me know if you have any questions.
Ty, you're the guy!!! This is sooo helpful. My rental home had a fire and needed to be gutted from the inside. Most of the framing is still in tack with few repairs needed. There were companies that wanted to take over the entire process of completion but I, having done some interior remodeling on a couple flips, I wanted to do it myself so I could save some money and use that savings to get upgrades and a couple footprint changes. I wasn't so sure what it would entail, but after listening to your video's I feel confident that I can get the subs I need and get this home done with all the interior build steps. Thanks! I have decided to let SurfPro do the mitigation part and take over from there. Again, many thanks!!!
That is an excellent question. A window well is placed in homes with basement where windows are placed. It's usually corrugated steal attached to the exterior of the foundation wall to hold the dirt back away from the window. Did that answer your question?
It really is. I can't imagine how we ended up in this spot with all of the technology & up to date data & statistics we have available at our finger tips.
Ty, responding to your return message, i was a home builder for over 40 years. Also a licensed real estate broker and a member of the National Assn Of Realtors for over 25 of those years. Now TY, how many guesses do you need as to why i bacame a real estate agent? Fact is i had been selling my own homes for many years before that. Fact also is there isnt a more seedy group than real estate agents as a whole. Which is why so many of them like you for example are making videos in order to promote themselves, while trashing others.
I’m proud of you Ernie Forest. However, you don’t know a thing about me. You are clearly taking your preconceived notion‘s about real estate agents in general & applying them to me because I’m a real estate agent. I don’t trash other agents on my channel or ever. I don’t need to, nor do I want to. I’m an honest hard-working guy who always has my clients best interest at heart.
I started my contract last year July, was supposed to close in April, then May, and then July/ August, well we are in August. Now being told September/Oct. But I was told I have about $30k in equity, I’m just trying to be patient. I could have signed a lease with my apt, but opted to do month to month.
Yeah, it's been tough for a lot of people who are building a home. Make sure you watch, The Closing Process with Home Builders. Here's the link - ruclips.net/video/6wPkzilTqKE/видео.html
Hi there! Very detailed video, thank you! I just had my pre-drywall inspection, but the estimated closing date is in 4 months. I hope i move-in sooner, though!!
In a market where home prices are going up, the home will increase in value while it's being built. Since you lock in the price at time of contract several months before the home is completed you can easily gain $10k-$50,000 in equity before you ever move in. The market over the next several months will stabilize so I wouldn't expect major gains.
Crazy, our timeline is following exactly to this video. They just poured our foundation walls today is 7/6/21. Will be interesting to see how it follows your timeline
@@TyWilde Well, it looks like we are falling behind. We just poured the garage on 8/16/21. We do not have our lumber yet either. According to the builder we are supposed to start framing end of this week or first of next. Im not holding my breath on anything at this point. Very frustrating.
@@TyWilde First of many delays was right lol. Our lumber has been sitting next to the foundation for 3 1/2 weeks now. Crazy how nothing is getting done.
Hello ty I am in the process in starting a real estate development business and this channel is very help TY I have a question for you do you know where home builders order their supplies from? For example plywood and so on also if I am building a home with blocks where would I order the blocks from? I am about to take a home building course soon, but I am very curious about Certain things because I am new to the real estate industry.
Thanks for watching & for your excellent questions. The supplies come from many different locations all over the US & the world. The builder selects the location that they think is best either because of price or quality & often both. Have a great day & I hope you subscribed.
Talk about details Ty! I am so anxious of the timeline during this crazy time, lumber costs, contractor shortages, etc. OMG - talk about biting my fingernails here! When u said some homeowners were told 18-24 months for completion for homes to be built - my heart dropped a bit! I am thinking they might have told the homeowners that so they can cancel and resell it for higher price and watch them complete in 12 months! My biggest fear is that my home won't be ready in 9 months which is the estimated timeframe by builder gave me which I signed on 4/5/21 or worse call me to say there needs to be an increase due to lumber cost increasing again. The price went up $5K on new builds since I have signed on. I am coming to hot summer months, holidays, crazy market.... Thank u soooooooo much for the vid Ty!
Yeah, we're in for some crazy times. There's definitely a lot of unknowns. And you're right, home builders would love for people to cancel so they can resell the home at a much higher price.
@@TyWilde it did not. My builder (Taylor Morrison) has actually been great. Base price on my model went up 10k the day after I went under contract. Hope it stays this way.
Thank you so much for this video. We went under contract mid December, and our builder just broke ground on the 12th of April. The earlier part of this week the footings/foundation was inspected. I’m assuming the slab is next. Since this is our first time going through this process, I have been trying to educate myself and keep up with what’s going on. This helps tremendously! Thank you for taking the time out to make this video, your videos help more than you’ll ever know. #newsubbie
Great timing. Congratulations. I'm so happy to hear that your home is moving forward. Thank you sincerely for the compliment & best of luck. Where are you building?
Love your videos. It took my builder 6 months to get my building permit approved. I signed last year in February. Right now we're waiting on the widows to be installed. We did save over 40k on base price because we signed last year.
Nice. Any reason it look so long to get approved, or were they just working on others first? I signed 2 months ago, I think the permit will finally get approved. There had been pushback from the county because the builder assumed the county would roll over and accept an elevation with less than 70% brick. But now I get more brick than I was promised :)
Thanks for watching & for your excellent question. A lot of builders center the home on the lot while many others will slide the closer to the lot line on the non-garage side which will allow you to install an RV pad or even add a 3 car garage in the future. If you ask, most builders will place the home where you like. Where are you building a home?
Thank you for taking a moment to write. I appreciate the compliment & I'm grateful for your views. Best of luck to you & please let me know if you have any questions.
Paid the Ernest deposit 2 weeks ago and they started the following week. Original start date was June with an end date of December. Now the end date is expected at the end of July. Is this normal?
No! It's not normal. BUT... Nothing is normal right now. Every single builder is having delays. It's totally annoying but there's nothing anyone can do about it. We are in a sever shortage. What state or city are you building in?
@@TyWilde Las Vegas and the builder is Beazer Homes! And stick to the Oakleys bro! The viper make you look like your pulling off a cyberpunk cosplay 😆!
@@lunisean Ha thanks. I agree with you on the sunglasses but the vipers are fun. I'm an Oakley's guy all the way. It's tough to beat the comfort & quality.
The time from framing to completion here is way too short for good quality workmanship. Should be at least double the timeline or even more like triple.
Great video ! We are building New home Plumbing just got installed. However waiting on delayed sliding door and two windows . In your opinion do you think completion would be early August ? 2700-3000 sq foot home partial finished basement. builder does not do driveway for landscaping.
Thanks for the compliment and for watching my video. That is an excellent question and there’s probably too many variables for me to make a educated guess. That being said I probably wouldn’t count on it being done in early August.
@@TyWilde 😬 completely understand this . Builder is great ! Very reliable from reviews . Said be in home in 120 days . Contract does say 120-150 days though. Crossing our fingers 🤞 Groundbreaking was in early April
@@DaveVideos5 Yeah, there's just been a lot of delays for most builders. You never know what's going to slow you down next. Hopefully they hit that date. It's definitely possible, I just wouldn't count on it.
@@TyWilde cool thanks again , I went to our property , I did not see a gas meter on the home . I do see gas stake in front that it was run . however at this point . framing is done roof has shingles, plumbing is done . Electrical is not run yet , is it a concern I don't see a gas line running into the home yet? typically would it gas be run in home when electrical is ?
That's an excellent question. Both are hard for different reasons. I'm actually putting out a video hopefully tomorrow about what it's like to be a new home salesperson So that should explain that for you. In this video I explain that there are multiple crews that do different things to build the house, but we use a construction manager to make sure things are being done on time.
Great Video! You are very knowledgeable! My final walkthrough is 6 days before our close date. Hopefully that will give the builder plenty of time to fix items if needed
Thanks for the compliment & congratulations. You're almost to the finish line. I'm sure 6 days will be fine, a lot of builders have a similar timeline. Thanks for watching & please let me know if you have any questions.
I have another question for you Ty as I am hoping you can help. The builder sent us a notice that we are nearing completion and it stated: “A Guided Tour of Your New Home - This is the date and time you will meet with your Home Care Specialist, for your homeowner orientation. The purpose of this meeting is to demonstrate the many wonderful features of your new home. Only buyers on contract are invited to this walk thru. Please remember children are not permitted. The meeting will last approximately 2 to 3 hours. It is imperative that you be on time as these appointments are scheduled back to back daily. We appreciate your cooperation.” During this “guided tour” will the house by fully complete by then or do we just get to see it and see how to use the appliances etc?
@@TheMnky7 Excellent question. The home should be 99% done. Maybe just final touchups. I would have them show me how to use everything! Best of luck. You're almost done.
@@TheMnky7 Yes. Just make sure if it's the final walkthrough & they are having you sign something make sure everything they said they would do is in writing.
What are things I need to look for when I go visit my new construction weekly? I'm a first time home buyer and have no idea what I'm looking at or for!
First off, thanks for watching & for your excellent question. It totally depends on the stage of the home. I think the best answer would be for you to watch my super in-depth video on the new home construction process. Here's the link... ruclips.net/video/p9LlHOgfIeE/видео.html
Thanks for making this video, The permit for our home is ready and they can start building just as soon as we leave the design center this week, however it has been raining Almost everyday for the last 3 weeks and we are soon approaching hurricane season. How much delay can Rain cause on building a home?
Rain is actually one of the biggest pains because there's not a lot that can be done when the rain won't stop. Once the home is framed in with the roof on, the rain doesn't slow things too much. But, up to that point it can really slow things down. Where are you building?
I’m under contract to build a home in Utah. We put our down payment down mid March and they’re scheduled to break ground the first week of May. Hopefully everything goes smoothly! 🤞🏻
At what point should you hire your own inspector to do an inspection? Pre-dry wall stage? Post-dry wall stage? Before final walk through? All of the above? Not sure if an inspection covers all of that or if it’s all separate and paid separately I know you said your timeline is in normal times but that seems pretty fast how they can bring up a home like that. So in “normal” times it only takes roughly 3 months from excavation to moving in?
Excellent Questions. Most people just get an inspection at the end. If you're not comfortable with the work the builder is doing, you might want to get an inspection done at the 4-way/pre drywall stage too. A normal timeline is about 4 months, give or take a week or two. Thanks for watching & for your comment.
Signed in March, groundbreaking expected late June or July with an expecting closing date between December and February. It's madness, but long timelines like this certainly allow me more time to prepare and put money away. The other crazy thing is the base price of the model I am building is already above the base price plus options that I chose for the house! That is a +25/30k change since signing!
As a new realtor that recently signed a contract for my clients in new construction. What is the steps or timeline of things I need to be doing that you recommend leading up to closing?
Stay in contact with the builders agent. For the most part, he'll want you to stay out of the way. You will want to attend the 4-way & the final walkthrough. I've made videos for both of those that you'll want to watch. Thanks for watching & best of luck to you my friend.
My question is, is it likely for home builder to adjust the cost of the home during the home construction process? And how likely? How would you as the agent help navigate that? Is there any protections for the home buyer? PS you’re awesome.. lol
That's an excellent question & it can get ugly. A lot of builders right now are giving ultimatums. Things like if you want to move forward, the price is going to be $50,000 more or you can cancel & we'll give you back all of your Earnest Money. Most builders are just eating it, which is cool. As an agent we just need to understand each builder contract. That being said, most builders do have the ability to cancel you without repercussions as long as they return your deposits.
What size square footage home are you assuming. How much is main floor, basement and then 1st floor? Also if I am building a house 2x as big does this mean it takes 2x time? Thanks. The videos are excellent and very helpful. My family and I are moving from Florida to Heber and building with Ivory Homes
Thanks for watching & for you compliment. I'm so grateful I could help you. I would say anything up to about 4500 sq ft total maybe 3500 or 3600 finished sq ft. You're only adding a few days here or there as you increase in size. Worst case scenario you'd add about a month. Custom homes can take a lot longer & then of coarse in this market, everything is taking longer. BTW, I visited Florida a few years ago & loved it, but I'm very happy here in Utah. Welcome! Please let me know if you have any questions.
Great video. Some things I've seen too with the process: delays due to weather, delays from the builder side where they build other homes faster in order to get these sold, and try not to get frustrated if you don't see progress on your home and there is progress on other homes (not sure if there's a red flag here). Different materials and even appliances might go out of stock and other choices will need to be made. Last one, (this is not a good or common one) builder builds more homes than planned and this causes issues with the city and utilities thus causing delays for months while they dig for water.
Thanks for the compliment & your comment. These are all very good points. Often people get upset because other homes are built faster around them. The builder usually builds home in the order in which the building permits are received. But sometimes different materials may slow or speed up the home you are building.
Best video I’ve seen on the timeframe of building a home.
Thanks for the compliment & for watching my video. I appreciate you more than you know. Are you building a home somewhere?
Thanks for the compliment & for watching my video. I appreciate you more than you know. Are you building a home right now?
I’m in the process of building. They just just excavated the lot last week. So I’ve been looking for a video like this one. This one was the best!! Thanks a lot
@@sidneywynn4089 That's awesome. I've got loads of videos to guide you through the home build process. When they're done framing, you'll want to watch the video on the 4-way & then I have another video for the final walk through & etc. Best of luck & please let me know if you have any questions.
Doing this now in Macon,Georgia Bibb county. Adams homes some time summer 2024. Good information for this military veteran
Congrats my friend.
Thank you~
You're welcome 😊
We signed in February 2021 on a
That is awesome! I'm sure it will be done before you know it. Best of luck!!
Very informative!
You're awesome, THANKS!!!
Ty, you're the guy!!! This is sooo helpful. My rental home had a fire and needed to be gutted from the inside. Most of the framing is still in tack with few repairs needed. There were companies that wanted to take over the entire process of completion but I, having done some interior remodeling on a couple flips, I wanted to do it myself so I could save some money and use that savings to get upgrades and a couple footprint changes. I wasn't so sure what it would entail, but after listening to your video's I feel confident that I can get the subs I need and get this home done with all the interior build steps. Thanks! I have decided to let SurfPro do the mitigation part and take over from there. Again, many thanks!!!
So glad I could help. Best of luck & please let me know how it goes.
What are windows wells
That is an excellent question. A window well is placed in homes with basement where windows are placed. It's usually corrugated steal attached to the exterior of the foundation wall to hold the dirt back away from the window. Did that answer your question?
Thank you for awesome channel and informative videos!
Just FYI - Nowadays, in 2022, it takes 14-15 month to build a home in Texas (Dallas).
Thanks for the info! I've heard that's happening in a lot of places. In Utah most builders are 12 months.
Thank you. Great info
You're Very welcome! Thanks for watching!!
Dude, this is your best video YET! A MILLION View worthy for sure!! All those people who are building a homes should watch this video first!
Thanks brother. A lot of work went into this video. I'm sure it will help a lot of people.
@@TyWilde Keep it rollin'!
You should open a business here in New York.
Thanks for the compliment. I would love to do that.
We’re stuck for 10 days of nothing, waiting for the cement trucks to become available to pour the basement slab. It’s a crazy time!
It really is. I can't imagine how we ended up in this spot with all of the technology & up to date data & statistics we have available at our finger tips.
Excellent video. Seems like there's a lot of people building homes right now that can benefit from all your videos.
Thanks. I hope so!
Ty, responding to your return message, i was a home builder for over 40 years.
Also a licensed real estate broker and a member of the National Assn Of Realtors for over 25 of those years.
Now TY, how many guesses do you need as to why i bacame a real estate agent?
Fact is i had been selling my own homes for many years before that.
Fact also is there isnt a more seedy group than real estate agents as a whole.
Which is why so many of them like you for example are making videos in order to promote themselves, while trashing others.
I’m proud of you Ernie Forest. However, you don’t know a thing about me. You are clearly taking your preconceived notion‘s about real estate agents in general & applying them to me because I’m a real estate agent. I don’t trash other agents on my channel or ever. I don’t need to, nor do I want to. I’m an honest hard-working guy who always has my clients best interest at heart.
I started my contract last year July, was supposed to close in April, then May, and then July/ August, well we are in August. Now being told September/Oct.
But I was told I have about $30k in equity, I’m just trying to be patient. I could have signed a lease with my apt, but opted to do month to month.
Yeah, it's been tough for a lot of people who are building a home. Make sure you watch, The Closing Process with Home Builders. Here's the link - ruclips.net/video/6wPkzilTqKE/видео.html
@@TyWilde Maronda Homes
I’m in Florida and Hurricane season has started so there’s another delay
@@parsonj23 I love Florida, but there's too many of them dang hurricanes. They ruin everything.
@@TyWilde oh and it’s been raining every day 😩
👍🏿👍🏾👍🏽👍🏼👍🏻👍👍🏿👍🏾👍🏽👍🏼👍🏻
Thanks dude!!
Hi there! Very detailed video, thank you! I just had my pre-drywall inspection, but the estimated closing date is in 4 months. I hope i move-in sooner, though!!
You’re welcome. Thanks for watching and for your comment. Best of luck to you.
Hey Ty,
You mentioned a home builder builds equity the longer it takes the builders.. can you explain how that works ?
In a market where home prices are going up, the home will increase in value while it's being built. Since you lock in the price at time of contract several months before the home is completed you can easily gain $10k-$50,000 in equity before you ever move in. The market over the next several months will stabilize so I wouldn't expect major gains.
Sir how about osb plywood making factory business ?
Thanks for your excellent question. I don't know the profit margin of each part of the home sorry.
Wow! and not one rain delay, amazing, lol good video Ty
Utah has actually been very dry this year. Thanks for the compliment on the vid. Have a great day.
Crazy, our timeline is following exactly to this video. They just poured our foundation walls today is 7/6/21. Will be interesting to see how it follows your timeline
That's great. Hopefully it stays that way.
@@TyWilde Well, it looks like we are falling behind. We just poured the garage on 8/16/21. We do not have our lumber yet either. According to the builder we are supposed to start framing end of this week or first of next. Im not holding my breath on anything at this point. Very frustrating.
@@nklingler Yep. Here you go. The first of probably multiple delays. As long as you’re prepared for it it won’t be as hard to handle.
@@TyWilde First of many delays was right lol. Our lumber has been sitting next to the foundation for 3 1/2 weeks now. Crazy how nothing is getting done.
@@nklingler Yeah, first it was a lumber shortage & now the unemployment benefits is so good that we are now having a labor shortage. It's a joke.
Hello ty I am in the process in starting a real estate development business and this channel is very help TY I have a question for you do you know where home builders order their supplies from? For example plywood and so on also if I am building a home with blocks where would I order the blocks from? I am about to take a home building course soon, but I am very curious about Certain things because I am new to the real estate industry.
Thanks for watching & for your excellent questions. The supplies come from many different locations all over the US & the world. The builder selects the location that they think is best either because of price or quality & often both. Have a great day & I hope you subscribed.
Talk about details Ty! I am so anxious of the timeline during this crazy time, lumber costs, contractor shortages, etc. OMG - talk about biting my fingernails here! When u said some homeowners were told 18-24 months for completion for homes to be built - my heart dropped a bit! I am thinking they might have told the homeowners that so they can cancel and resell it for higher price and watch them complete in 12 months! My biggest fear is that my home won't be ready in 9 months which is the estimated timeframe by builder gave me which I signed on 4/5/21 or worse call me to say there needs to be an increase due to lumber cost increasing again. The price went up $5K on new builds since I have signed on. I am coming to hot summer months, holidays, crazy market.... Thank u soooooooo much for the vid Ty!
Yeah, we're in for some crazy times. There's definitely a lot of unknowns. And you're right, home builders would love for people to cancel so they can resell the home at a much higher price.
@@TyWilde are they allowed to raise the price even after your under contract?
@@TyWilde it did not. My builder (Taylor Morrison) has actually been great. Base price on my model went up 10k the day after I went under contract. Hope it stays this way.
@@mstoon3891 At this point it should. Most builders won't raise prices because it's bad publicity.
Thank you so much for this video. We went under contract mid December, and our builder just broke ground on the 12th of April. The earlier part of this week the footings/foundation was inspected. I’m assuming the slab is next. Since this is our first time going through this process, I have been trying to educate myself and keep up with what’s going on. This helps tremendously! Thank you for taking the time out to make this video, your videos help more than you’ll ever know. #newsubbie
Great timing. Congratulations. I'm so happy to hear that your home is moving forward. Thank you sincerely for the compliment & best of luck. Where are you building?
@@TyWilde Thank You! We are building in Southern Maryland. We are about a 25-30 minute drive from Washington, DC.
@@sandyjackson8535 You are literally on the other side of the country from me.
@@TyWilde lol, I know right!
@@sandyjackson8535 Some day I'll make it to the East coast.
Love your videos. It took my builder 6 months to get my building permit approved. I signed last year in February. Right now we're waiting on the widows to be installed. We did save over 40k on base price because we signed last year.
Thanks for the compliment. It sounds like you're sitting in a great spot. Where are you building a home?
@@TyWilde I'm building in Ohio with Schumacher Homes. Thanks for the reply.
@@jermaineclarke4317 You're welcome. Have a great weekend.
Nice. Any reason it look so long to get approved, or were they just working on others first?
I signed 2 months ago, I think the permit will finally get approved. There had been pushback from the county because the builder assumed the county would roll over and accept an elevation with less than 70% brick. But now I get more brick than I was promised :)
Do you know if builders generally center your house in the lot? What determines the placement of the home?
Thanks for watching & for your excellent question. A lot of builders center the home on the lot while many others will slide the closer to the lot line on the non-garage side which will allow you to install an RV pad or even add a 3 car garage in the future. If you ask, most builders will place the home where you like. Where are you building a home?
We are building in NC but I have been watching a lot of your videos and found them extremely helpful!
Thank you for taking a moment to write. I appreciate the compliment & I'm grateful for your views. Best of luck to you & please let me know if you have any questions.
Question for ya Ty? If a builder forgets to install a fireplace during framing, will that delay the tradesman coming?
Great question. Yes, most likely. I would definitely prepare for that.
@@TyWilde Thank you for responding. I’ll definitely prepare for that.
@@chrissyjohnson6832 You're welcome. Best of luck to you.
Paid the Ernest deposit 2 weeks ago and they started the following week. Original start date was June with an end date of December. Now the end date is expected at the end of July. Is this normal?
No! It's not normal. BUT... Nothing is normal right now. Every single builder is having delays. It's totally annoying but there's nothing anyone can do about it. We are in a sever shortage. What state or city are you building in?
@@TyWilde Las Vegas and the builder is Beazer Homes! And stick to the Oakleys bro! The viper make you look like your pulling off a cyberpunk cosplay 😆!
@@lunisean Ha thanks. I agree with you on the sunglasses but the vipers are fun. I'm an Oakley's guy all the way. It's tough to beat the comfort & quality.
The time from framing to completion here is way too short for good quality workmanship. Should be at least double the timeline or even more like triple.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. In Utah this is common timing. The quality seems great to me.
Great video ! We are building New home Plumbing just got installed. However waiting on delayed sliding door and two windows . In your opinion do you think completion would be early August ? 2700-3000 sq foot home partial finished basement. builder does not do driveway for landscaping.
Thanks for the compliment and for watching my video. That is an excellent question and there’s probably too many variables for me to make a educated guess. That being said I probably wouldn’t count on it being done in early August.
@@TyWilde 😬 completely understand this . Builder is great ! Very reliable from reviews . Said be in home in 120 days . Contract does say 120-150 days though. Crossing our fingers 🤞 Groundbreaking was in early April
@@DaveVideos5 Yeah, there's just been a lot of delays for most builders. You never know what's going to slow you down next. Hopefully they hit that date. It's definitely possible, I just wouldn't count on it.
@@TyWilde cool thanks again , I went to our property , I did not see a gas meter on the home . I do see gas stake in front that it was run . however at this point . framing is done roof has shingles, plumbing is done . Electrical is not run yet , is it a concern I don't see a gas line running into the home yet? typically would it gas be run in home when electrical is ?
@@DaveVideos5 That’s a great question. Not necessarily. If you ask the builder what the timing is, I’m sure they would love to tell you.
I have a question, which is more difficult, being a real estate agent and selling a house, or building the house?
That's an excellent question. Both are hard for different reasons. I'm actually putting out a video hopefully tomorrow about what it's like to be a new home salesperson So that should explain that for you. In this video I explain that there are multiple crews that do different things to build the house, but we use a construction manager to make sure things are being done on time.
@@TyWilde video I want to see :)
Great Video! You are very knowledgeable! My final walkthrough is 6 days before our close date. Hopefully that will give the builder plenty of time to fix items if needed
Thanks for the compliment & congratulations. You're almost to the finish line. I'm sure 6 days will be fine, a lot of builders have a similar timeline. Thanks for watching & please let me know if you have any questions.
I have another question for you Ty as I am hoping you can help. The builder sent us a notice that we are nearing completion and it stated: “A Guided Tour of Your New Home - This is the date and time you will meet with your Home Care Specialist, for your homeowner orientation. The purpose of this meeting is to demonstrate the many wonderful features of your new home. Only buyers on contract are invited to this walk thru. Please remember children are not permitted. The meeting will last approximately 2 to 3 hours. It is imperative that you be on time as these appointments are scheduled back to back daily. We appreciate your cooperation.” During this “guided tour” will the house by fully complete by then or do we just get to see it and see how to use the appliances etc?
@@TheMnky7 Excellent question. The home should be 99% done. Maybe just final touchups. I would have them show me how to use everything! Best of luck. You're almost done.
@@TyWilde can we still do the walkthrough if there is no fence and garage door?
@@TheMnky7 Yes. Just make sure if it's the final walkthrough & they are having you sign something make sure everything they said they would do is in writing.
What are things I need to look for when I go visit my new construction weekly? I'm a first time home buyer and have no idea what I'm looking at or for!
First off, thanks for watching & for your excellent question. It totally depends on the stage of the home. I think the best answer would be for you to watch my super in-depth video on the new home construction process. Here's the link... ruclips.net/video/p9LlHOgfIeE/видео.html
Thanks for making this video, The permit for our home is ready and they can start building just as soon as we leave the design center this week, however it has been raining Almost everyday for the last 3 weeks and we are soon approaching hurricane season. How much delay can Rain cause on building a home?
Rain is actually one of the biggest pains because there's not a lot that can be done when the rain won't stop. Once the home is framed in with the roof on, the rain doesn't slow things too much. But, up to that point it can really slow things down. Where are you building?
@@TyWilde thanks for the info and we are building in Jacksonville fl
@@bossent.9575 Cool. I love Florida.
I’m under contract to build a home in Utah. We put our down payment down mid March and they’re scheduled to break ground the first week of May. Hopefully everything goes smoothly! 🤞🏻
Yeah, things are crazy. I would expect delays. Who's building your home?
At what point should you hire your own inspector to do an inspection? Pre-dry wall stage? Post-dry wall stage? Before final walk through? All of the above? Not sure if an inspection covers all of that or if it’s all separate and paid separately
I know you said your timeline is in normal times but that seems pretty fast how they can bring up a home like that. So in “normal” times it only takes roughly 3 months from excavation to moving in?
Excellent Questions. Most people just get an inspection at the end. If you're not comfortable with the work the builder is doing, you might want to get an inspection done at the 4-way/pre drywall stage too. A normal timeline is about 4 months, give or take a week or two. Thanks for watching & for your comment.
Signed in March, groundbreaking expected late June or July with an expecting closing date between December and February. It's madness, but long timelines like this certainly allow me more time to prepare and put money away. The other crazy thing is the base price of the model I am building is already above the base price plus options that I chose for the house! That is a +25/30k change since signing!
Oh yeah, it's been crazy with more to come. Where are you building?
@@TyWilde Central Ohio - building a Maronda home
@@shawnpetty3837 Thanks. Best of luck to you my friend.
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As a new realtor that recently signed a contract for my clients in new construction. What is the steps or timeline of things I need to be doing that you recommend leading up to closing?
Stay in contact with the builders agent. For the most part, he'll want you to stay out of the way. You will want to attend the 4-way & the final walkthrough. I've made videos for both of those that you'll want to watch. Thanks for watching & best of luck to you my friend.
My question is, is it likely for home builder to adjust the cost of the home during the home construction process? And how likely? How would you as the agent help navigate that? Is there any protections for the home buyer?
PS you’re awesome.. lol
That's an excellent question & it can get ugly. A lot of builders right now are giving ultimatums. Things like if you want to move forward, the price is going to be $50,000 more or you can cancel & we'll give you back all of your Earnest Money. Most builders are just eating it, which is cool. As an agent we just need to understand each builder contract. That being said, most builders do have the ability to cancel you without repercussions as long as they return your deposits.
What size square footage home are you assuming. How much is main floor, basement and then 1st floor? Also if I am building a house 2x as big does this mean it takes 2x time? Thanks. The videos are excellent and very helpful. My family and I are moving from Florida to Heber and building with Ivory Homes
Thanks for watching & for you compliment. I'm so grateful I could help you. I would say anything up to about 4500 sq ft total maybe 3500 or 3600 finished sq ft. You're only adding a few days here or there as you increase in size. Worst case scenario you'd add about a month. Custom homes can take a lot longer & then of coarse in this market, everything is taking longer. BTW, I visited Florida a few years ago & loved it, but I'm very happy here in Utah. Welcome! Please let me know if you have any questions.
Great video.
Some things I've seen too with the process: delays due to weather, delays from the builder side where they build other homes faster in order to get these sold, and try not to get frustrated if you don't see progress on your home and there is progress on other homes (not sure if there's a red flag here).
Different materials and even appliances might go out of stock and other choices will need to be made.
Last one, (this is not a good or common one) builder builds more homes than planned and this causes issues with the city and utilities thus causing delays for months while they dig for water.
Thanks for the compliment & your comment. These are all very good points. Often people get upset because other homes are built faster around them. The builder usually builds home in the order in which the building permits are received. But sometimes different materials may slow or speed up the home you are building.