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How to Save Money Buying a New Construction Home

A practical guide to builder registration, incentives, upgrades, financing, inspections, taxes, and Homebuyer Reward eligibility.

Published by Homebuyer Rewards Editorial TeamUpdated
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The best way to save on new construction is to protect your representation before registering with a builder, compare the builder’s entire incentive package with outside financing, control upgrade spending, inspect the home independently, and budget for taxes and insurance after the completed home is assessed.

Contact the program before visiting or registering

Builders often track the first contact, online registration, model-home visit, or agent registration. A buyer who visits alone or registers first may prevent an agent from being recognized or compensated, which can also prevent a Homebuyer Reward. Submit the community or property before taking those steps whenever possible.

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Compare the full builder package

Separate the base price, lot premium, structural options, design upgrades, closing costs, financing incentives, title charges, HOA or community fees, and included items. A large credit may be offset by a higher rate, price, or provider charge.

Price upgrades by long-term value

Structural changes can be difficult to add later, while many cosmetic upgrades can be completed after closing. Ask for itemized pricing and determine which upgrades affect appraisal, resale, maintenance, and insurance.

Compare the affiliated lender with outside lenders

Request comparable estimates using the same price, down payment, loan type, lock period, and closing date. Consider rate, points, lender fees, credits, mortgage insurance, and the cost if construction delays require a lock extension.

Use independent inspections

New does not mean defect-free. Depending on the construction stage and local practice, buyers may consider pre-drywall, final, specialty, and warranty inspections. Understand the contract’s inspection and repair procedures.

Budget for completed-home taxes and insurance

Existing public records may reflect vacant land or an incomplete structure. Future taxes can rise after the completed home is assessed. Insurance can also vary based on location, construction, roof, wind, flood, deductibles, and carrier underwriting.

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Review the contract timeline and remedies

Builder contracts may differ substantially from standard resale contracts. Review deposits, cancellation rights, completion estimates, delay provisions, change orders, financing deadlines, appraisal risk, walkthrough procedures, warranty terms, association documents, and dispute provisions. Obtain legal advice when appropriate.

Plan for the warranty period

Document concerns promptly, follow the required warranty process, keep photos and correspondence, and calendar deadlines. A warranty is only as useful as the scope, exclusions, process, and available remedy.