Building a custom home is one of the most rewarding — and complex — things you can do as a homeowner. Here is a comprehensive guide to the costs, financing, timeline, and process in Canada.
The custom home building process
| Phase | Timeline | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Planning & budgeting | 1–3 months | Set budget, research lots, talk to lenders |
| 2. Land purchase | 1–3 months | Buy the lot, conduct due diligence |
| 3. Design | 2–6 months | Hire architect/designer, develop plans |
| 4. Permits | 1–4 months | Submit for building permits and approvals |
| 5. Builder selection | 1–2 months | Get bids, select builder, sign contract |
| 6. Site preparation | 2–4 weeks | Clear lot, excavation, grading |
| 7. Foundation | 2–4 weeks | Footings, foundation walls, waterproofing |
| 8. Framing | 4–8 weeks | Structure, roof, exterior sheathing |
| 9. Mechanical rough-in | 3–6 weeks | Electrical, plumbing, HVAC, insulation |
| 10. Drywall & interior | 4–8 weeks | Drywall, paint, trim, cabinetry |
| 11. Finishing | 4–8 weeks | Flooring, fixtures, appliances, landscaping |
| 12. Inspection & occupancy | 1–2 weeks | Final inspection, occupancy permit, move in |
| Total | 18–30 months | From first planning step to move-in |
Cost breakdown
Construction costs per square foot (2026)
| Build Level | Cost Per Sq Ft | 2,000 Sq Ft Home | 3,000 Sq Ft Home |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget / basic | $200–$300 | $400K–$600K | $600K–$900K |
| Mid-range custom | $350–$550 | $700K–$1.1M | $1.05M–$1.65M |
| High-end custom | $500–$750 | $1M–$1.5M | $1.5M–$2.25M |
| Luxury | $750–$1,000+ | $1.5M–$2M+ | $2.25M–$3M+ |
Complete cost breakdown
| Category | Percentage of Total | Example ($1M Build) |
|---|---|---|
| Land | Varies (not in construction budget) | $200K–$1M+ (separate) |
| Site work & excavation | 5%–8% | $50K–$80K |
| Foundation | 8%–12% | $80K–$120K |
| Framing & structure | 15%–20% | $150K–$200K |
| Exterior (roofing, siding, windows) | 10%–15% | $100K–$150K |
| Mechanical (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) | 12%–18% | $120K–$180K |
| Interior finishes | 20%–30% | $200K–$300K |
| Kitchen & bathrooms | 10%–15% | $100K–$150K |
| Landscaping & driveway | 3%–5% | $30K–$50K |
| Soft costs (permits, design, engineering, surveys) | 8%–12% | $80K–$120K |
| Contingency | 10%–15% | $100K–$150K |
Regional cost variation
| Region | Cost Per Sq Ft (Mid-Range) | Key Factor |
|---|---|---|
| GTA / Vancouver | $400–$600 | High land costs, tight labour market |
| Ottawa / Calgary | $300–$450 | Moderate costs |
| Montreal | $280–$400 | Lower labour costs vs Toronto |
| Edmonton / Winnipeg | $250–$380 | More affordable labour and materials |
| Atlantic Canada | $220–$350 | Lower costs overall |
| Rural areas | $200–$350 | Lower labour but potentially higher material delivery costs |
Construction mortgage financing
How construction mortgages work
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Type | Draw mortgage / progress advance mortgage |
| Down payment | 20%–25% of total project cost (land + construction) |
| How funds are released | In stages (draws) as construction milestones are reached |
| Interest during construction | Interest-only on amounts drawn |
| Typical draw schedule | 4–6 draws over the construction period |
| Completion | Converts to a standard mortgage or you arrange new financing |
| Lender inspections | Lender sends an appraiser to verify completion at each draw stage |
Standard draw schedule
| Draw | Milestone | Percentage of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Draw 1 | Lot purchase (if financed) or foundation complete | 15%–20% |
| Draw 2 | Framing complete, roof on | 20%–25% |
| Draw 3 | Lockup (windows, doors, exterior) + mechanical rough-in | 20%–25% |
| Draw 4 | Drywall, interior rough-in | 15%–20% |
| Draw 5 | Substantial completion (ready for occupancy) | 15%–20% |
| Final holdback | Released after completion and lien period | 10% |
Construction mortgage vs standard mortgage
| Feature | Construction Mortgage | Standard Mortgage |
|---|---|---|
| Disbursement | Staged draws | Single lump sum |
| Interest | Only on drawn amount | On full mortgage amount |
| Rate | Often higher (prime + 1%–2%) | Standard mortgage rate |
| Down payment | 20%–25% | As low as 5% (existing homes) |
| CMHC insured | Generally not available | Available with < 20% down |
| Lender options | Fewer lenders offer construction mortgages | Widely available |
Selecting a lot
Lot due diligence checklist
| Item | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Zoning | Confirms what you can build (residential, setbacks, height, lot coverage) |
| Soil test / geotechnical report | Reveals soil conditions — rock, clay, water table — affects foundation cost |
| Survey | Confirms lot boundaries, easements, right-of-ways |
| Servicing | Municipal water/sewer or private well/septic? (septic = $15K–$40K extra) |
| Environmental assessment | Check for contamination (former industrial use, buried oil tanks) |
| Access | Road access, driveway location, utility connections |
| Trees and grading | Removal and grading costs can add $10K–$50K |
| Restrictive covenants | May limit building size, style, or materials |
| Permit feasibility | Confirm with the municipality that your planned home is approvable |
Selecting a builder
Builder types
| Type | Best For | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Production builder | Standard plans with some customization | Lower cost — $200–$350/sq ft |
| Semi-custom builder | Modified plans with more flexibility | Mid-range — $300–$500/sq ft |
| Full custom builder | Completely unique architect-designed homes | Higher cost — $400–$1,000+/sq ft |
| Owner-builder | Hands-on owners managing their own project | Varies — can save 15%–25% but requires significant time and knowledge |
Questions to ask a builder
- How many years have you been building custom homes?
- Can I visit a home you are currently building and one that is 3–5 years old?
- What is your warranty program? (Look for Tarion in Ontario, provincial equivalent elsewhere)
- Do you offer fixed-price or cost-plus contracts?
- What is your typical timeline, and what happens if there are delays?
- How do you handle change orders?
- Who is the on-site supervisor, and how often are they on my job?
- Can I see your current budget for a recent project (to assess accuracy)?
Contract types
| Contract Type | How It Works | Risk Level for Owner |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed price (lump sum) | Builder quotes a total price — changes are handled via change orders | Lowest — builder absorbs overruns |
| Cost-plus | Owner pays actual costs + builder’s markup (10%–20%) | Highest — you bear all cost overruns |
| Cost-plus with GMP | Cost-plus with a guaranteed maximum price cap | Moderate — caps your exposure |
New home warranty programs by province
| Province | Warranty Provider | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Tarion | Deposit protection, 1-year materials/labour, 2-year systems, 7-year structural |
| British Columbia | BC Housing (mandatory home warranty insurance) | 2-year materials/labour, 5-year building envelope, 10-year structural |
| Alberta | New Home Warranty Program (voluntary but common) | 1-year materials, 2-year systems, 5- or 10-year structural |
| Quebec | Guarantee Plan for New Residential Buildings (mandatory) | 1-year materials, 3-year systems, 5-year structural |
| Other provinces | Atlantic / Prairie home warranty programs (varies) | Varies — check provincial programs |
Common pitfalls to avoid
- Underestimating costs by 20%–30% — always budget a contingency of at least 10%–15%
- Choosing a lot without a soil test — discovering rock or high water table after purchase can add $50K+ to foundation costs
- Not getting permits confirmed before purchasing the lot — a zoning issue can make the lot unbuildable for your plan
- Using a cost-plus contract without a GMP — costs have no ceiling and you are fully exposed
- Making changes during construction — every change order adds cost and delays; finalize decisions during the design phase
- Not holding back funds — provincial construction lien acts require holdbacks; failing to hold back leaves you liable to unpaid trades
- Skipping inspections — independent inspections at foundation, framing, and completion catch problems before they are buried