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Building a Custom Home in Canada: Costs, Timeline & Process (2026)

Updated

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

PhaseTimelineWhat Happens
1. Planning & budgeting1–3 monthsSet budget, research lots, talk to lenders
2. Land purchase1–3 monthsBuy the lot, conduct due diligence
3. Design2–6 monthsHire architect/designer, develop plans
4. Permits1–4 monthsSubmit for building permits and approvals
5. Builder selection1–2 monthsGet bids, select builder, sign contract
6. Site preparation2–4 weeksClear lot, excavation, grading
7. Foundation2–4 weeksFootings, foundation walls, waterproofing
8. Framing4–8 weeksStructure, roof, exterior sheathing
9. Mechanical rough-in3–6 weeksElectrical, plumbing, HVAC, insulation
10. Drywall & interior4–8 weeksDrywall, paint, trim, cabinetry
11. Finishing4–8 weeksFlooring, fixtures, appliances, landscaping
12. Inspection & occupancy1–2 weeksFinal inspection, occupancy permit, move in
Total18–30 monthsFrom first planning step to move-in

Cost breakdown

Construction costs per square foot (2026)

Build LevelCost Per Sq Ft2,000 Sq Ft Home3,000 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

CategoryPercentage of TotalExample ($1M Build)
LandVaries (not in construction budget)$200K–$1M+ (separate)
Site work & excavation5%–8%$50K–$80K
Foundation8%–12%$80K–$120K
Framing & structure15%–20%$150K–$200K
Exterior (roofing, siding, windows)10%–15%$100K–$150K
Mechanical (electrical, plumbing, HVAC)12%–18%$120K–$180K
Interior finishes20%–30%$200K–$300K
Kitchen & bathrooms10%–15%$100K–$150K
Landscaping & driveway3%–5%$30K–$50K
Soft costs (permits, design, engineering, surveys)8%–12%$80K–$120K
Contingency10%–15%$100K–$150K

Regional cost variation

RegionCost Per Sq Ft (Mid-Range)Key Factor
GTA / Vancouver$400–$600High land costs, tight labour market
Ottawa / Calgary$300–$450Moderate costs
Montreal$280–$400Lower labour costs vs Toronto
Edmonton / Winnipeg$250–$380More affordable labour and materials
Atlantic Canada$220–$350Lower costs overall
Rural areas$200–$350Lower labour but potentially higher material delivery costs

Construction mortgage financing

How construction mortgages work

FeatureDetails
TypeDraw mortgage / progress advance mortgage
Down payment20%–25% of total project cost (land + construction)
How funds are releasedIn stages (draws) as construction milestones are reached
Interest during constructionInterest-only on amounts drawn
Typical draw schedule4–6 draws over the construction period
CompletionConverts to a standard mortgage or you arrange new financing
Lender inspectionsLender sends an appraiser to verify completion at each draw stage

Standard draw schedule

DrawMilestonePercentage of Total
Draw 1Lot purchase (if financed) or foundation complete15%–20%
Draw 2Framing complete, roof on20%–25%
Draw 3Lockup (windows, doors, exterior) + mechanical rough-in20%–25%
Draw 4Drywall, interior rough-in15%–20%
Draw 5Substantial completion (ready for occupancy)15%–20%
Final holdbackReleased after completion and lien period10%

Construction mortgage vs standard mortgage

FeatureConstruction MortgageStandard Mortgage
DisbursementStaged drawsSingle lump sum
InterestOnly on drawn amountOn full mortgage amount
RateOften higher (prime + 1%–2%)Standard mortgage rate
Down payment20%–25%As low as 5% (existing homes)
CMHC insuredGenerally not availableAvailable with < 20% down
Lender optionsFewer lenders offer construction mortgagesWidely available

Selecting a lot

Lot due diligence checklist

ItemWhy It Matters
ZoningConfirms what you can build (residential, setbacks, height, lot coverage)
Soil test / geotechnical reportReveals soil conditions — rock, clay, water table — affects foundation cost
SurveyConfirms lot boundaries, easements, right-of-ways
ServicingMunicipal water/sewer or private well/septic? (septic = $15K–$40K extra)
Environmental assessmentCheck for contamination (former industrial use, buried oil tanks)
AccessRoad access, driveway location, utility connections
Trees and gradingRemoval and grading costs can add $10K–$50K
Restrictive covenantsMay limit building size, style, or materials
Permit feasibilityConfirm with the municipality that your planned home is approvable

Selecting a builder

Builder types

TypeBest ForPrice Range
Production builderStandard plans with some customizationLower cost — $200–$350/sq ft
Semi-custom builderModified plans with more flexibilityMid-range — $300–$500/sq ft
Full custom builderCompletely unique architect-designed homesHigher cost — $400–$1,000+/sq ft
Owner-builderHands-on owners managing their own projectVaries — can save 15%–25% but requires significant time and knowledge

Questions to ask a builder

  1. How many years have you been building custom homes?
  2. Can I visit a home you are currently building and one that is 3–5 years old?
  3. What is your warranty program? (Look for Tarion in Ontario, provincial equivalent elsewhere)
  4. Do you offer fixed-price or cost-plus contracts?
  5. What is your typical timeline, and what happens if there are delays?
  6. How do you handle change orders?
  7. Who is the on-site supervisor, and how often are they on my job?
  8. Can I see your current budget for a recent project (to assess accuracy)?

Contract types

Contract TypeHow It WorksRisk Level for Owner
Fixed price (lump sum)Builder quotes a total price — changes are handled via change ordersLowest — builder absorbs overruns
Cost-plusOwner pays actual costs + builder’s markup (10%–20%)Highest — you bear all cost overruns
Cost-plus with GMPCost-plus with a guaranteed maximum price capModerate — caps your exposure

New home warranty programs by province

ProvinceWarranty ProviderCoverage
OntarioTarionDeposit protection, 1-year materials/labour, 2-year systems, 7-year structural
British ColumbiaBC Housing (mandatory home warranty insurance)2-year materials/labour, 5-year building envelope, 10-year structural
AlbertaNew Home Warranty Program (voluntary but common)1-year materials, 2-year systems, 5- or 10-year structural
QuebecGuarantee Plan for New Residential Buildings (mandatory)1-year materials, 3-year systems, 5-year structural
Other provincesAtlantic / Prairie home warranty programs (varies)Varies — check provincial programs

Common pitfalls to avoid

  1. Underestimating costs by 20%–30% — always budget a contingency of at least 10%–15%
  2. Choosing a lot without a soil test — discovering rock or high water table after purchase can add $50K+ to foundation costs
  3. Not getting permits confirmed before purchasing the lot — a zoning issue can make the lot unbuildable for your plan
  4. Using a cost-plus contract without a GMP — costs have no ceiling and you are fully exposed
  5. Making changes during construction — every change order adds cost and delays; finalize decisions during the design phase
  6. Not holding back funds — provincial construction lien acts require holdbacks; failing to hold back leaves you liable to unpaid trades
  7. Skipping inspections — independent inspections at foundation, framing, and completion catch problems before they are buried
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