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Buying Land and Building a House in Canada — Construction Mortgage Guide

Updated

Building a house from the ground up gives you complete control over design, quality, and location — but it requires a different financial strategy than buying an existing home. This guide walks you through the entire process from buying land to securing a construction mortgage to moving in.

Overview — the build process

PhaseTimelineWhat Happens
1. Land purchase1–3 monthsFind and buy a building lot
2. Planning & design2–6 monthsArchitect/designer plans, permits, engineering
3. Financing1–2 monthsSecure construction mortgage
4. Construction8–14 monthsBuild the house in stages
5. Completion1–2 monthsFinal inspections, occupancy permit, mortgage conversion
Total12–24 monthsFrom land purchase to move-in

Step 1 — Buying the land

Types of building lots

Lot TypeDescriptionProsCons
Serviced lot (subdivision)Municipal water, sewer, hydro, road access in placeReady to build; no infrastructure costsLess privacy; developer restrictions
Unserviced lot (rural)No municipal services; requires well, septic, roadMore space, privacy, lower land cost$30,000–$100,000+ for well, septic, driveway
Infill lot (urban)Empty or tear-down lot in an established neighborhoodPremium location; land appreciationExpensive; tight building envelope; neighbor issues
Estate lotLarge (1–10+ acres) in semi-rural areasPrivacy, space for large custom homesLonger build times; access and service costs

Due diligence before buying land

CheckWhy It Matters
ZoningConfirms residential use is permitted; sets setbacks, height limits, lot coverage
Soil test / geotechnical reportReveals if the soil can support a foundation; identifies rock, clay, water table issues
Environmental assessmentRequired in some areas; checks for contamination, protected species, wetlands
SurveyConfirms exact boundaries, easements, right-of-ways
Percolation test (rural)Determines if the soil is suitable for a septic system
Well assessment (rural)Checks water availability and quality — drill a test well before buying
Municipal servicesConfirm water, sewer, hydro, gas availability and connection costs
Road accessLegal access confirmed? Year-round maintained?
Development chargesMunicipal fees for new construction — can be $20,000–$80,000+
Building restrictionsHOA, subdivision agreements, architectural controls, conservation authority rules

Financing the land purchase

OptionDetails
CashSimplest; land is fully paid and becomes equity for the construction mortgage
Lot loanBank finances 50–75% of land value; higher rate than mortgages (prime + 2–4%); shorter term (1–5 years)
Vendor take-back (VTB)Seller finances part or all of the purchase; negotiable terms
HELOC from existing homeUse equity in your current home to buy the land
Construction mortgage (single-close)Some lenders include land purchase in the construction mortgage — one transaction from land to completion

Step 2 — Planning and design

Design options and costs

OptionCostTimelineBest For
Stock plans$1,000–$5,000Available immediatelyBudget-conscious; standard layouts
Modified stock plans$3,000–$10,0004–8 weeksMostly standard with custom changes
Custom architect$15,000–$80,000+ (8–15% of build cost)3–6 monthsFully custom, complex sites, unique designs
Design-build firmIncluded in build contract2–4 monthsOne-stop shop; simpler process

Permits and approvals

Permit / ApprovalCostTimeline
Building permit$2,000–$15,000 (varies by municipality and square footage)2–8 weeks
Septic permit (rural)$500–$2,0002–6 weeks
Conservation authority approval$500–$5,0004–12 weeks
Site plan approval (some municipalities)$1,000–$5,0004–12 weeks
Development charges$20,000–$80,000+Paid at permit issuance

Step 3 — Construction mortgage

How construction mortgages work

Unlike a regular mortgage where you receive all funds at closing, a construction mortgage releases funds in stages called draws. You pay interest only on drawn amounts during construction.

Typical draw schedule

DrawStage% of LoanCumulative
1Foundation complete15%15%
2Framing and roof complete25%40%
3Mechanical rough-in (plumbing, electrical, HVAC)20%60%
4Drywall, insulation, interior finishes25%85%
5Completion and occupancy15%100%

Each draw requires an inspection (by the lender or their appraiser) to confirm the work is complete before funds are released.

Construction mortgage vs regular mortgage

FeatureConstruction MortgageRegular Mortgage
DisbursementIn draws (3–5 stages)Full amount at closing
Payments during buildInterest-only on drawn amountPrincipal + interest from day 1
RateUsually prime + 1–2% (higher than standard)Posted or discounted fixed/variable
Down payment20–25% of total project cost5–20% of purchase price
Inspection requiredAt each draw stageOne appraisal at purchase
Term12–24 months construction + conversion1–5 year term, 25 yr amortization
AvailabilityLimited — not all lenders offer theseAll lenders

Lenders offering construction mortgages

Lender TypeTypical TermsBest For
Credit unions (Meridian, Desjardins, etc.)Most flexible; some offer insured construction mortgagesBest option for most custom builds
Big banks (limited programs)Stricter criteria; may require contractor from approved listWell-established builders with bank relationship
B-lendersHigher rates (7–10%); more flexible on documentationNon-standard projects, self-builds
Private lenders10–15%+ plus feesLast resort; very expensive

Down payment calculation

ComponentAmount
Land value (already owned)$200,000
Construction cost (from builder contract)$500,000
Soft costs (permits, design, contingency)$80,000
Total project cost$780,000
Required equity (25%)$195,000
Land equity applied–$200,000
Additional cash needed$0 (land covers the down payment)

If the land is worth less than 25% of the total project cost, you need to bring additional cash.

Interest cost during construction

MonthCumulative DrawInterest RateMonthly Interest
Months 1–3$117,000 (Draw 1: 15%)7.5%$731
Months 4–6$312,000 (Draw 2: +25%)7.5%$1,950
Months 7–9$468,000 (Draw 3: +20%)7.5%$2,925
Months 10–11$663,000 (Draw 4: +25%)7.5%$4,144
Month 12$780,000 (Draw 5: +15%)7.5%$4,875
Total interest during construction~$30,000–$38,000

This is a carrying cost that many people forget to budget for.

Step 4 — Build costs

What does it cost to build a house in Canada?

Quality LevelCost Per Sq Ft2,000 Sq Ft Home3,000 Sq Ft Home
Basic / builder grade$175–$250$350,000–$500,000$525,000–$750,000
Mid-range / custom$250–$400$500,000–$800,000$750,000–$1,200,000
High-end / luxury$400–$600+$800,000–$1,200,000+$1,200,000–$1,800,000+

Costs vary significantly by region, site conditions, and market conditions

Cost by region

RegionBuild Cost Per Sq Ft (mid-range)
GTA / Southern Ontario$275–$400
Greater Vancouver$300–$450
Ottawa$250–$350
Calgary / Edmonton$225–$325
Montreal$225–$325
Atlantic provinces$200–$300
Rural / remote$200–$350 (lower labor, higher material transport)

Build budget breakdown

Category% of TotalExample ($600K build)
Foundation & framing25–30%$150,000–$180,000
Roofing5–8%$30,000–$48,000
Mechanical (HVAC, plumbing, electrical)15–20%$90,000–$120,000
Interior finishes (drywall, flooring, paint, trim)15–20%$90,000–$120,000
Kitchen & bathrooms10–15%$60,000–$90,000
Exterior finishes (siding, windows, doors)10–12%$60,000–$72,000
Site work (excavation, grading, driveway)5–8%$30,000–$48,000
Contingency10–15%$60,000–$90,000

Soft costs (often forgotten)

CostAmount
Architectural/design fees$15,000–$80,000
Building permits and development charges$22,000–$95,000
Engineering (structural, geotechnical, civil)$5,000–$20,000
Survey$1,500–$5,000
Soil / environmental testing$2,000–$8,000
Legal fees$1,500–$3,000
Insurance during construction$2,000–$5,000
Interest during construction$20,000–$50,000
Utility connections (hydro, gas, water, sewer)$5,000–$25,000
Landscaping, driveway, final grading$10,000–$50,000
Total soft costs$84,000–$341,000

Critical: Soft costs can add 15–25% on top of the construction contract. Budget for them separately.

Choosing a builder

Builder types

TypeDescriptionBest For
Production builderBuilds from a library of pre-designed plans; volume-based pricingBudget-conscious; faster timelines
Custom builderBuilds from your architect’s plans; fully customUnique designs; complex sites
Design-build firmHandles design and construction in-houseStreamlined process; single point of responsibility
Owner-builderYou act as general contractorMaximum control and cost savings; high time commitment

What to look for in a builder contract

ClauseWhat It Should Say
Fixed price vs cost-plusFixed price gives you cost certainty; cost-plus gives flexibility but less control
AllowancesClearly defined dollar amounts for selections (flooring, fixtures, etc.)
Change order processWritten approval with price and timeline impact before any changes
Completion dateSpecific date with consequences for delay (penalty clause)
Warranty1-year workmanship, 2-year mechanical, 7-year structural (Tarion in Ontario; New Home Warranty in other provinces)
Payment scheduleTied to draw milestones, not calendar dates
Holdback10% holdback as required by provincial Construction Lien Act
Dispute resolutionArbitration or mediation clause

Cost overrun protection

StrategyHow It Helps
Fixed-price contractBuilder absorbs cost overruns (within scope)
15% contingency in budgetYour buffer for surprises and upgrades
Detailed specs before signingFewer change orders = fewer cost surprises
Avoid changes during constructionEven small changes cascade into significant cost and time impacts
Monitor draw scheduleEnsure spending aligns with progress; flag issues early
Independent inspectionsHire your own inspector at each stage — separate from the lender’s

Total cost example

ComponentAmount
Land$200,000
Construction (2,500 sq ft mid-range)$625,000
Soft costs$120,000
Contingency (10%)$62,500
Total project cost$1,007,500
Down payment (25%, land equity covers it)$200,000 (land) + $51,875 cash
Construction mortgage$755,625
Converted to permanent mortgage$755,625 at market rate
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