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Construction Loan

Discussion in 'Money & Finance Forum' started by builder, Jan 6, 2007.

  1. builder

    builder membered member

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    Anyone ever had one? Thelt's thread got me thinking, imagine that.


    Here's what I want to do. I want to buy a piece of property that may or may not include a house. I want to then build a small non-traditional house of my own design. It would not be your normal house, but more like a cabin and a workshop. Everything would be built to adhere to local building codes of course. Over time, i would likely add to the original structure creating a more realistic sized home, but would rather do that in the future than now.

    How hard is this to do? Does it matter what kind of house it is as long as it is a permanent structure?
     
  2. Thelt

    Thelt Full Access Member

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    Obviously I am not the expert but I would guess it would based on the projected appraised value of the finished house/workshop. As long as there is sufficient means to appraise it, since it will be unique that might be hard, there should not be a problem getting a loan.

    My dad did a construction loan a few years ago and built a house. He had a deal with the contractor. He drew down on the loan and paid the contractor in five installments. Each installment was due when a certain milestone was reached in the construction process.

    Dad's old house was paid off and he owned the land so he had no issues in financing.
     
  3. Redsnapper

    Redsnapper Burp, gargle, spit.

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    A construction loan, you cannot be your own builder, you'd have to have a licensed and insured GC to build it, he may sub work out to you, though.

    How much you can borrow is determined by the eventual value of the home, you can borrow up to 100% of this value, if it will be your primary residence, determined by an appraiser who looks at the plans, lot, and recent comps. You can build in an interest reserve into the loan, which would automatically make the payments on the interest only loan during construction, so absolutely no money out of pocket! You must have yo' sh*t together, lots of pre-loan documentation, plans, appraiser schedule, estimated draw schedule and construction time line, income and asset (if needed) documentation, and a good credit score is must. If you have any problem at all with credit, I'd suggest looking into fixing that now, rather than later. Submit to underwriting, get the loan, then you work closely with builder and appraiser, to make sure all is on schedule, they disperse money at previously estimated times, then you move in. They'd like you to hold onto the house for at least 2 years, in order for the lender to re-coup some interest on the post construction part of the loan.

    I think that's it in a nutshell, I'm doing one right now in Asheville, I find it interesting and a f*cking great way to develop equity, quickly! I can answer more specific questions as well.

    I think, if any, problem you may run into with your design, is finding comparables that will support the value of construction, other than that, it's all up to credit score, income, plans, specs, and finding a competent GC.
     
  4. builder

    builder membered member

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    gracia
     
  5. Thelt

    Thelt Full Access Member

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    I thought you could be your own GC in North Carolina as long as you were building your own house. I guess I was wrong. I have heard several people say that though.
     
  6. Redsnapper

    Redsnapper Burp, gargle, spit.

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    That actually depends on the lender; if you don't need a loan, you can be your own GC in a heart beat, as long as you are building your own primary residence. Lenders have their own guidelines in order to use their money, and so far the ones I've run into, want you to use a licensed GC to perform the work, although, they can sub work out to you.
     
  7. builder

    builder membered member

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    I'm still thinking I'll buy something with a livable, but not really what I want house. The land will be the important part of the deal. Then, I'll build what I want out of my own pocket or with a personal/equity (if there is enough) loan. I'm thinking over 3 years I should be able to put together at least a workshop and cabin structure and eventually build on to it making the house larger as my own money is available.
     
  8. Thelt

    Thelt Full Access Member

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    I see it is a restriction in place by the lenders and not by NC law. I think it is fairly common in log houses for the owner to act as the GC.
     
  9. Freakshow

    Freakshow Fuck you guys.

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    Gonna have a HARD time getting a lender to lend on a project when you aren't using a licensed contractor. Think of it from the lender's perspective.
     
  10. builder

    builder membered member

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    I know that. I've been thinking of that all along. That's why I'm still considering the traditional route and building when my own finances allow. Depending on the design, I could have an enclosed shell for only $15k. The rest would be added as money allowed. It's not like I'm looking to rush this thing into being next month.
     

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