16/10/2025
FINANCING A CUSTO BUILD OR MORTGAGING AN EXISTING HOUSE.
Financing a custom build can be “better” if you value control, potential built-in equity, and energy-efficient design—but only if you’re comfortable with the extra moving parts (draws, timelines, and cost risk). Here’s a crisp, Canada-focused comparison.
HOW CUSTOM-BUILD FINANCING CAN BE BETTER
You finance only what’s completed (at first).
With a progress-draw construction mortgage, you pay interest-only on the amount advanced to date, not the full final price from day one. That can ease cash flow during the build versus starting full principal + interest immediately on an existing home.
1) Potential built-in equity (“buy at cost”).
If you secure land well and manage a fixed-price contract or tight budget, the finished home’s appraised value can exceed total cost (land + hard/soft costs). That equity is harder to capture when paying market price for an existing house.
2) Design to your budget.
You can tailor specifications (size, finishes, systems) to keep costs aligned with what the lender will advance—more control than competing for existing homes with unpredictable offer prices.
3) Lower operating costs from day one.
New builds can hit higher energy-efficiency standards (airtightness, heat pumps, better insulation, HRVs). Lower utility bills and fewer near-term repairs improve total cost of ownership versus many resale homes.
4) Warranty + newer components.
In Ontario, Tarion warranty coverage on new homes reduces early repair risk; lenders like this. Existing homes have unknowns that can become immediate cash drains.
5)Tax considerations on new homes.
Depending on structure, new primary residences may be eligible for the federal GST/HST new housing rebate (and Ontario’s provincial portion). Resales don’t offer this specific new-home rebate.
6) Phased flexibility.
You can stage upgrades (e.g., finish basement later), keeping initial financing smaller and adding value over time.
WHEN IT'S NOT BETTER
Rate risk & carrying costs: Construction loans are often variable-rate during the build. If you’re also paying rent or a current mortgage, double-carrying can outweigh benefits.
Cost overruns & delays: Materials, labor, site surprises, and weather can push you over budget—lenders won’t fund extras without re-approval.
Lower initial leverage: Some lenders cap Loan-to-Cost/Value (e.g., 65–80%). You may need more cash than a 5–20% down payment on a resale with default insurance.
Admin & appraisal friction: Draws require inspections/appraisals; funds aren’t instant.
Market risk. If values soften by completion, final take-out financing could be tighter.
BOTTOM LINE : Custom-build financing shines when you want control, efficiency, and the chance to create equity—and you’re prepared for the extra process and risk.