ᐅ Should I buy a plot of land now to start building in 2023 or 2024?
Created on: 7 May 2022 15:18
R
rifoxa4902
Hello everyone,
I’ve been following this forum for a few weeks now and I’m currently finding it very difficult to make a decision regarding our house building plans. There have been similar posts here over the past days/weeks, and as far as I can tell, I am not alone in facing this kind of decision.
A bit of background:
Last year, we initially tried to find an existing property. However, many rather unpleasant experiences with the houses on offer, the agents, and bidding processes led to frustration on my part, and I ended up investing a lot of energy into searching for a building plot instead.
In the search for a plot, I seem to have had either a lot of luck or skill (or both), as I now have the opportunity to buy a municipal plot under good conditions (however, unfortunately with a building obligation requiring construction to start no later than 2024 and completion within 3 years plus 2 years).
As it often happens, I got the confirmation for the plot at roughly the same time interest rates increased sharply and the Ukraine crisis began.
Right now, we are quite unsettled due to the currently unpredictable construction cost situation. We would rather not start building this year and are considering whether to secure the plot for a building start in 2023 or 2024 instead. Or possibly to abandon the idea of building altogether, although existing properties are not getting any cheaper either.
Some key facts about us:
- Desired house size (single-family home): 100-120 sqm (simple standard, nothing fancy, a basic kitchen is fine, no basement, simple driveway)
- Ages: 43 (male) and 38 (female), 1 child aged 4, no further children planned
- Net income (combined): over 5,300 euros net per month (plus various bonus payments amounting to several thousand euros), the female partner currently works part-time, with an additional net potential of about 800 euros
- Current equity: 210,000 euros (increasing by approximately 20,000 to 25,000 euros per year)
Our rough cost estimate for the house is as follows (feedback on whether this sounds roughly realistic is welcome):
- Plot costs (1,000 sqm (1,200 square yards)) including development, notary, tax: 85,000 euros (price fixed)
- Building location: Schleswig-Holstein
- Pure construction costs (estimated for 100-120 sqm): 300,000 euros
- Additional construction-related costs (estimated): 80,000 euros
- Total cost: 465,000 euros (minus equity leaves a financing requirement of 255,000 euros)
- With a monthly payment of 1,600 euros and an interest rate of 3%, we would need about 17 years to repay and finish before retirement.
Our naive assumption is that building under these calculations, if started now at current interest rates (3%) and construction costs, would work fairly well, but due to the currently unpredictable construction cost situation, it feels too risky (we don’t see much buffer in the loan repayment). Instead, we are considering securing the plot now, accumulating more equity by next year, and then starting to build in 2023 or 2024 (completing the build by 2026 at the latest).
What do you think about this? What would you do in our situation? (I have outlined a few options below.)
I would...
- start building as soon as possible despite the unpredictable construction cost situation (development likely only starting in August)
- secure the plot now despite the building obligation (with a latest start in 2024) and wait for a more cost-predictable situation in 2023 or 2024. If building cannot proceed in 2023 or 2024, simply give up the plot—but at least we would have preserved the opportunity to build
- not buy the plot at all, as construction costs and interest rates are expected to rise so much and so quickly that households with incomes like ours will no longer be able to build in the near future
- ...
Many thanks in advance for your evaluations and opinions.
I’ve been following this forum for a few weeks now and I’m currently finding it very difficult to make a decision regarding our house building plans. There have been similar posts here over the past days/weeks, and as far as I can tell, I am not alone in facing this kind of decision.
A bit of background:
Last year, we initially tried to find an existing property. However, many rather unpleasant experiences with the houses on offer, the agents, and bidding processes led to frustration on my part, and I ended up investing a lot of energy into searching for a building plot instead.
In the search for a plot, I seem to have had either a lot of luck or skill (or both), as I now have the opportunity to buy a municipal plot under good conditions (however, unfortunately with a building obligation requiring construction to start no later than 2024 and completion within 3 years plus 2 years).
As it often happens, I got the confirmation for the plot at roughly the same time interest rates increased sharply and the Ukraine crisis began.
Right now, we are quite unsettled due to the currently unpredictable construction cost situation. We would rather not start building this year and are considering whether to secure the plot for a building start in 2023 or 2024 instead. Or possibly to abandon the idea of building altogether, although existing properties are not getting any cheaper either.
Some key facts about us:
- Desired house size (single-family home): 100-120 sqm (simple standard, nothing fancy, a basic kitchen is fine, no basement, simple driveway)
- Ages: 43 (male) and 38 (female), 1 child aged 4, no further children planned
- Net income (combined): over 5,300 euros net per month (plus various bonus payments amounting to several thousand euros), the female partner currently works part-time, with an additional net potential of about 800 euros
- Current equity: 210,000 euros (increasing by approximately 20,000 to 25,000 euros per year)
Our rough cost estimate for the house is as follows (feedback on whether this sounds roughly realistic is welcome):
- Plot costs (1,000 sqm (1,200 square yards)) including development, notary, tax: 85,000 euros (price fixed)
- Building location: Schleswig-Holstein
- Pure construction costs (estimated for 100-120 sqm): 300,000 euros
- Additional construction-related costs (estimated): 80,000 euros
- Total cost: 465,000 euros (minus equity leaves a financing requirement of 255,000 euros)
- With a monthly payment of 1,600 euros and an interest rate of 3%, we would need about 17 years to repay and finish before retirement.
Our naive assumption is that building under these calculations, if started now at current interest rates (3%) and construction costs, would work fairly well, but due to the currently unpredictable construction cost situation, it feels too risky (we don’t see much buffer in the loan repayment). Instead, we are considering securing the plot now, accumulating more equity by next year, and then starting to build in 2023 or 2024 (completing the build by 2026 at the latest).
What do you think about this? What would you do in our situation? (I have outlined a few options below.)
I would...
- start building as soon as possible despite the unpredictable construction cost situation (development likely only starting in August)
- secure the plot now despite the building obligation (with a latest start in 2024) and wait for a more cost-predictable situation in 2023 or 2024. If building cannot proceed in 2023 or 2024, simply give up the plot—but at least we would have preserved the opportunity to build
- not buy the plot at all, as construction costs and interest rates are expected to rise so much and so quickly that households with incomes like ours will no longer be able to build in the near future
- ...
Many thanks in advance for your evaluations and opinions.
N
Neubau20228 May 2022 17:30Franzbrot schrieb:
I also think that’s enough.
In my opinion, children like to play in the living room not so much because of the room’s size, but more because of its location.
I hardly know any children who enjoy playing alone upstairs, where it’s usually empty. They don’t notice what’s going on downstairs, and I think that’s probably why playing in the living room is appealing – everyone is there, and you can hear what the parents are saying.
We lived all on one level, and we liked playing most in my parents’ study, right next to the living room. I agree with that. The large garden will also likely be the focal point for our daughter, especially on warm days. We are looking forward to it and hope the move goes as planned in July. 😎
P
Pinkiponk8 May 2022 20:16Franzbrot schrieb:
They don’t notice what’s happening downstairs, and that’s probably part of the appeal of playing in the living room – everyone is there and you can hear what the parents are saying. Until now, I also assumed that this was the purpose of “open-plan living areas,” meaning the combined kitchen-living-dining space, so that no one feels left out. It’s also great for the children: spacious, lots of natural light, doors leading outside, always something going on, close to the fridge and the chocolate drawer. 🙂