ᐅ Is Buying Land and Building a House Too Risky in the Current Situation?

Created on: 24 Jun 2022 10:14
J
Julchen7393
Hello everyone,

After quietly reading along for a long time, I finally want to reach out to you with my first post to ask for advice.

My partner and I currently live in an end-terrace house (end townhouse) that we rent cheaply from my boyfriend’s parents – who inherited the house themselves. Since the size of the house is not sufficient for our long-term plans and a lot of money would be needed for renovations, we have been looking for a plot of land to build our own home for some time.

Now, a building plot in a new development area of our municipality has been returned, and we are eligible to apply for it. Because the plot is provided by the municipality, it is significantly cheaper (€420 per m² (approx. $440 per sq yd)) than the market price (€600–1000 per m² (approx. $630–1050 per sq yd)). All other plots are already developed or have building permits/planning permission applied for, so it’s unlikely that any more plots will become available.

Although the plot is probably a unique opportunity, we are very uncertain about the feasibility under the current circumstances and would appreciate your assessment.


General information about us:

Female, 29 (Controlling) and Male, 30 (Engineer)
No children yet, but we plan to have two children within the next 4-6 years (which is why we want more living space)


Financial situation:

Net income: €7000 (approx. $7400)
  • Female: €3400 (approx. $3600) and Male: €3600 (approx. $3800) – both full-time 40 hours per week (with additional variable bonuses not yet factored in)

Current expenses: €3400 (approx. $3600)
  • Fixed costs: €2200 (approx. $2350)
  • €600 rent, €350 utilities incl. heating, internet, and electricity, €500 car expenses incl. insurance, €400 retirement savings, €350 other fixed costs (insurance, streaming services, etc.)
  • Variable costs: €1200 (approx. $1265) – budgeted quite generously; we usually spend significantly less
  • Living costs, vacations, leisure activities

Surplus: €3600 (approx. $3800)

Equity: €250,000 (approx. $265,000) – of this, we plan to put €200,000 (approx. $212,000) into financing; part of the remaining €50,000 (approx. $53,000) is tied up in retirement savings and should remain there


Construction costs:

Plot: 621 m² (6679 sq ft) at €420 per m² (approx. $440 per sq yd): €260,820 (approx. $277,000)
Additional purchase costs: €18,257 (approx. $19,400)
House construction: 150 m² (1615 sq ft) at €2600 per m² (approx. $270 per sq ft): €400,000 (approx. $425,000)
(We have an appointment with a construction company next week to see if this is feasible with significant DIY work)
Basement: €40,000 (approx. $42,500)
Garage: €25,000 (approx. $26,500)
Kitchen: €25,000 (approx. $26,500)
Outdoor facilities: €30,000 (approx. $32,000)

Total costs: €800,000 (approx. $850,000)

Financing requirement:
€800,000 - €200,000 = €600,000 (approx. $425,000 - $212,000 = $638,000)
The bank would approve a loan with our desired monthly payment of €2,500 (approx. $2650), but depending on interest rate changes, the repayment period without early repayments would be between 30 and 35 years.

We are particularly worried that our estimated construction costs are too low and that significant price increases may follow.
Also, the long loan term concerns us – given the planned children, we find it difficult to consider a higher monthly payment, especially since we both earn roughly the same and will face significant income reductions due to parental leave benefits.

For days now, we have been torn between “taking this once-in-a-lifetime chance to get an affordable building plot in town” and “the financial risk is too high in the current situation.”

We would be grateful for your thoughts on our plan and the expected construction costs.

Best regards,
Julia
montessalet25 Jun 2022 08:23
Giving advice is difficult. Everyone has to make their own decision eventually.
I would go for it:
A) Getting building plots is challenging and will remain difficult in the mentioned price range.
B) Equity is very good.
C) Income is adequate.
D) Construction costs are currently high – but it appears that significantly (!) fewer projects are being built (reasons: rapidly rising construction costs and increased loan interest rates). Suppliers should have capacity available again in the short term.
If you don’t have a sloped lot, skip the basement: this would definitely give you enough buffer.
F
Fuchsbau35
25 Jun 2022 08:36
If you want to stay in that location and the plot meets your expectations, then go ahead with it now. I believe that land will become increasingly scarce in the future. The remaining undeveloped areas are not unlimited. Storage space issues can be solved in other ways. I would rather do without a basement and other extras than miss out on a suitable building site. Besides the basement, some things can also be addressed later when more funds are available.
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Neubau2022
25 Jun 2022 08:39
WilderSueden schrieb:

Long enough that it’s no fun anymore. A construction period of 10–12 months is more or less standard, and with a lot of self-work it usually takes longer. With a prefabricated house, it’s a bit shorter. Plus all the appointments and tasks beforehand (finding a construction company, architect, bank, etc.).
We hardly do anything before moving in, yet building a house is still a lot of work. I think it’s fairer to everyone if you don’t constantly have the construction site on your mind and don’t visit it all the time. Children are only little once.

There is a risk, but it could also be that after the first one there are no more problems.


I can confirm that. We basically just move in. However, everything still needs to be checked, despite the general contractor’s site manager and the external construction supervision. I am on site almost every day to inspect everything. After all, it’s my money being invested here.
D
driver55
25 Jun 2022 09:49
Fuchsbau35 schrieb:

you can also tackle that later when you have the money available again.

That’s always the best line here. 😀
The Easter Bunny, Santa Claus, or who’s going to bring it then?
askforafriend25 Jun 2022 10:28
driver55 schrieb:

That’s always the best line here. 😀
Easter Bunny, Santa Claus, or who’s delivering that then?

I don’t get it. If you have a surplus of x per month, then you can multiply x by the time period = savings and buy quite a bit again (garden, terrace, fences, etc.) – the important thing is to move in.
D
driver55
25 Jun 2022 10:34
askforafriend schrieb:

If you have a surplus of x per month,

Yeah, currently, but not once the payment is due… you probably have almost a million project (40,000€ basement 😳 ) on your hands, so you won’t be making big moves anymore… especially with children…