The Uncomfortable Truth: Your โ€œFinalโ€ Number Is Never Final

If youโ€™re building a custom home or doing a major renovation, thereโ€™s one simple reality most people donโ€™t hear early enough:

The number on your contract is not the real final number.

There are always unknowns – under the ground, inside the walls, inside the design, and inside your own decision-making. You canโ€™t remove that uncertainty. But you can plan for it.

Thatโ€™s why at BPC we recommend that every homeowner set aside a realistic buffer in both schedule and budget at the start of a custom home or complex renovation. As we move through design and preconstruction, that buffer can often shrink. But we always start high on purpose.

Think of it less like โ€œextra moneyโ€ and more like an unassigned cost bucket youโ€™ll transfer into real, known line items as the project comes to life.


In This Blog, Weโ€™ll Walk Through:

  • What typically drives changes to a custom home budget or schedule
  • Why 15% is a smart starting point early in the process
  • How a good builder reduces uncertainty (but never to zero)
  • How to think about your buffer so youโ€™re not blindsided later

What Actually Moves a Custom Home Budget?

Itโ€™s rarely just one thing. Most changes fall into four big buckets:

  1. Surprises related to the site and what lies below
  2. Design details that werenโ€™t fully defined
  3. Hidden conditions in renovations
  4. Client choices and scope creep

Letโ€™s hit each quickly.


1. Site Surprises: Whatโ€™s Under Your Feet

The project may look perfectly straightforward on paperโ€ฆ until you start digging.

Unexpected ledges or rocks. 

  • On one project, the design team sited the house in a spot that turned out to be full of ledge. We ended up having to blast rock. It was the right call for long-term performance and layout – but it was a real cost.
  • Silver lining: we processed that blasted rock into gravel and used it on the project, and even integrated exposed ledge into the patio design.

Variable Soils and Fill

  • Sometimes a site has pockets of low quality historical fill, or buried organics like old stumps or wood debris from prior work. You donโ€™t always find it until excavation starts, and then the fix is simple but real: remove the bad material and bring in clean, compactable fill so the foundation and drainage perform the way they should.

High Water Table 

  • You can discover underground water where you didnโ€™t expect it. That affects foundations, drainage, and sometimes even design.

How we try to get ahead of it:

Early on, we do test holes – both for septic/drainage and at the actual house location. Thereโ€™s no rigid โ€œevery 10 feetโ€ rule; instead, we rely on an experienced site contractor who understands the local geology and can โ€œread the land.โ€ They know the difference between rock thatโ€™s easily broken up and rock that will require blasting.

Even with that, you canโ€™t test every square foot. Some surprises are just part of building.

Want to see what โ€œledgeโ€ actually looks like on a real site? Watch this short video from our Biggs project, where Ben walks through what we found and how it affected the plan.


2. Design Details That Werenโ€™t Fully Defined

Architectural drawings are not all created equal. You can have a beautiful big-picture design without the nitty-gritty detail needed to price and build it accurately.

Common places where missing details show up:

  • Interior trim details are often undecided in early design.
  • Siding and exterior transitions
  • Exterior decks, porches, and patio designs that havenโ€™t been finalized
  • Millwork and cabinetry that are drawn conceptually, not fully specified

These details arenโ€™t always needed for permits, so they sometimes get pushed until later. Thatโ€™s when they turn into change orders.

At BPC, we work from a drawing completeness checklist for each stage of design. We constantly push for the details we know will affect cost and schedule – because if itโ€™s not designed, it canโ€™t be priced accurately.


3. Renovation unknowns: whatโ€™s inside the walls

Renovations are a whole different beast. You donโ€™t know what youโ€™re really working with until you open things up.

Real examples:

Hidden Asbestos 

  • We recently found extra asbestos buried inside interior walls – no visible warning signs beforehand. It wasnโ€™t a massive cost hit, but it stopped work until it could be abated safely.

Rotted Roof Deck

  • On another project, we stripped the roof and discovered sections of the roof deck completely rotted from old water leaks. There was no way to know that until we took the old roof off.

Those kinds of discoveries canโ€™t be fully predicted from the outside. Thatโ€™s exactly what your buffer is for.


4. Client decisions, upgrades, and scope creep

Even if you think youโ€™ve made all your decisions, things change when:

  • You walk the framed space and see how it feels
  • You see how the rest of the budget is tracking
  • You discover a fixture or finish you like better than the original choice

Typical examples:

  • Upgrading to a more expensive tile, faucet, or appliance package
  • Changing light fixtures (especially specialty or strip lighting with big implications for finishing work)
  • Deciding to finish the basement now instead of โ€œsomedayโ€
  • Adding a deck or exterior feature โ€œwhile weโ€™re already hereโ€

None of this is wrong. Itโ€™s just normal human behavior. The buffer gives you room to evolve the design without panic.


Why BPC Recommend Starting with a 15% Preconstruction Buffer

At the very beginning of preconstruction, we like to see homeowners plan for around 15% above the estimated project cost as a contingency.

Hereโ€™s why Construction Contingency is important:

Early estimates are like a rough sculpture. We start with a block of stone – high-level allowances and assumptions. As drawings and specs get more detailed, we carve away the uncertainty.

At the beginning, more things are unknown: structural details, specific fixtures, finishes, cladding, millwork, and whatโ€™s really hiding on or in the site.

Renovations, in particular, carry more unknowns behind walls, under floors, and in older systems. Those projects almost always need the higher end of the buffer range.

As We Move Closer to Contract Signing, Two Things Happen:

  1. Drawings get more complete. Weโ€™ve pushed the architect for the details that affect cost.
  2. Allowances get more realistic. Even if you havenโ€™t picked exact tiles or fixtures, weโ€™ve at least calibrated the allowances to your taste and market pricing.

When those two conditions are true, we can often dial the construction contingency down:

  • New build with solid drawings and realistic allowances: buffer may get down to 10% or even 5%
  • Complex new build or renovation with more unknowns: weโ€™re more comfortable staying around 10โ€“15%

Construction Schedule buffers: the protection hiding inside your schedule

Budget isnโ€™t the only thing that needs a buffer. Your schedule does too.

When we build a construction schedule, we intentionally build in schedule buffers between phases. We donโ€™t always call them out as a separate line item, but theyโ€™re there.

 Why Is A Schedule Buffer Needed?

  • Supplier and material delays. Lead times can move, especially for custom items, specialty fixtures, and appliances.
  • Labor availability. Subs arenโ€™t always free on the exact day youโ€™d love them to be. Good trades are busy.
  • Unforeseen work. That hidden rot, extra demo, or additional structural support you didnโ€™t anticipate? It takes time, not just money.

When we issue a change order that taps your budget buffer, we also flag whether it will affect the schedule. If it does, we adjust the schedule and talk through the implications. The goal is no surprises, even when the underlying conditions are surprising.


How BPC Reduces Risk (but Never to Zero)

Our job isnโ€™t to promise perfection. Itโ€™s to manage uncertainty honestly and proactively. 

A few examples of how we do that:

We investigate your site early

  • Test holes at the future house location, not just septic or drainage areas
  • Partnering with site contractors who know local conditions and can spot risks early

We push for design detail before construction starts

  • For each design stage (design development, construction drawings), we use an internal drawing completeness checklist to ensure:
    • Key details are actually designed
    • Fixtures and finishes are specified or at least properly allowed for
    • Weโ€™re not pricing off assumptions that are going to explode later

This lets our estimates track much more closely to final costs. On recent projects, final costs landed within less than 5% of the preconstruction estimates precisely because we did this work up front.

 Weโ€™re realistic about what youโ€™ll change

  • We know youโ€™re going to tweak finishes. You might fall in love with one light fixture and shrug at another. You might decide to do more now instead of saving it for โ€œlater.โ€

Instead of pretending that wonโ€™t happen, we:

  • Put honest allowances in place for items youโ€™re not ready to choose
  • Talk through whatโ€™s โ€œworth itโ€ and where to save, based on our experience
  • Treat your budget like itโ€™s our own, not a limitless pool

“Lance, our project manager, was phenomenal. He showed up every day with focus and integrity, always working to solve problems and keep us on track. When costs exceeded expectations, he went out of his way to find smart alternatives and help us stay within reach. That meant a lot.”

-BPC Client, CT

How to think about your Construction Contingency Buffer as a Homeowner

 Letโ€™s reframe the idea of a โ€œbufferโ€ so it actually helps you:

Expect to spend most of your Buffer

  • If you go into the project thinking, โ€œMaybe weโ€™ll get all this back!โ€ youโ€™re setting yourself up for frustration.

Better Expectation:

  • โ€œThis buffer is here to cover things we canโ€™t see yet and choices weโ€™ll make later.โ€
  • If you end up with money left over, great. But donโ€™t base other financial decisions on getting that buffer back.
  • Your contingency isnโ€™t โ€œextra.โ€ Itโ€™s unassigned.
  • During the job, you and your builder will gradually reassign it to:
    • Site conditions that show up during excavation
    • Renovation surprises inside walls, roofs, or foundations
    • Upgrades you consciously choose
    • Small but important technical details that improve performance and durability

The emotional difference is huge when youโ€™re not feeling like youโ€™re constantly โ€œoverโ€ your budget – youโ€™re just moving money from the unknown bucket to the known one.

Ask your builder to show you how it evolves

  • Before you sign:
    • Ask, โ€œWhatโ€™s driving the buffer right now?โ€
    • Ask, โ€œWhat would need to be true for us to safely reduce it?โ€
    • Ask, โ€œHow will you communicate when weโ€™re dipping into it – both for surprises and for upgrades we choose?โ€

You want a builder who can answer those questions clearly and calmly, not someone who waves their hand and says, โ€œDonโ€™t worry about it.โ€


Three Conversations to Have Before You Sign a Contract

Whether you work with BPC or not, here are three conversations to have with any builder:

Site Risk Conversation

  • โ€œWhat are the specific site risks you see on this property?โ€
  • โ€œWhat investigations or test holes have you done or do you recommend?โ€

Design Completeness Conversation

  • โ€œWhat parts of this design arenโ€™t fully detailed yet?โ€
  • โ€œWhere are we using allowances instead of specific selections, and how realistic are they?โ€

Buffer and Change Order Conversation

  • โ€œWhat percentage buffer do you recommend for this project and why?โ€
  • โ€œHow will you tell me when weโ€™re moving money out of the buffer and where itโ€™s going?โ€
  • โ€œHow will changes affect schedule, not just cost?โ€

The right builder wonโ€™t be offended by these questions. Theyโ€™ll be relieved youโ€™re asking them.


Closing Thought: Planning for the Unknown Is the Most Practical Thing You Can Do

A custom home or major renovation is, by definition, one-of-a-kind. That means there will be moments where weโ€™re doing something new – new details, new combinations of materials, new site conditions.

You donโ€™t need a fantasy number. You need a realistic plan.

A buffer in both schedule and budget at the start is one of the simplest, most powerful tools you have to:

  • Reduce stress
  • Make better decisions as you go
  • Protect relationships (with your builder and your partner)
  • End up with a home you love, not a project that emotionally drained you

If youโ€™re considering a project and want to talk through what a realistic buffer would look like for your specific site and scope, weโ€™re happy to walk you through it.

You bring your ideas. Weโ€™ll bring the honesty, the checklists, and yes – the buffer.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Ready to Build?

Letโ€™s talk about designing a home that grows with your family.

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