How Much Is Your Home Worth?

By Stephanie Checkley | Stephanie Checkley Real Estate | Keller Williams Premier Realty
Serving Lake Elmo, Stillwater & Woodbury for 13+ Years |stephaniecheckleyrealestate.com
New construction is booming in Lake Elmo. Communities like North Star, Limerick Village, Bridgewater Village, and several others are attracting buyers who want modern floor plans, builder warranties, and the chance to put their stamp on a home before anyone else lives in it.
It's exciting, and for many buyers, it's the right move. But the new construction process has its own quirks, costs, and pressure points that are easy to miss if you're not familiar with how builders operate. Here's what I tell my buyers before they walk into a model home.
1. The Sales Rep Works for the Builder - Not for You
The friendly, knowledgeable person greeting you in the model home is a builder's employee. They're good at their jobs, they're often genuinely helpful, and they can tell you a lot about the product. But their job is to sell homes for that builder, not to protect your interests.
That's why having your own buyer's agent (ideally one who specializes in new construction) matters more than many buyers realize. A good agent can help you interpret the contract, identify what's negotiable, and catch issues before you're locked in. And in most cases, the builder pays the buyer's agent commission, so representation costs you nothing directly.
Don't skip this step just because you're buying from a builder.
2. The Base Price Is Not the Real Price
Builder floor plans are typically marketed at a base price, but that number can look very different from what you'll actually spend by closing.
Here's what gets added:
Lot premiums - In communities like North Star, lots with pond views or premium positioning carry premiums that can range from $10,000 to $50,000 or more above the base lot price. These are often non-negotiable.
Structural upgrades - Adding a finished basement, a third garage stall, a covered porch, or a bonus room can each add $20,000–$60,000 depending on the builder.
Design center selections - Flooring, cabinetry, countertops, fixtures, and appliances are typically chosen through the builder's design center, and base-level finishes are almost always disappointing. Many buyers spend $30,000–$80,000+ at the design center alone.
Rule of thumb: Budget 15–25% above the base price for a finished home that matches what you saw in the model.
3. Timelines Are Estimates - Sometimes Generous Ones
Builders provide projected completion timelines, and some are quite good at hitting them. Others are not. Supply chain delays, labor shortages, and permitting backlogs can all push your move-in date.
This matters for planning:
If you're selling an existing home, be cautious about agreeing to a closing date tied to a construction timeline
Make sure your purchase agreement spells out what happens if completion is delayed beyond a certain date
Ask the builder's sales team about their actual average delivery window versus the projected timeline; past performance is usually telling.
For communities just breaking ground (like Limerick Village, starting Spring 2026), the earliest buyers should expect to be flexible on timing.
4. Builder Incentives Are Real, But They Have Strings
Builders regularly offer incentives: closing cost contributions, design center credits, or rate buy-downs through their preferred lender. These can be genuinely valuable.
The strings: builder incentives are almost always tied to using their preferred lender and title company. That's not inherently bad, but it limits your ability to shop rates. If a builder is offering $15,000 toward closing costs but their lender's rate is a quarter-point higher than you could get elsewhere, you need to do the math carefully.
Get a quote from at least one outside lender to use as a comparison. Your agent can help you evaluate whether the incentive package is genuinely advantageous or mostly cosmetic.
5. What's "Standard" Varies Wildly by Builder
Robert Thomas Homes, Creative Homes, Hanson Builders (all active in North Star), and M/I Homes (Inwood Townhomes) each have different standards for what's included in the base home. One builder's "standard" kitchen might include quartz countertops and dovetail drawer boxes; others might include laminate and builder-grade hardware.
Before comparing prices across builders, compare what's included. Two homes with the same square footage and base price can represent very different values depending on the standard specification.
Ask for a full specification sheet for the base home before you visit the design center. This will save you from surprises and give you a real basis for comparison.
6. The Contract Favors the Builder
Builder contracts are drafted by the builder's legal team, which means they protect the builder's interests more than yours. Common provisions to watch:
Limited or no price lock: Some contracts allow the builder to pass on material cost increases
Arbitration clauses: Disputes may be resolved through arbitration rather than court
Limited warranty scope: Builder warranties typically cover certain defects for 1–10 years, but exclusions matter
Right to modify plans: Some builders reserve the right to make material substitutions
Having a real estate attorney or an experienced buyer's agent review the contract before you sign. With a $700,000+ transaction, having that insurance may be worthwhile.
7. You Can Negotiate More Than You Think
Many buyers assume builder prices are fixed. They're often not, especially on spec homes (already-built or nearly-finished homes that the builder is carrying). Builders have overhead costs on unsold inventory, and they are motivated to move it.
What's often negotiable:
Closing cost contributions
Design center credits
Appliance packages
Completion of specific upgrades at no additional cost
Lot premium reductions on slower-selling lots
What's usually not negotiable:
The base price on pre-sale homes (in a strong market)
Structural selections once they're submitted to production
Timeline guarantees
The key is knowing when to push. Your agent, particularly one with new construction experience, will know what's realistic and how to ask in a way that doesn't damage the relationship with the builder.
The Bottom Line
New construction in Lake Elmo is a genuinely compelling opportunity. You're getting a modern, efficient home in a community that's being thoughtfully built for the long term. But it's a different process than buying resale, and the buyers who do best are the ones who understand those differences before they walk into the model home.
Go in informed. Bring an agent. Read the contract. And enjoy the process, because building a home in a place like Lake Elmo is pretty special.
Looking to purchase a newly built home in Lake Elmo?
Thinking about new construction in Lake Elmo? I work with buyers across the North Star, Limerick Village, Bridgewater Village neighborhoods, and would love to be your guide. I know the builders, the lots, and the process inside and out. Let's connect before you sign anything.
Stephanie Checkley | Keller Williams Premier Realty
Serving Lake Elmo, Stillwater & Woodbury, MN | 13+ Years of Local Expertise
Phone: 651-308-8450
Website:stephaniecheckleyrealestate.com
Stephanie Checkley Real Estate | Keller Williams Premier Realty | Lake Elmo | Stillwater | Woodbury | Washington County | East Metro Twin Cities
This guide was written by Stephanie Checkley, a licensed Minnesota real estate agent with Keller Williams Premier Realty, based on 13+ years of hands-on experience helping sellers in Lake Elmo, Stillwater, and Woodbury achieve outstanding results. Information is current as of 2026. For personalized advice specific to your property, contact Stephanie directly.
Stephanie Checkley | Stephanie Checkley Real Estate | Keller Williams Premier Realty | Licensed in Minnesota | Serving Washington County and the Greater East Metro Twin Cities Area