How Do You Plan a New Home Build From Start to Finish? (Budget, Design, Consents & Construction Timeline)

“How do I avoid going $50,000 over budget? When should I talk to a builder? What happens if my architectural plans come back too expensive?”

Most South Island custom home builds exceed budget by 20-30% because homeowners involve builders after architectural plans are complete. The fix: talk to a builder before finalising your design. Total planning time: 3-6 months. Total build time: 12-18 months.

⚠️ This guide covers the complete planning process from initial budget through to construction handover. Cost ranges provided are South Island market averages for November 2025. Contact builders directly for accurate project-specific pricing.

Before we go further, here’s the truth: Connor Jones Group isn’t right for every build.

When we’re NOT your best fit:

If you’ve already committed to completed architectural plans and need a contract-only builder to execute them, we’re not designed for that. Our value comes from early involvement. We’re also not the right choice if your project budget sits under $200,000 or if you’re searching for the absolute lowest price regardless of accountability.

When Connor Jones IS your best fit:

You want to avoid over-budget architectural plans. You value having one accountable team handling everything from engineering through to handover. Your project needs structural engineering work where our in-house capabilities eliminate delays. You’re building in South Island conditions where our 47+ years of combined experience matters.

What Planning Mistakes Affect South Island Custom Home Builds Most in 2025?

The #1 mistake: hiring an architect before talking to a builder. This costs homeowners $15,000-$45,000 in redesign fees when plans exceed budget.

A Dunedin homeowner recently contacted us with architectural plans, estimating $640,000 when their budget was $560,000. The plans were beautiful—exactly what they wanted. They were also 14% over budget, which meant starting over.

The homeowner hired an architect first. The architect created stunning plans without input from the builder on cost. All three builder quotes came back $60,000 to $80,000 over budget. The homeowner then paid the architect $12,000 to redesign with reduced specifications. The second round still exceeded the budget by $20,000. Total waste: $12,000 in fees plus 12 weeks of delays.

The worst part isn’t the wasted money—it’s telling excited homeowners their dream design isn’t possible. When homeowners come to us with over-budget plans, we see the disappointment on their faces. They’ve spent months getting emotionally attached to a design they simply cannot afford. That emotional cost—the crushed expectations and lost time—hurts far more than the redesign fees.

The three most expensive planning mistakes:

Mistake #1: Architect-First Approach
  • Cost impact: $15,000-$45,000 in redesign fees
  • Timeline impact: 8-12 weeks of delays
  • Why it happens: Architects design for aesthetics, not budget constraints
  • The fix: Involve a builder during the preliminary design phase
Mistake #2: Skipping Site Assessment
  • Cost impact: $8,000-$35,000 in unexpected foundation work
  • Real example: Homeowner spent $15,000 on pool excavation before discovering drainage issues
  • The fix: Geotechnical report before design ($1,500-$3,500)
Mistake #3: Building Consent Confusion
  • Cost impact: $5,000-$25,000 for retrospective consents
  • Real example: Homeowner called asking if external stairs needed consent (answer: yes)
  • The fix: Understand requirements before starting design

Planning Mistake

Cost Impact

Timeline Impact

Prevention Cost

Architect before builder

$15,000-$45,000

8-12 weeks

$0 (free consultation)

No site assessment

$8,000-$35,000

4-8 weeks

$1,500-$3,500

Consent confusion

$5,000-$25,000

4-12 weeks

$0 (builder guidance)

Builder involvement before architectural drawings significantly reduces over-budget scenarios based on South Island construction data.

How Long Does Home Build Planning Take in Dunedin, Christchurch & Queenstown?

Most home builds in the South Island take 3-6 months from initial consultation to construction start. Queenstown adds 4-6 weeks due to council processing and site complexity.

Queenstown presents unique challenges beyond other South Island regions. Extreme site access via narrow alpine roads often requires specialised equipment and careful logistics. Weather delays from snow and frost halt work for weeks during the winter months. Council requirements are particularly stringent, with virtually every hillside property requiring resource consent. The limited availability of skilled local trades means we often bring specialised teams from Dunedin, requiring additional accommodation and travel coordination. These factors combine to make Queenstown build more complex but also more rewarding when executed properly.

Planning takes longer than most homeowners expect, but rushing creates expensive mistakes. The timeline breaks down into four distinct phases.

Phase 1: Initial Consultation & Feasibility (1-2 weeks)

This phase starts with a builder consultation where you discuss budget, site, and vision. A good builder gives you an immediate budget reality check—not to discourage you, but to set realistic expectations. The builder visits your site to assess slope, access, and services. Within a week, you’ll know if your project is feasible at your budget level.

Phase 2: Design Development (6-10 weeks)

Design happens in three stages. Preliminary design produces concept sketches with builder cost estimate at ±20% accuracy. Developed design produces detailed plans with ±10% accuracy. Working drawings include all details with ±5% accuracy. This three-stage approach keeps your design within budget at every step.

Phase 3: Building Consent (3-6 weeks)

  • Dunedin City Council: 15-20 working days
  • Christchurch City Council: 20-25 working days
  • Queenstown Lakes District Council: 20-30 working days (longer in peak season Nov-Mar)

Add 1-2 weeks for application preparation. These times assume complete applications—incomplete ones add weeks of back-and-forth.

According to BRANZ research, the average building consent in New Zealand generates multiple Request for Information (RFI) items, with the majority of applications requiring at least one RFI. These RFIs extend the consent process significantly beyond the statutory 20-day limit. Builder-prepared applications with complete documentation consistently achieve faster approval times than homeowner-prepared applications.

Phase 4: Pre-Construction (2-4 weeks)

Material selections, contractor scheduling, and site preparation occur quickly if the earlier phases are correctly done.

Region

Total Planning Time

Consent Processing

Peak Season Impact

Dunedin

3-5 months

15-20 working days

+1-2 weeks (Dec-Jan)

Christchurch

4-5 months

20-25 working days

+2-3 weeks (Nov-Feb)

Queenstown

5-6 months

20-30 working days

+4-6 weeks (Nov-Mar)

Most consent delays stem from incomplete applications, not council backlogs. Builder-prepared applications consistently achieve higher first-time approval rates compared to those prepared by DIY applicants.

Should I Hire an Architect First or a Builder First in 2025?

Hire a builder first for budget consultation, then involve both the builder and the architect together during design. This approach prevents the #1 cause of budget blowouts: architectural plans that exceed financial reality.

This question divides homeowners into two camps: those who prioritise design freedom and those who prioritise budget control. The truth is, you don’t need to choose one over the other if you sequence the process correctly.

The Architect-First Approach (Traditional Method)

You hire an architect to create plans. The architect designs without constraints. You then take plans to builders for quotes. The quotes come back 20-40% over budget. You now face three bad options: pay to redesign, compromise through value engineering, or abandon the project.

  • High likelihood of exceeding budget on first pricing
  • $15,000-$45,000 in redesign fees
  • 8-12 weeks of delays
  • Best for: Unlimited budgets where design matters more than cost
The Builder-First Approach (Budget-Focused Method)

You start with a builder consultation to establish realistic expectations. The builder recommends hiring an architect or provides in-house design services. Design develops with builder cost input at every stage. Plans get priced accurately the first time.

  • Plans match the budget from day one.
  • No redesign cycles
  • Faster timeline
  • Best for: Budget-conscious homeowners, first-time builders, projects requiring engineering
The Integrated Design-Build Approach (Connor Jones Method)

Builder, engineer, and architect collaborate from day one. Real-time cost tracking happens during design. Plans arrive ready for consent with accurate pricing.

  • Complete accountability (one team)
  • In-house engineering eliminates consultant delays
  • Saves 3-5 weeks of coordination time
  • Saves $3,000-$8,000 in consultant fees
  • Best for: Complex sites, hillside builds, homeowners valuing accountability

Your Priority

Choose

Why

Design freedom above all

Architect-First

Creative control, flexible budget

Staying within fixed budget

Builder-First

Cost certainty, fewer surprises

Complex site (hillside, coastal)

Integrated Design-Build

Engineering + building expertise

One accountable team

Integrated Design-Build

No finger-pointing

An ideal custom home building approach in New Zealand integrates design, engineering, and construction from day one to eliminate coordination issues.

Architectural plans created without builder input typically require multiple redesign rounds to meet budget in the South Island market.

Not sure which approach suits your project? See If Your Budget Matches Your Vision (Free 15-Min Call with Tom Connor)

The 7-Step Process to Plan Your New Home Build

Here’s the exact order of operations that keeps South Island custom home builds on budget and on schedule.

Step 0: When to Involve Your Builder (Before You Think)

Builder consultation should happen before architectural plans begin, not after they’re finished.

What happens at this stage? You have a budget reality conversation where the builder explains what your money delivers. The builder visits your site to identify challenges like slope, access, and services. These factors affect cost by 15-40%. The builder provides a feasibility assessment answering: Is your vision possible at your budget level?

Cost of skipping this step: $15,000-$45,000 in redesign fees. A homeowner with a $560,000 budget received $640,000 in builder quotes after completing architectural plans. A 30-minute builder consultation would have prevented this $80,000 gap.

Timeline: 1-2 weeks

Step 1: Budget and Feasibility Assessment

Establishing your real budget requires honest maths, most homeowners skip.

Calculate your available construction budget:

  • Start with total available funds (savings + loan approval + equity)
  • Subtract land cost (if not owned)
  • Subtract professional fees (10-15% of build cost)
  • Subtract contingency (10-15% of build cost)
  • = Available construction budget

 

Example: $600,000 total – $200,000 land – $48,000 fees – $60,000 contingency = $292,000 construction budget

South Island construction costs (2025 estimates):

  • Budget/Entry: $2,800-$3,500 per m²
  • Mid-range: $3,500-$4,500 per m²
  • Premium: $4,500-$6,000+ per m²
  • Queenstown: add 15-25% to all figures

 

What your budget typically delivers:

  • $300,000 = 85-107m² (mid-range)
  • $400,000 = 114-145m² (mid-range)
  • $500,000 = 142-178m² (mid-range)

 

Budget factors that add cost:

  • Sloping site: +15-30%
  • Foundation (piles vs. slab): +$15,000-$40,000
  • Roof complexity: +$20,000-$60,000
  • Cladding (brick vs. weatherboard): +$30,000-$80,000

 

Every $100,000 of construction budget typically delivers 28-35m² in Dunedin, 25-30m² in Christchurch, and 22-27m² in Queenstown, based on mid-range specifications.

Timeline: 1-2 weeks

 
Step 2: Site Evaluation and Land Considerations

Your site dictates design possibilities and adds or saves substantial costs that don’t appear in generic per-square-metre pricing.

What gets assessed:

Geotechnical factors:

  • Soil type and bearing capacity
  • Slope and stability
  • Groundwater and drainage
  • Earthquake/liquefaction risk (Christchurch)
  • Frost depth (Queenstown/Southland)

 

Access and services:

  • Road access for construction vehicles
  • Water connection (town vs. bore: +$8,000-$15,000)
  • Wastewater (sewer vs. septic: +$15,000-$30,000)
  • Power connection distance
  • Stormwater management

Site Factor

Typical Cost Impact

Sloping site

+$20,000-$80,000

No town water

+$8,000-$15,000

No town sewer

+$15,000-$30,000

Poor soil (piles)

+$15,000-$40,000

Limited access

+$5,000-$20,000

Required reports:

  • Geotechnical report: $1,500-$3,500 (essential)
  • Land survey: $1,200-$2,500 (essential)

 

One South Island homeowner spent $15,000 excavating for a pool before realising drainage issues made the site unsuitable. A $2,000 geotechnical report would have identified this first.

Timeline: 2-3 weeks

 
Step 3: Design Phase (Keeping Plans Within Budget)

This is where most builds go wrong. Design without cost control creates beautiful plans you cannot afford.

The right approach involves three design stages, each with builder cost input:

Preliminary Design (2-3 weeks):

  • Concept sketches showing layout and aesthetic
  • Builder cost estimate: ±20% accuracy
  • Catches budget problems early

 

Developed Design (2-3 weeks):

  • Detailed floor plans and elevations
  • Builder cost estimate: ±10% accuracy
  • Major specification decisions made

 

Working Drawings (2-3 weeks):

  • Construction-ready plans with all details
  • Builder cost estimate: ±5% accuracy
  • Becomes contract price

 

Common design decisions and typical cost impact:

  • Simple gable roof: baseline
  • Hip roof: +$8,000-$15,000
  • Complex roof: +$20,000-$60,000
  • Weatherboard cladding: baseline
  • Stucco: +$15,000-$30,000
  • Brick veneer: +$30,000-$80,000

 

A homeowner called asking about steel vs. timber stairs. Steel: $8,000-$12,000. Timber: $4,000-$7,000. These choices add up quickly across dozens of decisions.

This is why custom home building in New Zealand works best when builders are involved during design.

Timeline: 6-10 weeks total

 
Step 4: Building Consent and Council Approvals

Building consent confirms your plans meet New Zealand Building Code requirements. Every new home build requires it.

What you need:

  • Working drawings
  • Structural engineer’s design
  • Specifications document
  • Site plan
  • Council fees ($2,000-$5,000)

 

Common reasons applications get rejected:

  • Incomplete drawings
  • Missing engineer’s reports
  • Non-compliant specifications
  • Boundary setback issues

 

Resource consent (separate from building consent) is required only when your build breaches district plan rules—exceeds height limits, affects heritage areas, or sits on steep slopes. Adds 8-12 weeks to the timeline.

A homeowner called to ask if external stairs require consent. Answer: yes. All structural work in New Zealand requires consent. Building without it costs $5,000-$25,000 in retrospective consent fees.

Builder-prepared consent applications consistently achieve significantly higher first-time approval rates compared to those prepared by homeowners.

Timeline: 3-6 weeks for building consent

 
Step 5: Material Selection and Specifications

Timing matters because long lead-time items need ordering well before installation.

When selections happen:

  • Structural materials: during design phase (affects consent)
  • Exterior finishes: before consent application (appear on drawings)
  • Interior finishes: after consent (don’t affect code compliance)
  • Fixtures and fittings: 8-10 weeks before installation

 

Typical long lead times:

  • Custom windows: 8-12 weeks
  • Imported tiles: 10-16 weeks
  • Custom joinery: 6-10 weeks
  • Speciality lighting: 8-14 weeks

 

Typical allowances (mid-range builds):

  • Kitchen: $25,000-$45,000
  • Bathrooms: $8,000-$15,000 each
  • Flooring: $80-$150 per m²
  • Lighting: $5,000-$12,000

You spend more or less than allowances based on actual selections. Overspend gets added to final cost.

 
Step 6: Construction Timeline and Key Milestones

Realistic build timelines:

  • Small home (100-120m²): 10-14 months
  • Medium home (140-180m²): 12-16 months
  • Large home (200m²+): 14-20 months
  • Queenstown: add 2-4 months

 

Seven construction phases:

  1. Site Preparation (1-2 weeks): Site establishment, excavation, foundation prep
  2. Foundation (2-4 weeks): Footings, concrete, council inspection
  3. Framing (4-8 weeks): Floor, walls, roof, weather-tight stage
  4. External Envelope (3-5 weeks): Roofing, windows, cladding
  5. Internal Rough-Ins (4-6 weeks): Electrical, plumbing, insulation, pre-line inspection
  6. Lining and Finishing (6-10 weeks): Gib, painting, flooring, kitchen, bathrooms
  7. Final Fit-Out (2-4 weeks): Second-fix, final inspection, Code Compliance Certificate

 

Common delays:

  • Weather: +1-3 weeks
  • Material supply: +2-6 weeks
  • Consent variations: +2-4 weeks
  • Client changes: +1-4 weeks per change

Average timeline: 12-18 months from consent to completion

 
Step 7: Quality Inspections and Handover

Three mandatory council inspections:

  • Foundation inspection (before concrete)
  • Pre-line inspection (before walls covered)
  • Final inspection (before CCC issued)

 

What you receive at handover:

  • Code Compliance Certificate (CCC)
  • Producer statements (PS1, PS3, PS4)
  • 10-year warranties (if applicable)
  • As-built plans
  • Product warranties and manuals
  • Maintenance schedule

 

Connor Jones Group’s “Built Right First Time” Promise:

Quality checked at every stage by Licensed Building Practitioners. Problems prevented through systematic processes. 12-month defects liability period. Tom Connor’s personal oversight throughout your build.

Connor Jones Group maintains comprehensive public liability and contract works insurance, plus eligibility for Master Builders 10-year guarantee where applicable. This gives our clients peace of mind that their investment is protected throughout the build process and long after completion.

Learn more about our guarantee

Timeline: Handover day, with 12-month defects period

New Home Build Planning Checklist

Pre-Design:

  •  Builder consultation completed
  •  Budget established
  •  Geotechnical report ordered ($1,500-$3,500)
  •  Land survey completed ($1,200-$2,500)

 

Design:

  •  Preliminary design approved
  •  Budget check #1 (±20%)
  •  Working drawings complete
  •  Final budget confirmed (±5%)

 

Consent:

  •  Engineer’s report done
  •  Building consent submitted
  •  Consent issued (3-6 weeks)

 

Pre-Construction:

  •  Contract signed
  •  Materials selected
  •  Long-lead items ordered (8-16 weeks ahead)
  •  Insurance arranged

 

Construction:

  •  Foundation inspection passed
  •  Weather-tight stage reached
  •  Pre-line inspection passed
  •  Final inspection passed
  •  CCC received

Planning Example: Mid-Range Custom Home

Note: This is a representative scenario based on typical South Island builds and current market conditions. It does not represent a specific Connor Jones Group project. Individual project costs and timelines will vary.

A Dunedin couple with a $500,000 build budget wanted a mid-range custom home on a moderately sloping suburban site.

Timeline and costs:

Months 1-2: Initial planning, geotechnical report ($2,800), feasibility confirmed

Months 3-5: Design with builder input. First estimate: $485,000. Final estimate: $495,000. No redesign required.

Months 6-7: Consent approved in 18 days (complete application)

Months 8-10: Pre-construction, materials selected

Months 11-21: Construction on schedule

Month 22: Handover with 8 minor defects rectified in 1 week

Final costs:

  • Build: $495,000
  • Reports: $5,300
  • Consent: $3,200
  • Contingency used: $12,000
  • Total: $515,500 (3% over initial estimate, within contingency)

 

Success factors: Builder before architect saved potential redesign costs. In-house engineering capability saved coordination time. Complete consent application prevented delays. Realistic contingency absorbed variations.

How Connor Jones Group Handles Residential Building Planning

Connor Jones Group integrates design, engineering, and construction under one roof. This eliminates coordination chaos that causes delays and budget blowouts.

Our five-stage process:

Stage 1: Free Consultation

Tom Connor discusses your budget, site, and vision. We provide honest reality checks and tell you if we’re not the right fit.

Stage 2: Site Assessment

In-house engineering evaluates geotechnical needs, foundation options, and structural requirements immediately.

Stage 3: Design Development

Work with your architect or use our design capabilities. Real-time cost tracking prevents over-budget surprises.

Stage 4: Consent Management

Complete application preparation with high first-time approval rates. Council liaison and inspection coordination.

Stage 5: Construction Delivery

Tom Connor’s personal oversight. Licensed Building Practitioners on-site. Real-time project tracking. Direct communication.

Why our integrated approach works:

In-house engineering:

  • No external consultant delays
  • Saves coordination time
  • Reduces consultant fees
  • Single contract = complete accountability

South Island expertise (47+ years):

  • Deep knowledge of regional conditions
  • Understanding of council requirements
  • Experience with local challenges
  • Established supplier relationships

Service areas:

Who we’re best for: Homeowners valuing accountability over lowest price. Projects needing structural engineering. First-time builders needing guidance. Anyone avoiding over-budget plans.

Who should look elsewhere: Projects under $200,000. Completed plans needing contract-only builder. Absolute cheapest option seekers.

What Our Clients Say

★★★★★ “We’ve used quite a few builders, Connor Jones was the best by a wide margin. Thoroughly professional (even when I changed the brief quite a bit at the last minute), they offered a fixed price project even with this renovation/improvement project, which a lot of builders won’t do. The work was done to the highest standard, sub-contractors were always on time and likewise excellent. We were delighted with the result, which has helped make our house feel genuinely special. They would be our first choice when we come to use a builder again.” -Andy and Allison C.

★★★★★ “Connor Group installed a new window for us in the kitchen in the second story of our house. Throughout the design and planning phase, Connor Group was very easy to deal with; I didn’t feel rushed even though I was comparing quotes and eventually needed some external design services. The provided quote was well structured and easy to analyse. During the job everything went well, and they could even provide some engineering service to alter the rangehood to fit into the space. The job was started and completed on time at the agreed price. I’d certainly use them again.” -Cameron K.

South Island homeowners trust Connor Jones Group’s integrated planning approach to avoid budget blowouts and delays.

What Happens Next After Contacting Us

Wondering what happens after you reach out? Here’s our simple process:

  1. Tom Connor personally calls you within 24 hours of your inquiry
  2. We have a straightforward 15-minute phone conversation about your budget and site
  3. If it makes sense for both parties, we schedule a site visit within the week
  4. You receive honest assessment and clear next steps

No pressure, no sales pitch—just straight talk about whether we’re the right fit for your project.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, for budget-focused builds. Builder consultation prevents designs exceeding budget by 20-30%. This costs $15,000-$45,000 in redesign fees. Talk to a builder first.

Typically $25,000-$70,000 before construction: Geotechnical ($1,500-$3,500), survey ($1,200-$2,500), architect ($15,000-$45,000), engineer ($3,000-$8,000), consent ($2,000-$5,000), legal ($2,000-$5,000). Costs vary by project complexity and region.

Dunedin: 15-20 working days. Christchurch: 20-25 working days. Queenstown: 20-30 working days. Add 1-2 weeks for preparation. Processing times vary based on application completeness and council workload.

Dunedin: typically 114-145m² (mid-range). Christchurch: 105-135m². Queenstown: 89-114m². Assumes mid-range finishes and straightforward site. Your actual size will vary based on specifications and site conditions.

Yes, strongly recommended. Reports cost $1,500-$3,500. Skipping costs $8,000-$35,000 when problems discovered during construction.

Three costly options: Redesign ($5,000-$15,000 + 4-8 weeks). Value engineering (compromises design). Increase budget (not possible for most). Prevention: involve builder during design.

Building consent: Confirms Building Code compliance. Required for all builds.

Resource consent: Confirms district plan compliance. Required only for rule breaches (height, setbacks, heritage areas).

10-15% minimum. Covers unexpected conditions, design changes, material increases, weather delays. Builds without contingency run out of money before completion.

Key Takeaways

Talk to a builder before hiring an architect. This prevents $15,000-$45,000 in redesign costs.

Get a geotechnical report before designing. Site conditions create $15,000-$40,000 cost variations.

Allow 3-6 months for planning. Queenstown needs 5-6 months due to council processing.

Budget realistically with contingency. South Island homes cost $2,800-$6,000+ per m². Add 10-15% contingency.

Understand consent requirements early. Building consent takes 15-30 working days. Incomplete applications add weeks.

Choose builders with in-house engineering. Saves coordination time and consultant fees for complex sites.

Plan material selections early. Long-lead items need ordering 8-16 weeks before installation.

Your next step: See If Your Budget Matches Your Vision (No-Obligation Call)

Disclaimer: Cost ranges, timelines, and processes in this guide are based on Connor Jones Group’s experience across the South Island and current market conditions as of November 2025. Individual project costs and timelines will vary based on site conditions, specifications, material choices, and market factors. Council processing times may vary based on application completeness and seasonal workload. Contact us for project-specific quotes and timelines tailored to your specific requirements.