Cost-Plus vs Fixed-Price: How iLevel Builds Custom Home Budgets You Can Actually Trust
Why iLevel uses cost-plus for custom Black Hills builds, what the contract actually says, and how transparency changes the budget conversation.
The honest version of “what will my custom home cost”
Most custom home buyers start with a number they read in a magazine or heard from a friend, get a fixed-price contract that fits inside it, then discover six months in that change orders, allowances, and “unforeseen conditions” have rewritten the math. The frustration is rarely about the dollars themselves. It is about not being able to see the dollars while they move.
iLevel builds on a cost-plus contract for one reason: it makes the budget readable while construction is happening, not just at quarterly review meetings. Owners see what every line item actually costs the build, what our fee is on top of it, and where the work-in-progress lands versus the estimate at any given moment.
What cost-plus actually means in our contract
Cost-plus is straightforward in concept: the owner pays the actual cost of materials and labor, plus a fixed builder fee or percentage. The detail that makes or breaks it is what the contract calls “cost” and what it makes the builder do with that information.
Our cost-plus contract defines cost as documented invoices and labor hours. Every line is tied to a receipt or a timesheet inside Ressio, our client portal. The owner can pull a report at 11 PM on a Tuesday and see what was spent that week, who it was spent with, and what part of the build it went toward. There is no monthly statement that has to be requested. The information is live.
On top of that documented cost, our builder fee is fixed. Not a percentage that grows when the project grows. Not a sliding scale that nudges up when allowances are exceeded. A fixed number agreed during preconstruction. Which means the only variable in the total is the actual cost of the work, and the owner can see that variable change in real time.
Why fixed-price often hides the budget instead of locking it
A fixed-price contract sounds safer because the total is a single number. The trade-off is that the builder absorbs all the risk of unknowns, and most builders price that risk in by padding allowances, padding labor estimates, and writing change-order clauses that make any deviation from the plan a renegotiation.
When something inside the wall turns out to be different from the spec, the builder is the one who decides what it is going to cost to fix. The owner sees a change-order number, not the underlying cost. Five or six change orders in, the gap between the original fixed price and the running total can be uncomfortable, and the explanation lives entirely on the builder’s side of the conversation.
Cost-plus moves that conversation into shared territory. The change is still the same change. The cost is still the same cost. But it is documented, visible, and explained in real numbers rather than negotiated in change-order language.
How transparency changes the relationship over an 18-month build
Black Hills custom builds run 14 to 18 months on average. That is a long time to spend in a relationship where one side controls the financial picture and the other side gets quarterly summaries. The owners who have built with us tell us, repeatedly, that the single most valuable feature of how we run a project is that they never feel surprised by the budget.
Knowing what the work costs makes everything downstream easier. The owner can choose finishes against a real running total rather than a guess. They can decide whether to add the wine cellar in month seven because they can see exactly what margin the build has left. They can pause a decision for two weeks without worrying that something is happening to their money in the meantime.
Cost-plus is not the right fit for every builder or every owner. It requires discipline on the builder side, documentation that holds up under inspection, and an owner who actually wants to look at the numbers. For the owners who want to build a generational home and want to be a real partner in how it is done, it is the only contract that makes the partnership actually work.
Building in the Black Hills?
Want to see the cost-plus contract iLevel uses, plus a sample Ressio dashboard from an active Black Hills build? Reach out and we will walk you through both.