New Construction Inventory Just Hit a 9.7 Month Supply and Buyers Who Know This Are Winning

April 03, 20265 min read

New Construction Inventory Just Hit a 9.7 Month Supply and Buyers Have More Leverage Than They Realize

A Window of Opportunity in New Construction That Most Buyers Are Missing

There is something happening in the new construction market right now that creates a genuine and time-sensitive opportunity for buyers who understand how to use it. The inventory situation, the builder incentives currently on the table, and the loan structuring strategies available when you work with the right loan officer can combine into a deal that would have been impossible to negotiate two years ago when builders had waiting lists instead of backlogs.

Understanding what is driving this moment and how to take advantage of it is the difference between buyers who walk out of a new construction community with an exceptional deal and buyers who are still scrolling listings wondering why homeownership feels out of reach.

What Is Actually Happening With Builder Inventory

New construction inventory hit a 9.7 month supply in January. For context a balanced market sits at around six months of supply. Anything above that tilts conditions in favor of buyers and 9.7 months represents a meaningful surplus that is creating real and measurable pressure on builders to move product.

When builders need to close transactions they have tools available to them that individual resale sellers simply do not have access to. They are operating at scale with profit margins that allow them to offer financial incentives without the same personal financial constraints that affect a homeowner selling their primary residence. And right now they are using those tools actively.

A growing share of builders cut prices in March. Nearly two thirds of builders are actively offering sales incentives to get deals done. Builders in the Sun Belt including Florida, Texas, Georgia, and the Carolinas are especially motivated to reduce their net effective prices and make affordability adjustments that get buyers to the closing table.

What Builder Leverage Actually Looks Like for Buyers

The incentives that motivated builders are putting on the table right now include rate buydowns funded directly by the builder that bring the buyer's interest rate below market, closing cost credits that reduce the cash needed at the settlement table, and in some cases outright price reductions on homes that have been sitting in their inventory. In many communities buyers are seeing combinations of multiple incentives stacked together on the same transaction.

As Geoff Ricker at Bay Capital Mortgage explains this is where working with the right loan officer changes the outcome significantly. A builder incentive is a starting point. A skilled loan officer takes that incentive and builds a loan structure around it that maximizes the impact on the buyer's monthly payment rather than simply accepting the builder's preferred lender terms without evaluation.

Why Stacking Incentives and Loan Structuring Creates a Different Deal Entirely

The combination of what a motivated builder is offering and what a knowledgeable loan officer can structure around it produces a deal that looks fundamentally different from what a resale purchase in the same price range can offer right now.

Consider what that combination can look like in practice. A reduced purchase price from a builder who needs to sell. A rate buydown that brings the interest rate below the current market rate and reduces the monthly payment meaningfully. Closing cost credits that reduce the upfront cash required at closing. All of it on a brand new home with a builder warranty that eliminates the uncertainty around deferred maintenance and hidden condition issues that resale properties carry.

That is not a deal that a resale seller in the same price range can replicate. A resale seller does not have builder margins. They cannot fund a meaningful rate buydown out of their profit structure the way a production builder can. They cannot offer a builder warranty. And in most cases they are not in a position to combine price reduction with rate buydown with closing cost credits in a single negotiated package.

The buyers who are walking into new construction communities right now, asking the right questions, and coming out with correctly structured deals are accessing a value proposition that simply does not exist in the resale market at this moment.

How to Approach This Opportunity the Right Way

Not every new construction deal is structured the same way and not every builder's incentive package is as valuable as it appears on the surface. Some builders present rate buydowns in ways that benefit their preferred lender arrangement more than they benefit the buyer. Some closing cost credits are offset by purchase price adjustments that reduce their net value. And some incentive packages are genuinely excellent deals that a well-informed buyer and loan officer can take full advantage of.

The key is going in with a loan officer who works directly with builders, understands how builder incentives are structured, knows which offers represent genuine value and which require closer scrutiny, and can pair the builder's incentives with loan options that actually move the needle on the monthly payment the buyer will live with for years after closing.

Geoff Ricker works directly with builders in the market and brings that specific expertise to every new construction transaction. The goal is not just to use whatever the builder is offering but to pair it with the loan structure that produces the best possible outcome for the buyer's actual financial situation and monthly payment.

The Window Is Open Right Now

Builder inventory at 9.7 months does not stay elevated indefinitely. When inventory normalizes the incentives that are currently on the table will compress. The rate buydowns that motivated builders are funding today will not be available at the same level when builders are less motivated to close quickly.

The buyers who act while this window is open are walking into new construction communities with real leverage and real tools to use it. The buyers who wait may find that the market has moved and the opportunity they heard about is no longer available in the same form.

Reach out to Geoff Ricker at Bay Capital Mortgage to find out which builders in your market are currently offering the strongest incentives and how to structure a deal that stacks those incentives with loan options that make the biggest difference in your monthly payment.


Sources

NAR.realtor CensusGov.gov MortgageNewsDaily.com Forbes.com Realtor.com

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