What a New Construction Loan Broomfield CO Buyers Should Know
A new construction loan Broomfield CO buyers consider is financing built specifically for homes that are still being built or have not yet broken ground. The most common version is the construction-to-permanent loan, often called a one-time-close or single-close loan. It covers the building phase, then automatically converts into a standard 30-year mortgage once the home is finished and ready for occupancy.
Broomfield has been one of the more active new-construction markets along the US-36 corridor for several years. Anthem Highlands continues to expand on the north side of town, Baseline is adding homes near the Sheridan corridor, and infill builders are filling lots across original Broomfield neighborhoods. For buyers who want a brand-new home with current finishes and energy-efficient systems, new construction is a real option.
However, the financing path looks different from a typical resale purchase. So before you sign a builder contract or commit to a custom plan, it helps to understand which loan products fit your situation, how draws and inspections work, and where the timeline can flex.
Two Paths: Production Homes vs. Custom Builds Near Broomfield CO
The first thing to figure out is which kind of new construction you are buying. The financing differs for each.
Production Homes (Builder-Built, Pre-Designed)
Production homes are built by national or regional builders on lots they already own, often in master-planned communities like Anthem Highlands or Baseline. You choose a floor plan, pick from a defined list of finishes, and sign a contract with a target completion date. Because the builder owns the land and absorbs the construction costs, you typically take out a standard purchase mortgage at the end, just like buying a resale home.
For these homes, FHA, VA, conventional, and jumbo loans all work. A construction-to-permanent loan is usually not necessary because the builder finances the build with their own capital.
Custom or Spec Builds (Lot Plus Build)
Custom builds and infill spec homes work differently. You may own the lot already, or you may be buying lot and build together. In either case, somebody has to fund the construction phase, and that is where a construction-to-permanent loan comes in.
For a new construction loan Broomfield CO buyers pursuing a custom build will typically need a single-close construction-to-permanent loan, sometimes called a one-time close. The lender funds the build through scheduled draws, then converts the balance into a permanent mortgage once construction is complete.
Step-by-Step: How a New Construction Loan Broomfield CO Process Flows
Here is the step-by-step process I follow with every borrower exploring construction financing in Broomfield County.
Step 1: Confirm Your Build Type and Builder
Before pricing any loan, I need to know whether you are buying a production home, working with a custom builder, or financing your own lot-plus-build. The lender approval list matters: not every builder is approved for every program. For VA construction loans in particular, the builder must be VA-registered. I confirm builder eligibility before we move further.
Step 2: Get Pre-Approved Based on Final Loan Amount
For a construction-to-permanent loan, your pre-approval is based on the total project cost (lot plus construction) and the appraised value of the finished home. I review your credit, income, debt ratios, and reserves to issue a pre-approval that reflects the full scope of the project, not just the lot.
Step 3: Lock the Plan, Budget, and Build Contract
Your builder provides plans, specs, and a fixed-cost contract. The lender uses these documents to order the appraisal, which estimates the home's value as if completed. The appraised value, the build contract, and the lot value together determine the maximum loan amount.
Step 4: Close the Construction Loan
With a single-close loan, you sign one set of documents that covers both the construction phase and the permanent mortgage. The loan funds in stages, called draws, as the builder hits scheduled milestones.
Step 5: Draws During Construction
Most construction-to-permanent loans use four to six draws spread across the build. A typical draw schedule looks like this:
| Draw Stage | Approximate % | Milestone |
|---|---|---|
| Draw 1 | 15-20% | Lot purchase, foundation, footings |
| Draw 2 | 20-25% | Framing, roof, exterior sheathing |
| Draw 3 | 15-20% | Mechanicals (plumbing, electrical, HVAC) |
| Draw 4 | 15-20% | Drywall, interior finishes, cabinetry |
| Final Draw | 20-25% | Flooring, fixtures, landscaping, certificate of occupancy |
Each draw triggers an inspection. The lender sends an inspector to verify the milestone is complete before releasing funds to the builder. During this period, you typically pay interest only on the portion of the loan that has been drawn.
Step 6: Conversion to Permanent Mortgage
Once the home receives a certificate of occupancy, the loan converts from construction to permanent financing. With a single-close loan, no additional closing is required and you keep the rate you locked at the start. The permanent phase is a standard fixed-rate mortgage, typically 30 years, and your monthly payment shifts from interest-only to principal and interest.