Design-build firm vs general contractor: which do you actually need?
A common question in early consultations, with a longer answer than most people expect. Here's the honest version, including when a GC is actually the better call.
This question comes up in maybe a third of our first consultations. Homeowners have done some research, they've found us, but they're also talking to a general contractor down the road who quoted a lower number. They want to know what they're actually choosing between.
Here's the honest breakdown, including the cases where a GC is the better choice.
The structural difference
A general contractor (GC) builds. They take your drawings, they manage trades, they hand you a finished project. They don't typically do design. They don't typically do material sourcing beyond standard catalog selections. The expectation is that you arrive with a plan and they execute it.
A design-build firm does both. Design happens in-house. Material sourcing happens in-house. Project management and construction happen in-house. You get one team and one point of contact from the first conversation to the final walkthrough.
The structural difference is whose problem the gaps are. With a GC plus separate designer, the gaps between disciplines are your problem to manage. With design-build, the gaps are our problem to manage.
The communication difference
With a GC plus designer plus possibly a separate kitchen-and-bath specialist, you're managing three relationships. Three points of contact. Three sets of opinions when there's a decision to make. Three calendars to coordinate when something needs to change.
With design-build, you have one. Decisions move faster because everyone is in the same Friday meeting. Trade-offs get resolved internally instead of relayed through you. The "designer says the cabinets need to be 1/4 inch deeper but the contractor says that won't fit" problem becomes our problem to figure out before it reaches you.
For most clients, the time saved here is the single biggest practical benefit of design-build. Renovations have a hundred decisions. Each one is faster when there are fewer people in the loop.
The cost difference
This is where the honest answer gets nuanced.
On a quote-for-quote basis, a GC is usually cheaper than a design-build firm. We're not pretending otherwise. The design work has to be paid for somewhere, and design-build builds it into the project.
On a total-project basis, the difference often narrows or reverses. Reasons:
- A GC quote often doesn't include design fees. Those add 8 to 15 percent on top of the GC's number when you hire a separate designer.
- Coordinating gaps between trades when nobody owns the design tends to cause change orders. Change orders are how GC projects creep over budget.
- Material selections happen in design with a design-build firm and tend to be tighter. With a separate-designer setup, the contractor often substitutes materials at install time without realizing what the designer specified.
On a $150,000 kitchen renovation, the all-in cost between design-build and "GC plus separate designer" usually lands within 5 percent of each other. The design-build path tends to be more predictable about staying in that range. The GC-plus-designer path has wider variance.
When design-build is the better call
- Anytime the project involves layout changes. The integration of design and construction matters most when walls are moving.
- Anytime you don't have time to manage multiple vendors. Most working professionals fall here.
- Anytime the project is over $75,000. The decision count grows fast above that line.
- Anytime you want a single warranty for the work. Design-build means one company stands behind the whole project.
- Anytime you don't already have a designer you love. Searching for and hiring one is its own project.
The honest test
Ask the GC who's going to design the cabinetry layout. If the answer is "the cabinet supplier" or "you can hire a designer," and the project involves any complexity, you're paying for design somewhere. Add that cost to the quote.
Ask the design-build firm what's included in the price. Design, drawings, permits, selections, project management, construction, warranty. If all of it is in the number, you're comparing apples to apples.
The right answer depends on the project. If yours is straightforward and you have time to coordinate, GC works fine. If yours is anything but, design-build usually saves you money and time once you account for the actual scope.
Not sure which one fits your project?
A free in-home consultation includes our honest read on whether design-build is right for you. If it isn't, we'll tell you, and recommend a GC we trust.
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