Last updated: May 2026
Quick Answer
Fix-and-flip projects typically offer faster returns, lower capital requirements, and more predictable timelines. Ground-up construction can generate higher gross profits but entails greater risk, longer timelines, and greater financing complexity. Which strategy is more profitable depends on your market, experience level, available capital, and how you define return on investment.
Start your application with Park Place FinanceFix-and-flip vs. ground-up construction: How each creates value
Fix-and-flip and ground-up construction both generate profit through the same basic mechanism: buy low, improve, sell higher. But they create value in fundamentally different ways.
- Fix-and-flip captures value that already exists in a property by removing the market discount applied to distressed properties. You’re closing the gap between what a property is and what it could be with the right renovation.
- Ground-up construction creates value from scratch. You acquire land or a teardown lot, build a finished product, and sell it at new construction prices. The value is manufactured as opposed to something that’s unlocked.
That distinction shapes everything: the financing, the timeline, the risk, and the profit potential.
Comparing the numbers on a fix-and-flip vs. ground-up project
Neither strategy is universally more profitable. The comparison depends heavily on your market and execution.
That said, some general patterns hold:
| Factor | Fix and flip | Ground-up construction |
| Typical timeline | 3–9 months | 12–24 months |
| Capital required | Lower | Significantly higher |
| Profit potential per deal | Moderate | Higher ceiling |
| Cost predictability | Moderate | Lower |
| Financing complexity | Moderate | Higher |
| Experience required | Beginner to intermediate | Intermediate to advanced |
| Market timing risk | Lower | Higher |
- Fix and flip projects tend to generate net margins in the 10% to 20% range on total project cost when executed well
- Ground-up construction can push higher, sometimes 20% to 30% or more in strong markets, but that ceiling comes with a wider range of outcomes
Cost overruns and permitting delays on a construction project can compress margins significantly faster than a renovation gone sideways.
Timeline of a flip project vs. a ground-up construction project
You may think the difference in timelines between these strategies is just about patience. But it’s also about risk exposure.
A fix-and-flip that closes in five months ties up your capital for five months. Holding costs accumulate: loan interest, property taxes, insurance, and utilities—but your exposure to market movement is relatively limited.
Alternatively, a lot can happen to real estate values over 18 months of ground-up construction.
Permitting alone can add months to a construction timeline without any work happening on site. Entitlement processes, such as getting zoning approvals and building permits, are the primary timeline risk in new construction and the variable most difficult to control.
Experienced construction investors build permitting contingencies into their project timelines. First-time construction project investors often don’t.
Risk profile: where each investment strategy is most vulnerable
Both strategies carry risk, but the risk sits in different places.
Fix-and-flip risks are concentrated in execution:
- Renovation scope creep
- Contractor reliability
- ARV accuracy
These are real challenges, but they’re largely within the investor’s control and can be mitigated through experience, strong relationships with contractors, and conservative underwriting.
Ground-up construction risks are broader:
- Permitting and entitlement delays outside your control
- Cost overruns on materials and labor; construction budgets are harder to lock than renovation budgets
- Market timing exposure from longer hold periods
- Lender draw inspections and construction milestone requirements that can slow access to capital
- Absorption risk: Will the market absorb your finished product at the price you need when you’re ready to sell?
That risk profile doesn’t make construction a bad strategy, just a different one.
The nature of ground-up construction requires more capitalization, more contingency planning, and more experience to execute consistently.
How financing works for each strategy
The financing structures for these two strategies share some DNA but diverge in important ways.
Fix and flip considerations for financing
Fix-and-flip loans are short-term hard-money or bridge loans secured by the property.
The lender considers the loan size relative to ARV, funds the acquisition, and releases rehab draws as work progresses.
Underwriting centers on the property value and your exit.
Ground-up considerations for financing
Ground-up construction loans are more complex. Lenders evaluate the land value, the architectural plans, the construction budget, and most importantly, your contractor’s experience and track record.
Funds are released in draws tied to construction milestones and verified by lender inspections. You’re not borrowing against an existing asset; you’re borrowing against a projected one.
That distinction affects how lenders price the risk.
Construction loan rates
Construction loans typically carry higher rates than rehab loans, require more documentation upfront, and demand stronger borrower experience profiles. First-time investors attempting ground-up construction without a seasoned general contractor backing the project will find access to lenders significantly more limited.
What is an infill development?
Infill development is the process of building new homes, apartments, offices, or mixed-use projects on vacant or underused land within an already developed area, instead of building outward into undeveloped land.
In simple terms: It’s “filling in the gaps” inside existing cities or neighborhoods.
How infill development can act as a middle ground investment strategy
If the profit ceiling of new construction appeals to you but the complexity gives you pause, infill development can be a useful entry point.
Buying a teardown lot in an established neighborhood, where comps exist, demand is known, and permitting is relatively straightforward, reduces several of the risks that make raw land development difficult.
Infill projects benefit from existing infrastructure, established buyer demand, and comparable sales that support your exit price.
They’re still construction projects with associated risks, but market uncertainty is considerably lower than when breaking ground in an undeveloped area.
Choosing based on where you are, not where you want to be
The most profitable strategy is the one you can execute reliably given your current experience, capital, and market.
For most investors entering real estate, fix-and-flip builds the skills (e.g., comp analysis, contractor management, budget discipline) that make ground-up construction viable later.
If you’re evaluating either path and want to understand what financing looks like for your specific project, Park Place Finance works with investors across both strategies.
Start the conversation with Park Place Finance today.FAQs: Ground-up construction vs fix and flip
A fix-and-flip is generally the better starting point. The timeline is shorter, the capital requirement is lower, and the financing is more accessible. Furthermore, the skills you build, such as reading comps, managing contractors, and controlling budgets, are directly transferable to more complex strategies later. Ground-up construction rewards experience; fix-and-flip is where most investors build it.
For fix-and-flip lenders, the focus is primarily on ARV and the borrower’s experience. For ground-up construction, lenders also evaluate the land value, the quality of the architectural plans, the construction budget, the draw schedule, and the general contractor’s track record. The underwriting is more involved because the lender is financing its creation; there’s no collateral yet.
Many hard-money lenders that offer fix-and-flip loans also offer ground-up construction products, though not all do. Confirm with your lender upfront that they have an active construction loan program and experience funding projects similar in scope and budget to yours. A lender’s comfort level with construction draws and milestone inspections matters as much as their rates.
A draw schedule is a predetermined plan that ties loan fund releases to specific construction milestones: foundation complete, framing complete, rough mechanicals complete, and so on. Before each draw is released, the lender typically sends an inspector to verify the work is done. This protects both the lender and the borrower by ensuring funds are deployed in line with actual project progress.
