
The Impact of New Build "Phase One" Pricing on Your Current Neighborhood’s Resale Value

In 2026, new build Phase One pricing typically acts as a "Market Anchor" that can temporarily suppress the resale value of nearby homes. Builders often launch the first phase of a community with "Introductory Pricing"—sometimes 5% to 10% lower than projected final values—to generate momentum and satisfy their construction lenders. For existing homeowners, this means your home is competing with a brand-new product offered at a similar or even lower sticker price. Furthermore, 2026 builders are utilizing "Sticky Base Prices" but offering aggressive mortgage rate buydowns (often down to 5.5% or lower) and closing cost assistance, which makes the monthly payment on a new build significantly more attractive than a resale home at the same price point.
Book your Home Goals consultation to see exactly how many "Phase One" units are entering your specific zip code this month: https<span></span>://stevenjthomas.com/home-goals
Builders use Phase One to establish "Absorption Rates." In early 2026, this has led to a unique market oddity where resale homes in some DFW submarkets are actually priced higher than new construction.
Introductory Discounts: To kickstart a 500-home community, a builder may price the first 20 homes at a "Break-Even" point. This creates a temporary comparable sale (comp) that appraisers may use against your existing home.
The 'Model Home' Effect: Builders invest heavily in the "Phase One" experience, creating high-end model homes that set a visual standard your "used" home must now meet.
Inventory Dilution: A sudden influx of 50 new listings in a single phase can increase your neighborhood’s Days on Market (DOM), which in 2026 DFW is already normalizing toward 60+ days.
In 2026, the "headline price" of a new build is often a distraction from the real value: the financing.
Rate Buydowns: Nearly two-thirds of DFW builders are offering incentives like mortgage rate buydowns. A buyer may choose a $450k new build over your $430k resale because the builder’s financing saves them $400 per month.
Customization Credits: Phase One buyers often receive $15k–$30k in design center credits. To compete, resale owners in 2026 must ensure their homes feature neutral paint, modern hardware, and updated light fixtures before listing.
The Warranty Premium: New homes come with a "Predictable Cost" model—warranties on HVAC, roof, and structure that resale homes cannot match.
While Phase One is a challenge, Phase Three is your friend.
Price Escalation: As a community matures, builders historically raise prices every 5–10 sales. By the time the builder reaches the final phase, their prices are often 15% to 20% higher than Phase One, which finally "lifts" the floor for the entire surrounding neighborhood.
Infrastructure Boom: New builds bring new amenities—grocery stores, parks, and improved roads—that increase the "Lifestyle Value" of your existing street.
Landscaping Maturity: In 2026, resale homes still win on "Mature Character"—larger lots, established trees, and a "real neighborhood vibe" that brand-new construction zones lack for the first 5 years.
In 2026, a neighboring new build is a marathon, not a sprint. While Phase One pricing and aggressive builder incentives can make selling your existing home difficult in the short term, the eventual price appreciation of the completed community will likely act as a "Rising Tide" for your equity. To win in 2026, resale sellers must price based on monthly payment competitiveness and emphasize the "move-in-now" benefits of an established home.
Incentive Gap: Builders are using rate buydowns to make $450k homes feel like $380k homes.
Resale Advantage: Established homes offer mature trees, larger lots, and better locations.
Market Correction: DFW house prices are currently "firming" but remain sensitive to builder activity.
The 1% Rule: 2026 forecasts show a modest 1% gain in new home building and sales, suggesting a stable but cautious market.
Office 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto TX 75115
Call :(713) 505-2280
Email: [email protected]
Site: www.stevenjthomas.com
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