
By Steven J. Thomas
If you are shopping new construction in DeSoto or anywhere in southwest DFW right now, you face one decision before you ever pick a paint color: do you buy a quick move-in home that is already standing, or do you start from dirt and build to order? In a 2026 market where builders are sitting on finished inventory and dangling real incentives, that single choice can swing your monthly payment, your closing date, and how much cash ends up in your pocket. Here is how the two paths actually compare for DFW buyers this year.
In DFW for 2026, a quick move-in (spec) home usually saves you more money up front because builders attach their biggest incentives to finished inventory they need to clear. Build-to-order gives you more control over finishes and layout but takes 8 to 14 months and rarely carries the same buydown. If price and speed matter most, lean quick move-in. If customization matters most, build to order.
A quick move-in home is one the builder already started, or finished, on speculation. The floor plan is set, the finishes are chosen, and the move-in date is usually 30 to 90 days out. In southwest DFW cities like DeSoto, Cedar Hill, and Mansfield, these are the homes builders most want off their books, because a finished house that sits costs them money every month in carrying costs. That pressure is exactly why the richest incentives land here. You can browse current options on the DFW new construction homes hub to see what is standing now.
Build-to-order means you select the lot, the floor plan, and the finishes, then wait for the home to be built. North Texas build timelines are running 8 to 14 months in 2026. You get a home that fits how you actually live, and you spread some design decisions over time. The trade-off is patience, a longer gap if you are also selling, and incentives that tend to be thinner than what builders offer on finished spec homes.
The headline for 2026 is leverage. With more inventory and longer selling times, builders like Highland Homes, Perry Homes, D.R. Horton, and M/I Homes are leaning hard on incentives instead of price cuts. That shift rewards the buyer who can move quickly and offer certainty. For the broader picture, the Texas Real Estate Research Center at Texas A&M tracks statewide supply and pricing, and you can always check the latest weekly rate at Freddie Mac PMMS.
"In this market, the buyer who can give a builder a clean, fast closing usually walks away with the better deal. Certainty is currency in 2026." — Steven J. Thomas, Refind Realty DFW
Here is roughly where your dollars go on each path for a home in the 400,000 to 600,000 dollar range common across southwest DFW:
The math is not just the sticker. A 25,000 dollar incentive on a finished home is real money today, while a build-to-order home may cost you more in time and gap-housing even at a similar price. Run the net effective cost, not the marketing number.
Across DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Midlothian, Waxahachie, and Mansfield, builders are competing for the same pool of move-up buyers. Quick move-in inventory clusters where a community is trying to hit a sales threshold or close out a phase, and those are the homes with expiring, end-of-quarter incentives. Build-to-order shines in newer sections where you get first pick of premium lots. Knowing which communities are motivated is the whole game, and it is also where a rebate can stack on top of the builder's offer. See how that works through the new construction rebate program.
Pro Tip: If you are selling a current home to fund this move, get your Home Selling Score first so you know your timing and pricing power before you commit to a builder.
This is where being dual-licensed changes the conversation. Most buyers only hear the builder's lender pitch. Because I handle both the real estate side and the mortgage side, I can model what your payment actually looks like after a 2-1 or 3-2-1 buydown ends, not just the teaser rate on the flyer. On a quick move-in home, the play is usually to push flex cash into the rate buydown first, then closing costs. On build-to-order, you lock financing closer to delivery, so your strategy depends on where rates sit 8 to 14 months out.
The smartest move is to get pre-approved before you tour anything, so you negotiate from strength and the builder takes you seriously. Start that at Get Started / Get Pre-Approved. If your move depends on selling first, the HomeSwap New Construction Plan lets you secure the build without timing your sale to the day.
"A buydown only helps if you can afford the payment after it expires. I model that number before you sign, every time." — Steven J. Thomas
There is no universal winner here, only the path that fits your timeline, your budget, and your tolerance for waiting. In 2026, quick move-in homes in DeSoto and across southwest DFW carry the strongest incentives because builders need finished inventory gone. Build-to-order is the right call when control over your home matters more than speed or maximum savings. Either way, the buyers who win this year are the ones who get financing sorted early and know which communities are motivated. That is the part I handle for you, both sides, with one plan and no surprises.
Compare current new construction options across DFW with the Lone Star Living App.
Get the full new construction playbook in the free New Construction Home Guide.
Ready to map your move? Book an appointment today.
You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas.
A quick move-in home typically closes in 30 to 90 days because it is already built. Build-to-order runs 8 to 14 months in North Texas depending on the builder and phase.
Quick move-in homes usually save more up front because builders attach their largest flex cash and buydown incentives to finished inventory they want off their books. Always compare the net effective cost, not the advertised number.
The main risks are delays and the gap if you are also selling a home. A build that runs long can leave you in temporary housing or carrying two payments. A clear timing plan reduces that risk.
In 2026, builders like Highland Homes, Perry Homes, D.R. Horton, and M/I Homes are competing across DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Mansfield, Midlothian, and Waxahachie with flex cash and buydowns. Incentives often expire at the end of a quarter or when a community hits a sales threshold.
Before you tour a single model. A strong pre-approval gives you credibility with the builder and real negotiating leverage, especially on quick move-in homes where speed matters.
Browse live new construction options across DeSoto and southwest DFW on the Lone Star Living App, then reach out to compare incentives community by community.
Steven J. Thomas is a licensed Texas real estate broker (Refind Realty DFW) and loan officer (Envision Home Lenders) in DeSoto, TX. Market data reflects conditions at the time of writing and is not a guarantee of price, rate, or timeline. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Site: www.stevenjthomas.com
Call :(713) 505-2280
Email: [email protected]
Office 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto TX 75115
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