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Stop doing Cost Estimates for Free

Stop doing cost estimates for free
Every architect and builder has a version of this story. A homeowner walks in excited, maybe a little nervous, with a Pinterest board full of ideas and a budget pulled from thin air. They want to build. They want to renovate. They want to add a laneway house. And the first question out of their mouth is always the same: "So, what's this going to cost?"
You know the answer. It depends. It always depends. But that's not what they want to hear, and honestly, it's not a satisfying answer for you either.
So what happens? You spend the first meeting, sometimes the second, sometimes the third, walking them through ballpark numbers. You're pulling from experience, referencing past projects, doing mental math on permit fees and foundation costs and the price of engineered lumber this quarter. None of this is billable. None of it is in your scope. But you do it anyway, because if you don't, the project stalls before it starts.
The Invisible Hours
Let's talk about what this actually costs you. Not the homeowner. You.
If you're spending even two hours per lead running rough numbers, fielding budget questions, and recalibrating expectations that were set by a Reddit thread, that adds up fast. Ten leads a month? That's twenty hours of unpaid consulting. Some of those leads will never move forward, not because they don't want to, but because they couldn't afford the project in the first place. They just didn't know it yet.
That's the part that stings. You're not losing those hours to design work or site visits or anything that moves a project forward. You're losing them to a gap in the market. There's no accessible tool that gives homeowners a grounded sense of what their project will cost before they ever pick up the phone.
Blame the Information Gap, Not the Client
It's tempting to get frustrated with clients who show up unprepared. The residential construction industry makes it remarkably hard for a regular person to get a straight answer about cost.
Think about it. You can go online right now and configure a $60,000 truck down to the floor mats, see the final price, and get pre-approved for financing. But if you want to know what it costs to build a 1,200-square-foot home in Burnaby? Good luck. You'll find ranges so wide they're meaningless, articles from 2019 that haven't been updated, and forums where someone's uncle "built for $180 a square foot" without mentioning that was before permits, soft costs, or the driveway.
The data exists. Regional construction cost indexes, municipal permit fee schedules, material pricing, labour rates. It's all out there, scattered across government websites and trade publications and your own hard-won project history. But nobody's put it together in a way that a homeowner can actually use before they call you.
So they call you. And you become the budget counsellor.
What If They Showed Up Already Informed?
Picture this instead. A homeowner opens a tool, enters their location, project type, approximate size, and finish level. Within minutes, they get a realistic cost breakdown: site prep, foundation, framing, finishes, permits, soft costs. They can adjust the inputs and watch the numbers shift. They see what grants or incentives might apply. They download a summary PDF and bring it to your first meeting.
Now your first conversation is different. You're not starting from zero. You're not managing sticker shock. You're talking about design intent, site constraints, phasing. The stuff you actually went to school for.
Better Leads, Less Waste
Here's the quiet upside that's easy to miss. When homeowners self-qualify with real numbers before reaching out, the leads that do come through are stronger. They've already looked at what their project costs. They've adjusted their expectations. They're not shopping for a miracle; they're shopping for the right professional.
That means fewer dead-end consultations. Fewer awkward conversations where you have to explain that their dream project is twice what they budgeted. Fewer hours lost to leads that were never going to convert.
And there's a longer game here too. Every estimate that runs through a system like this builds a clearer picture of what projects actually cost, by region and by type. Over time, that data benefits you directly. Better pricing benchmarks for your proposals. Stronger numbers when you're justifying fees to a skeptical client. More confidence in your own estimates.
Your Time Is Worth Protecting
You got into this profession to design, to build, to solve problems. Not to spend your mornings explaining permit fees to someone who found a cost-per-square-foot number on TikTok.
The question "how much will this cost?" isn't going away. But the expectation that you answer it for free, on the spot, with no tools and no data? That can change. And frankly, it should.


