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Buying a Prefab Home: Process, Contract, Pitfalls
Process

Buying a Prefab Home: Process, Contract, Pitfalls

AB
Andreea B.
Client Experience Lead
July 14, 2026
10 min read

Buying a prefab home runs through seven steps: configure, reserve, permit, produce, deliver, install, hand over. The order matters; the contract matters more. This guide walks the full path from first click to keys, shows which clauses protect you (fixed price, defined scope, delivery window, warranty terms), and lists the pitfalls that cost real money, so you can buy from any manufacturer, including us, with clear eyes.

A house is the largest purchase most people ever make, and prefab compresses it into months instead of years. That compression is the appeal, but it also means the important decisions come early and close together. This guide covers the process itself: what happens when, what you sign, and where buyers get hurt. What the house costs is a separate question, answered in the 2026 prefab home price guide; the costs surrounding the house are covered in the total-cost guide.

The seven steps, in order

The critical path insight: the permit, not the factory, sets your move-in date. Production is fast and predictable; municipal timelines are neither. Serious manufacturers keep the rest of the chain tight: once the permit lands, production and site preparation overlap, and delivery follows in weeks, which is how the calendar stays at months instead of growing into a year.

The contract: what must be in it

Prefab contracts are simpler than general-contractor agreements because one party delivers one defined product, but only if the definitions are written into the contract.

Before signing, check five points in writing: the total price from your personalized offer, the site-cost ceiling for your model (€26,300-€71,500 full-scope, most projects land below), the delivery trigger, the four payment milestones (at BIOBUILDS: 10/40/40/10), and the warranty terms (at BIOBUILDS: 5-year structural plus 24-month legal warranty).

Key Takeaway

The single most protective clause is the fixed price with a defined scope. Construction's classic failure mode, the open-ended cost-plus drift, cannot start if the number and the scope are locked on day one. If a manufacturer resists putting either in writing, that is your answer.

Payment structure: how the money should flow

Reputable prefab manufacturers work with staged payments tied to milestones. At BIOBUILDS, the contract schedule is 10% at signing, 40% at production-slot allocation, 40% at production start, and the final 10% when the product is available at your destination, inspected on the trailer before unloading. Whoever you buy from, what matters is the shape:

  • Each payment follows a verifiable event, not a calendar date. Production start can be evidenced; "week 12" cannot.
  • The final tranche is due only when the house is at your site. A manufacturer confident in its product does not need your money long before it delivers.
  • Beware of front-loading. A demand for most of the price before anything is built moves the manufacturer's business risk onto you. It is also the pattern behind most prefab horror stories: buyer pays, producer stalls.

Financing note for Germany: banks disburse construction loans against progress, which fits milestone payments naturally, and subsidized KfW financing (where the project qualifies, assessed per project by a certified energy-efficiency expert) must be set up before the funding-relevant project start and first payments. Details on our KfW page.

The pitfalls, ranked by cost

  1. The incomplete-scope quote. The headline price covers a shell; the livable scope hides in change orders. Antidote: the included/excluded lists in the contract, and the total-cost guide as your checklist.
  2. The unbuildable plot. Contract signed, then the geotechnical report or crane access breaks the plan. Antidote: survey and soil report before the purchase contract, or a contract conditioned on them; the foundation guide covers what the soil decides.
  3. Change orders after production lock. Factory production is why prefab is fast and exact; it is also why late changes are expensive or impossible. Antidote: decide everything at configuration, in the calm of step 1, not during step 4.
  4. The single-partner risk nobody priced. With prefab, one company carries nearly the whole project. That is a feature when the company is solid and a disaster when it is not. Antidote: check track record (years, delivered homes, visitable references), warranty terms, and whether prices and specifications are published or negotiated separately with each buyer.
  5. Verbal promises. "We usually include that" is not a clause. Antidote: if it matters, it is in the contract; if it is not in the contract, it does not exist.

What buying from a factory changes

Two structural differences from a classic build are worth understanding before you start, because they cut both ways:

Decisions move early. In a traditional build you decide as you go (and pay for every mid-course correction). In prefab, the configuration you sign is the house that gets built. You trade mid-project flexibility for price certainty and speed. Buyers who know what they want are structurally advantaged.

The site shrinks to days. There is no months-long construction site to supervise, which also means no months of weather risk, theft risk, and coordination overhead. The handover is not the end of a long negotiation with reality; it is a scheduled event.

At BIOBUILDS, the process is built around those two facts: the configurator prices every decision live and publicly, the personalized offer confirms that figure and the contract holds it firm, production is standardized to 3 weeks, and the warranty is 5-year structural plus the 24-month legal warranty. But the checklist above is manufacturer-neutral on purpose: whoever you buy from, buy with the contract, not the brochure.

AB
Andreea B.
Client Experience Lead
Certified Passive House Consultant with 8 years experience in timber-frame construction and prefabricated housing. Helping families across Europe build smarter, healthier homes.

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