I can see it both ways. I am a licensed builder and worked in the industry for 40yrs. I've done it both ways. Bought a new home, the profit margin was @ $4-5k when I bought it. 36yrs later, sold it it for 4x what we paid for it. Bought an older existing home this last time. When we finish fixing it up, it'll be worth 3.5x what we have in it.
Thing is, if you want a good building site you'll almost have to find an older built on site. Plus with an older home, you can be more practical about how you go about fixing it up. Ie., using old school craftsmanship. You build a new home, you're going to be hit with things you never thought about. New building codes, environmental impact fees and unscrupulous contractors. Plus these days you have to get things engineered, another cost to deal with. Then suppliers have things sewed up. If you're not on their list, good luck. The products used in an older home are better quality than what they use now. Not saying a new home is bad. If you've worked with materials as long as I have, you'd know what I'm talking about. Our home is 57yrs old and in pretty good shape. Good luck with that kind of history in a new home
Thing is, if you want a good building site you'll almost have to find an older built on site. Plus with an older home, you can be more practical about how you go about fixing it up. Ie., using old school craftsmanship. You build a new home, you're going to be hit with things you never thought about. New building codes, environmental impact fees and unscrupulous contractors. Plus these days you have to get things engineered, another cost to deal with. Then suppliers have things sewed up. If you're not on their list, good luck. The products used in an older home are better quality than what they use now. Not saying a new home is bad. If you've worked with materials as long as I have, you'd know what I'm talking about. Our home is 57yrs old and in pretty good shape. Good luck with that kind of history in a new home

