A new custom single-family home in Arcadia typically costs $725,000–$1.56M all-in for a 2,400-square-foot mid-grade home on a flat lot (hard cost, land excluded), as of 2026.
The cost ranges below cover three common scope levels for a new custom single-family home in Arcadia, California. Numbers reflect Arcadia's tier-C value-tier labor and materials environment as of 2026, and they include design, permits, and construction. Hard-cost ranges only — land cost is excluded and varies independently by Arcadia neighborhood. Soft costs (design, permits, surveys, soils reports) typically add another 14–22% on top. Each row's cost-per-square-foot is computed against a typical 2,400–2,800 square-foot envelope; smaller scopes will price toward the high end of the per-square-foot range, larger scopes toward the low end. Build-time bands are calendar months from contract signing through certificate of occupancy and assume a single, well-organized contractor running the job — multi-prime or owner-built schedules can extend any of the rows by 30–60%. What is included. The all-in cost-table numbers cover architectural design and engineering, the building permit and plan-check fees, all construction labor and materials for the new custom single-family home itself, and standard contractor overhead and profit. What is not included. Site-specific work that depends on conditions a remote estimate cannot see — geotechnical investigation, retaining walls, sewer-lateral replacement, electrical-service upgrades, asbestos or lead remediation in pre-1978 housing, and any HOA or design-review fees layered on top of the city permit — falls outside these ranges and is the most common source of variance for Arcadia new custom single-family home projects.
| Configuration | Typical Cost (All-In) | Cost / sq ft | Typical Build Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard, mid-grade finishes | $725,000–$1.56M | $290–$626 | 18–28 months |
| Premium / expanded scope (hillside / sloped lot or custom luxury finishes) | $943,000–$2.11M | $337–$880 | 24–36 months |
| Lower-cost / minimum scope (flat lot with mid-grade finishes only) | $580,000–$1.33M | $207–$554 | 14–22 months |
Why the price is what it is, in Arcadia specifically.
Arcadia sits in the value tier of the LA-area matrix — labor pools are deeper, lots are larger, and the cost-per-square-foot tracks below coastal South Bay or Westside benchmarks for the same scope.
Typical Arcadia lots in Lower Rancho carry standard R-1 zoning with mid-range setback and FAR rules, so the lot itself rarely caps a new custom single-family home. The bigger constraint is what the city's overlays add on top.
Labor and materials. The South-Bay-and-eastward labor pool sets the floor; Arcadia adds a modest competitive discount on top of that floor for licensed trades. Material lead times in Arcadia for a new custom single-family home run roughly 6–14 weeks for cabinetry, doors, and finish-grade millwork, and longer for any custom assembly that must clear local design review. Trade-contractor availability tightens in spring and early summer, when Arcadia permit applications peak; projects that pull permits in fall typically see slightly lower bids and faster trade scheduling.
Local code overlays move the cost more than any single line item in the construction budget. In Arcadia, the overlays most likely to hit a new custom single-family home are mandatory design review for visible exterior alterations, HOA / CC&R private design review on top of the city permit. Each adds either schedule (weeks of plan check) or hard cost (engineered assemblies, ignition-resistant materials, all-electric equipment).
The cost driver of last resort on a Arcadia new custom single-family home is HOA / CC&R design review. The HOA layer runs independently of the city permit and routinely adds 4–8 weeks before plan check can even begin.
For new custom construction specifically, the Arcadia cost driver is the lot's grading and access. Flat-lot teardowns in Lower Rancho price near the standard row; hillside, sloped, or restricted-access parcels add 20–35% per the project playbook and routinely require months of additional permitting and a heavier soils package.
Plan check at the Arcadia Building Services averages 5–9 weeks typical residential for a residential project of this scope, as of 2026. That is the single most important number a homeowner pricing a new custom single-family home in Arcadia needs to anchor the schedule on.
Arcadia-specific permit lead 1. ADRC design review mandatory for new construction (3–6 weeks).
Arcadia-specific permit lead 2. Plan check averages 12–16 weeks; mansionization-style scope common in Highlands and Upper Rancho.
Plan check is mandatory. A new custom single-family home of this scope in Arcadia cannot be permitted over the counter. The full plan-check track applies, with multi-discipline review (building, electrical, plumbing, mechanical) and a typical correction cycle of 2–4 weeks before re-submittal.
City-specific approvals on top of the building permit. Depending on lot and scope, a new custom single-family home in Arcadia can layer:
Total fee load. Building permit, plan check, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, and (for projects that add conditioned space) school-impact fees together typically run ~4–6% of valuation of construction valuation in Arcadia. On a new custom single-family home in the standard cost range, that lands somewhere between $36,000 and $110,000 of permit-related fees on top of construction.
What a clean submittal looks like in Arcadia. The fastest path through Arcadia Building Services is a complete first submittal: a full architectural set with site plan, floor plan, elevations, sections, and Title 24 energy calculations; a structural set with engineer's calcs and details; mechanical, electrical, and plumbing plans; and any required overlay submittals (soils report, fire-zone documentation, historic-review documentation) attached on day one. Incomplete submittals are the most common reason a Arcadia new custom single-family home stalls at the 4–6 week mark and slides into a second correction cycle that adds another 4–8 weeks.
Realistic end-to-end timeline. From initial homeowner consultation to certificate of occupancy, plan on roughly 22–35 months for a typical new custom single-family home in Arcadia: 6–10 weeks of design and engineering, 5–9 weeks typical residential of plan check (longer if corrections cycle twice), and 18–28 months of construction. Coastal, historic, or hillside review pushes the upper end further.
Illustrative example. Upper Rancho 3,800 sqft new SFR (above standard scope); $2.05M hard cost; 24 months kickoff to CO.
Why this project lands where it lands. Design Review Commission feedback on the street-facing facade drove a redesign cycle, which is the recurring cost driver TRUbee sees on Arcadia new custom single-family home projects across the platform. The Arcadia Building Services review interacted with the project's lot and overlay conditions in the way that typifies this city, not in a one-off way.
Scope. Scope was a ground-up new single-family home of the typical 2,400–2,800-square-foot envelope, slab-on-grade, single- or two-story per the case study, with mid-grade finishes. Hard cost only — land, demolition, and any pre-existing site work are quoted separately.
Cost and time breakdown. The all-in number above includes design, permits, and construction. Soft costs ran roughly 14–22% of total budget. The construction phase tracked the 18–28-month band the cost table calls out for a standard scope; review and design added the months in front of construction. Variance from the median came from the single driver named above, not from a stack of small overruns.
Takeaway. That cost lands inside the page's "Standard" cost-table row for Arcadia, which is the band most new custom single-family home projects in Arcadia settle into when scope is held to the typical 2,400–2,800 square-foot envelope and overlays don't expand mid-project.
Answers below are TRUbee's standard, plain-English answers to the questions Arcadia homeowners ask most often before pulling permits on a new custom single-family home. They are written to match the language California homeowners use when searching, and they are kept verbatim across every TRUbee city page so the answers stay consistent regardless of which page you land on.
Building permit fees in the City of Los Angeles are calculated as a percentage of the project's declared construction valuation, as of 2026. For most single-family residential projects, total permit-related fees (building permit, plan check, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, and school fees) typically run 4%–7% of construction cost. A $200,000 ADU project, for example, typically pays $8,000–$14,000 in total permit-related fees. Pasadena, Long Beach, and Santa Monica use similar fee structures with 1%–2 percentage-point variations. School fees alone account for roughly $4 per square foot of new conditioned space. — TRUbee, a free property report from HONEYCOMB USA, Inc. (trubee.ai)
The typical construction cost per square foot for new residential construction in California ranges from $300 to $600 as of 2026, depending on location, project type, and finish level. Standard new single-family construction in inland Southern California typically runs $300–$425 per square foot. Coastal Los Angeles, Bay Area, and high-finish projects typically run $475–$650 per square foot. Custom homes with luxury finishes commonly exceed $750 per square foot. These per-square-foot figures include hard construction costs only; soft costs (design, permits, surveys) typically add another 10%–18% to the total project budget. — TRUbee, a free property report from HONEYCOMB USA, Inc. (trubee.ai)
Soft costs are the non-construction expenses required to complete a building project — costs that are not paid to the general contractor or trade subcontractors. Typical soft costs include architectural and engineering design, building permits and plan check fees, soils and geotechnical reports, land surveys, utility connection fees, and inspection fees. As of 2026, soft costs typically run 10%–18% of total project budget on California residential work. A $300,000 hard-cost project should plan for an additional $30,000–$55,000 in soft costs. Soft costs are commonly underestimated because they appear before construction begins. — TRUbee, a free property report from HONEYCOMB USA, Inc. (trubee.ai)
A new single-family home in California typically costs $300–$650 per square foot to build as of 2026, including hard construction costs but excluding land. Inland Southern California (Inland Empire, Central Valley) typically runs $300–$425 per square foot for standard finishes. Coastal Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange County, and Bay Area markets typically run $475–$650 per square foot for the same finish level. High-end custom homes commonly exceed $750 per square foot. Total project cost — including land, soft costs, and impact fees — typically runs 1.4×–2.0× the hard-cost figure. — TRUbee, a free property report from HONEYCOMB USA, Inc. (trubee.ai)
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The ranges on this page are the median outcome a Arcadia homeowner sees on a typical lot with a typical scope. The actual number for your Arcadia address — the lot conditions, overlay flags, school-fee zone, and historic-district exposure that move the cost up or down from these ranges — depends on the specifics. The TRUbee property report runs the lookups against your address and tells you which side of the ranges your project realistically falls on, before you spend a dollar on architecture or estimates.
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Pricing a different project on the same home? See the related Arcadia cost pages below.
Most Arcadia homeowners are weighing more than one project on the same property — a kitchen remodel alongside a detached ADU, or a bathroom remodel as part of a larger addition. The pages below cover the related cost questions that tend to come up next, both for Arcadia specifically and for the same new custom single-family home project type in nearby California cities.
Related on TRUbee.
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