Triangle, NC · Raleigh · Cary · Apex · New Construction

New Construction Homes
in Raleigh, Cary & the Triangle

Explore new construction homes across the Triangle and surrounding communities — from entry-level townhomes in the mid-$200s to luxury single-family homes in Apex and Cary. Browse communities by city, by budget, or by lifestyle, and find the right fit with help from a local agent who specializes in new construction.

Free 30-minute consultation · English & Russian

Anna Rukhlina · Realtor® · DASH Carolina · Triangle & Wake County

What Are New Construction Homes in the Triangle?

New construction homes are homes built or currently under construction that have never been occupied by a previous owner. In the Triangle area — which includes Raleigh, Cary, Apex, Wake Forest, Holly Springs, Fuquay-Varina, Clayton, Garner, Knightdale, Wendell, and surrounding communities — buyers can choose from move-in ready homes, homes under construction, and to-be-built options offered by national and local builders.

Prices range from the mid-$200s in communities like Lillington and Angier to over $2 million in Apex and Cary. The Triangle’s most active new home builders include D.R. Horton, Lennar, Ryan Homes, Meritage Homes, Taylor Morrison, and Stanley Martin Homes, among others. Whether you’re a first-time buyer, relocating for work at RTP, or upsizing your family home, new construction in the Triangle offers modern floor plans, energy efficiency, and builder warranties that resale homes typically can’t match.

City Guides

New Construction Homes by City

The Triangle spans a wide range of communities, each with its own market character, builder mix, and lifestyle fit. The tables below position each city — explore linked city pages for current listings and community details.

Triangle Core Communities

CityMarket PositioningBuilders & Notes
Raleigh Largest inventory of new construction in the Triangle — townhomes, SFR, condos across all price points. 15+ active builders · widest selection · all price ranges
Apex Higher-end communities with luxury, semi-custom, and upper mid-range options. High demand, top schools. M/I Homes, Stanley Martin, Taylor Morrison, Beazer · upper-mid to luxury
Cary Premium market with the highest price per square foot in the Triangle. Limited inventory, sought-after schools. M/I Homes, Beazer · townhomes, condos, SFR · competitive
Wake Forest One of the fastest-growing communities north of Raleigh. Mix of SFR, townhomes, and luxury condos. Ashton Woods, AR Homes, Bluestone · wide price range
Fuquay-Varina Large and active new construction market southwest of Raleigh. Family-friendly communities with strong amenity packages. D.R. Horton, Mattamy, Pulte, Adams · one of the highest volumes in Triangle
Holly Springs Established new construction market with excellent schools and easy access to Research Triangle Park. Popular with families relocating to Triangle · SFR-focused
Clayton One of the most affordable new construction markets in the Triangle. SFR-focused with entry-level and mid-range options. D.R. Horton, Ashton Woods, Chesapeake, Mungo · value-driven
Garner Mid-range market with convenient I-40 access. Good mix of SFR and townhomes south of Raleigh. Lennar, Adams, Eastwood, Grand Tradition · commuter-friendly
Knightdale East Raleigh’s primary new construction corridor. Commuter-friendly with a range of builders and floor plans. D.R. Horton, DRB, Drees, Garman · SFR and townhome
Wendell Best value east of Raleigh. Large lots, newer communities, and a growing local amenity base. Caviness & Cates, Mattamy, Caruso · SFR-dominant · larger floor plans
Angier Entry-level to mid-range market south of the Triangle. One of the lowest starting prices in the region. D.R. Horton, Ryan Homes, Lennar, Mattamy · great for first-time buyers

Triangle & Surrounding Communities

These communities offer excellent value and are growing fast — though they sit further from the Triangle core. Popular with buyers who prioritize space, affordability, and larger lots.

CommunityMarket PositioningNotes
Zebulon Small but growing new construction market east of Raleigh. Affordable and rural feel with easy highway access. Entry-level SFR · growing developer interest
Smithfield Johnston County seat with affordable new construction and a mix of entry-level and mid-range homes. Adams, Ashton Woods, Asset Development · value-oriented
Selma Emerging market adjacent to Smithfield. Very affordable options for buyers who prioritize space over proximity. Entry-level · developing builder presence
Lillington Harnett County’s most active new construction market. Lower price points with larger lots, further from Raleigh. D.R. Horton, DRB, Chesapeake, Davidson · longest commute, best affordability
Mebane Alamance County along the I-40/I-85 corridor. Attractive to buyers commuting toward Burlington, Durham, or Chapel Hill. D.R. Horton, Drees, Garman, Eastwood · moderate prices

City links below — each goes to a dedicated page with live listings, builder profiles, and local market data.

Price Guide

Find New Construction by Budget

Many buyers start with a budget before they start with a city. Use this guide to narrow your search by price range, then explore the city pages that fit best.

BudgetWho It’s ForWhere to Look & Builders
Under $400k First-time buyers, investors, and budget-conscious buyers. Lillington, Angier, Smithfield, Zebulon, Selma, Clayton, Wendell, Knightdale — townhomes and entry-level SFR. Lennar, D.R. Horton, DRB, Ryan Homes, Smith Douglas.
$400k–$600k Move-up buyers, families relocating to the Triangle, buyers who want more space. Fuquay-Varina, Wake Forest, Garner, Clayton, Wendell, Knightdale, Angier — mid-range SFR. Meritage, Pulte, Mattamy, Mungo, Taylor Morrison, Garman.
$600k–$800k Buyers seeking larger homes, premium finishes, or desirable school districts. Apex, North Raleigh, Wake Forest — upper-mid SFR. Stanley Martin, Taylor Morrison, Ashton Woods, Tri Pointe, Beazer.
Luxury $800k+ Buyers seeking luxury finishes, custom floor plans, or premium lot positions. Apex, Cary, North Raleigh — Toll Brothers, Drees, M/I Homes, custom builders. Semi-custom and fully custom options available.

Prices reflect current market conditions and are subject to change. Contact me for up-to-date availability within your budget.

Buyer Benefits

Why Buy New Construction in the Triangle?

Buying new construction is a different experience than buying resale — and for many buyers, a better one. Here’s what sets it apart:

  • Brand new. You’re the first owner — no surprises from previous occupants, no deferred maintenance.
  • Builder warranty. Most Triangle builders offer a 1-2-10 year warranty: 1 year workmanship, 2 years systems, 10 years structural.
  • Customization. Choose flooring, cabinets, countertops, and fixtures before the home is built — or select from design packages.
  • Energy efficiency. New builds meet current energy codes: better insulation, efficient HVAC, and modern windows lower monthly bills.
  • Modern amenities. Many new communities are purpose-built around highly rated school districts, parks, pools, and trail systems.
  • Incentives resale can’t match. Builder incentives — rate buydowns, closing cost credits, free upgrades — are not available on resale homes.
Know Before You Buy

Types of New Construction: Know Before You Buy

Not all new construction is the same. Understanding the four types — and realistic timelines — helps you plan your move.

Move-In Ready

The home is complete or has fewer than 60 days to completion. What you see is what you get — no customization available, but you can close quickly. Great for buyers with a set timeline or those who want to lock in today’s pricing.

Typical timeline to closing: 0–60 days

Under Construction

The home is already started on a builder’s spec schedule. Limited design selections may still be available depending on build stage. You know the floor plan, community, and approximate completion.

Typical timeline to closing: 2–6 months

To-Be-Built

You choose a lot, select a floor plan, and work through the design center to personalize the home. Maximum customization, longest wait. Availability depends on remaining lots in the community.

Typical timeline to closing: 6–12+ months

Custom Home

A fully custom home built to your specifications, typically on a separately purchased lot, with a private builder or custom home firm. Highest involvement, most flexibility.

Typical timeline: 10–18+ months from contract to completion

Build times vary by builder, market conditions, and supply chain.

Find Your Fit

Find Your Fit: New Construction by Lifestyle

Not sure which community is right for you? Here’s a quick guide by what matters most:

  • Luxury New Construction: Apex, Cary, North Raleigh — M/I Homes, Toll Brothers, Drees, Taylor Morrison, and custom builders at $700k+.
  • Low Maintenance / Lock-and-Leave: Townhome communities in Raleigh, Cary, and Apex — low-maintenance living with HOA-covered exteriors, starting around the mid-$300s.
  • 55+ Communities: Select communities in Wake Forest, Fuquay-Varina, and Clayton offer 55+ active adult neighborhoods with resort-style amenities.
Builder Offers

Builder Incentives: What to Look For

Most Triangle builders offer incentives to help buyers manage today’s interest rate environment and move available inventory. Incentives change frequently — sometimes weekly — so always verify current offers before making a decision.

Common Triangle Builder Incentives

  • Rate Buydowns: Builder-funded rate reductions (2-1 buydowns, permanent rate locks). Often available only through the builder’s preferred lender.
  • Closing Cost Assistance: Builder contributions toward your closing costs, title fees, or prepaids. Typically $5,000–$25,000 depending on builder and price point.
  • Free Upgrades: Appliance packages, flooring upgrades, finished basements, or structural options added at no charge.
  • Price Reductions on Spec Homes: On spec homes that have been sitting unsold, builders may reduce list price or bundle additional incentives.

Important: Builder incentives are often tied to using the builder’s preferred lender. Always compare the full picture — rate, fees, and incentives combined — before committing. I help buyers run these numbers before any decision.

Active Builders

Top New Home Builders in the Triangle, NC

The Triangle is home to more than 50 active builders, from national production builders to regional and custom firms. The builders below are the most active across the region. Segments reflect typical positioning — many builders build across multiple price points depending on the community.

BuilderTypical SegmentCommon Areas
D.R. Horton Entry-Level Clayton, Garner, Angier, Knightdale, Fuquay-Varina, Lillington, Smithfield, Raleigh, Wendell
Lennar Entry to Mid-Range Angier, Garner, Knightdale, Lillington, Wendell, Apex
Ryan Homes Entry to Mid-Range Angier, Fuquay-Varina, Knightdale, Lillington, Wendell
DRB Homes Entry-Level Angier, Clayton, Knightdale, Lillington, Raleigh, Fuquay-Varina
Smith Douglas Entry-Level Clayton, Lillington, Raleigh, Smithfield
Meritage Homes Mid-Range Angier, Clayton, Garner, Mebane, Raleigh, Wake Forest
Mungo Homes Mid-Range Angier, Clayton, Garner, Knightdale, Lillington
Adams Homes Mid-Range Fuquay-Varina, Garner, Lillington, Smithfield
Mattamy Homes Mid-Range Angier, Fuquay-Varina, Garner, Lillington, Wendell
Davidson Homes Mid-Range Angier, Fuquay-Varina, Knightdale, Lillington, Mebane
Garman Homes Mid-Range Fuquay-Varina, Knightdale, Mebane, Raleigh, Wendell
Pulte Homes Mid-Range Apex, Fuquay-Varina, Garner, Knightdale, Raleigh
Chesapeake Homes Mid-Range Angier, Clayton, Lillington, Smithfield
Taylor Morrison Mid to Upper Apex, Cary, Garner, Knightdale, Wake Forest
Tri Pointe Homes Mid to Upper Fuquay-Varina, Raleigh, Wake Forest
Stanley Martin Mid to Upper Apex, Cary, Raleigh, Wake Forest
Ashton Woods Mid to Upper Apex, Clayton, Fuquay-Varina, Wake Forest
Beazer Homes Mid to Upper Apex, Cary, Fuquay-Varina
M/I Homes Upper-Range Apex, Cary, Raleigh
Toll Brothers Luxury Apex, Cary — semi-custom and luxury communities
Drees Homes Luxury Apex, Cary, Knightdale, Mebane, Wake Forest

Commission note (post-August 2024 NAR Settlement): Builder commission policies vary by builder and by community. I confirm buyer agent compensation terms with each builder before your first visit — no surprises.

Buyer Representation

Why Work With a Realtor When Buying New Construction?

This is one of the most common misconceptions in new home buying: that you don’t need — or can’t use — a buyer’s agent when purchasing from a builder. The reality is the opposite.

The builder’s rep works for the builder. Not for you.

The sales agent in the builder’s model home is a licensed real estate agent — but their job is to sell builder homes at the best possible terms for the builder. They’re friendly, knowledgeable, and helpful, but they represent the builder’s interests in the transaction.

A buyer’s agent represents your interests: reviewing the contract, negotiating incentives, flagging concerns during inspections, and making sure you understand what you’re signing before you sign it.

What a buyer’s agent does in a new construction transaction:

  • Reviews the builder’s purchase agreement before you sign — these are builder-drafted contracts, not standard NC forms, and they heavily favor the builder.
  • Negotiates incentives and terms on your behalf — builders have more flexibility than their reps typically disclose.
  • Coordinates your independent home inspection — yes, new construction can and should be inspected.
  • Attends your pre-drywall and final walkthrough to catch items before closing.
  • Confirms buyer agent compensation with each builder before your first visit, so there are no surprises.
  • Provides independent market context — so you know whether the builder’s pricing is competitive before you commit.

Working with a buyer’s agent on new construction costs you nothing in most cases — and gives you professional representation throughout a complex process.

Talk to an Agent Before Your First Builder Visit

Market Data

Triangle New Construction Market Overview

The Triangle new construction market remains one of the most active in the Southeast, driven by sustained in-migration, major employer presence (Apple, Google, Wolfspeed, WakeMed, Duke Health, and the broader Research Triangle Park ecosystem), and a persistent shortage of resale inventory.

What’s driving demand:

  • The Research Triangle is one of the top-ranked metros for job growth, quality of life, and university proximity in the US.
  • Resale inventory remains historically low, making new construction the primary option for many buyers in certain price ranges.
  • National and regional builders have accelerated development across a widening geographic footprint, pushing into Lillington, Zebulon, Selma, and Mebane as closer-in lots become scarcer.
  • 68% of new construction in the Triangle is single-family homes; 28% are townhomes; condos make up the remainder.

What’s happening with prices:

Mid-$200s
Entry-level townhomes (outer communities)
$300k–$600k
Most active segment by volume
$2M+
Luxury custom in Apex & Cary

New construction in the Triangle ranges from entry-level townhomes in the mid-$200s (Lillington, Angier, outer communities) to multi-million-dollar custom homes in Apex and Cary. The broad mid-range — $300k to $600k — remains the most active segment by volume, driven by first-time and move-up buyers. Price per square foot varies significantly by location: Cary and Apex command a meaningful premium over Clayton, Lillington, or Angier — reflecting school district quality, commute time, and land costs.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions: New Construction in the Triangle, NC

New construction homes in the Triangle range from the mid-$200s in communities like Lillington and Angier to over $2 million in Apex and Cary. Entry-level townhomes start in the mid-$300s across the region. The broad $300k–$600k range has the highest volume and the widest selection of builders and communities. Luxury and semi-custom homes in Apex, Cary, and North Raleigh typically start above $700k.
The most active builders in the Triangle are D.R. Horton (largest volume, entry to mid-range), Lennar, Ryan Homes, Meritage Homes, DRB Homes, Taylor Morrison, Mattamy Homes, M/I Homes, Stanley Martin Homes, and Pulte Homes. Regional builders like Garman Homes, Mungo Homes, and Chesapeake Homes are active in select communities. For luxury, Toll Brothers, Drees Homes, and AR Homes operate in Apex, Cary, and North Raleigh.
You are not required to have a buyer’s agent, but it is strongly recommended. The builder’s on-site sales representative works for the builder — not for you. A buyer’s agent reviews the contract (which is the builder’s own document, not the standard NC form), negotiates incentives, coordinates inspections, and represents your interests throughout. In most cases, having a buyer’s agent costs you nothing — the builder compensates agents separately from the purchase price.
Since the August 2024 NAR Settlement, builder commission policies vary by builder and by community. Some builders continue to offer buyer agent compensation; others do not, or offer it only under specific conditions. Builder commission policies should always be confirmed before your first visit to a sales office. As your agent, I verify compensation terms in advance so there are no surprises for either party.
Yes — but differently than with resale. Builders rarely cut the base price, because it affects comparable sales across the community. Instead, negotiate on closing cost credits, mortgage rate buydowns, design center upgrades, lot premiums, or included options. The best leverage is on completed spec homes that have been sitting unsold. An experienced agent knows which builders are offering flexibility right now and can help you negotiate effectively.
Yes. You are legally entitled to use any lender you choose. However, many builders offer incentives — rate buydowns, closing cost credits — exclusively when you use their preferred lender. Before committing, compare the builder’s lender offer (including rate, fees, and incentives) against an independent lender quote. Sometimes the builder’s lender is the better deal; sometimes it isn’t. I help buyers run this comparison before making a decision.
Move-in ready homes are complete or nearly complete — typically 0 to 60 days to closing, no customization available. To-be-built homes start from a floor plan and are built to order — typically 6 to 12 months or more, with full design center customization available. Under construction homes fall in between at roughly 2 to 6 months, with limited design selections depending on build stage. Custom homes through a private builder take 10 to 18 months or more.
It depends on your priorities. Builder incentives — rate buydowns, closing cost credits, upgrade packages — can significantly improve affordability on new construction. However, resale homes may offer more room to negotiate on purchase price and typically close faster. New construction is generally the better fit if you want modern floor plans, a warranty, energy efficiency, and the ability to choose your finishes. Resale may be the better fit if you want an established neighborhood, more mature landscaping, or a faster timeline.
Anna Rukhlina — Realtor, Triangle NC new construction

Ready to Explore New Construction in the Triangle?

I work with buyers across the Triangle and surrounding communities, and I specialize in new construction. Before you walk into a builder’s sales office, let’s talk — builder reps work for the builder, and having your own agent on your side costs you nothing.

  • I’ll tell you which builders have the strongest incentives right now
  • I’ll review the builder’s contract before you sign anything
  • I coordinate inspections and attend your walkthroughs
  • I verify buyer agent compensation with every builder before your first visit

Anna Rukhlina · 919-332-6256 · [email protected] · Mon–Sun 8am–10pm