What to look for in a Development Budget?

Was searching through the forum and couldn't find a solid conversation on the intricacies of budgeting for a development project (could've missed it). Seen topics on the developer fee, interest reserves, and a few other items, but wanted to hear some of your insights.

Outside of the general items like General Conditions, Site Work, Core + Shell, Parking, A&E Fees, Legal, etc... what are some items in the development budget that folks should look out for? Are there certain 'fees' that a GC might charge to double dip? Do you just trust your GC completely? Are marketing costs included in the dev budget or in opex? Are there items that you've missed in the past that you now make sure are in there every time?

I once worked on a deal with a developer that was also serving as the GC, and somehow, they got away with charging 8% Overhead + Profit by the GC, plus a 4% GC Fee, then a Development Fee on top of hard and soft costs of 8%. Seemed ridiculous to me, like they were double dipping since it was all really just one company and a handful of people managing it all from the Developer/GC side, but all the parties agreed.

 
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One word of high level advice - always trust but verify. Blind trust in any party is just asking to get take advantage of. GCs in particular can be some of the savviest business players and if you don’t know what you’re doing there are many ways for them to pull additional money out of the job or push it onto you as the owner. 

That fee stack you described sounds high but is also dependent on deal size. We usually charge 2-4% of project cost excluding land and financing costs for our development fee depending upon what the bank will let us get away with. 

GC fees are tricky because they are dependent on your contract structure - not to get too in the weeds but as an example if you agree on a stipulated sum (GC delivers project at a fixed fee/set cost) the fee might be lower because usually the GC keeps the buy out savings versus a cost plus fee (GC delivers project at a fixed cost but any savings go back to owner) where those go back into the GMP contingency. Generally GC fees run 2-4% on hard costs (or whatever their contract sum is). 

Marketing costs are carried both on the balance sheet as a project cost as well as an ongoing operating expense. The marketing costs in project costs are start up costs while you are in lease up while the costs in OPEX are for when you are more stabilized. 

Other project costs for you to be aware of:

  • Closing costs on land including title, legal, taxes, any brokerage fees
  • Consultant costs including architect, structural and MEP engineering, landscape architect, any market studies or data, any special testing or studies required for city approval/review
  • Permit and fees including impact fees, building permits, school and county fees, fire, police, etc.
  • Horizontal costs
  • Vertical costs 
  • Site amenity costs including benches, umbrellas, tables, etc 
  • FF&E costs for clubhouse, pool, amenity spaces and any model units
  • Marketing costs including any events you want to throw to build PR, equipment for your property management to get going, etc
  • Negative cash flow while you lease up project including utilities, etc 
  • Insurance
  • Real estate taxes 
  • Indirect costs including trailer rentals, temp fencing, etc if your GC doesn’t have this
  • Legal cost allowance 
  • Financing fees including origination fees, closing costs and interest reserve 

That about covers it but let me know if you have any additional questions.

 

Temp fencing, crane/site signage, material travel verification budgets (going to Italy for you and your 5 best project friends to make sure marble is pulled out of the ground before summer), owner/sales trailers, design-assist vs consultant work, etc. are all things that GCs are gonna be salty on if not 100% accounted for in your contract. As FutureCEO3 mentioned about GC savings & fees, it's good to get a solid understanding of basic contract structures and some contingency/buyout savings lines to figure out where saved money goes and who controls what. Controlling schedule float is something that is always contentious and gets really ugly if you let it. 

A lot of the school/county fees are more local jurisdiction to jurisdiction. 

 

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Temp fencing, crane/site signage, material travel verification budgets (going to Italy for you and your 5 best project friends to make sure marble is pulled out of the ground before summer), owner/sales trailers, design-assist vs consultant work, etc. are all things that GCs are gonna be salty on if not 100% accounted for in your contract. As FutureCEO3 mentioned about GC savings & fees, it's good to get a solid understanding of basic contract structures and some contingency/buyout savings lines to figure out where saved money goes and who controls what. Controlling schedule float is something that is always contentious and gets really ugly if you let it. 

A lot of the school/county fees are more local jurisdiction to jurisdiction. 

To add to this, it’s important to read word to word what is your development fee basis. For example, legal and finance related costs are usually not part of the development fee basis.

 

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