Drafting…
Drafting…
Guide
About 3 min read
Architect and designer fees are not a single sticker price. They depend on project type (new build, renovation, ADU, tenant improvement), level of service, risk, and how much documentation is required for permits and construction.
PlanGrounds is a platform where clients can discover architectural plans, connect with architects, and move from idea to built project in one place.
You may see hourly rates for early feasibility, fixed fees for a defined scope, or a percentage of construction cost when the architect is responsible for a full design and construction administration package.
On many residential and light-commercial jobs, work is phased: schematic design (big moves and code strategy), design development (materials, systems, and coordination), construction documents (what the builder bids and the jurisdiction reviews), and optional construction administration (RFIs, submittals, site visits). Each phase can be billed differently—some firms sell phases as separate fixed fees, others wrap several phases into one agreement once the scope is stable.
Ask what deliverables each quote includes: renderings, energy models, interior elevations, landscape coordination, and permit resubmittals are often out-of-scope unless written down. A lower fee that omits permit support or structural coordination can cost more in change orders later.
Renovations with unknown conditions, tight jurisdictions, fast timelines, and high coordination requirements increase effort. Clear briefs, good site surveys, and realistic schedules reduce churn.
Jurisdictions with strict energy, fire, accessibility, or historic requirements need more documentation and coordination. Corner lots, steep slopes, poor soils, and tight setbacks usually mean more engineering interfaces and more design time—not because the architect is slow, but because risk and liability are higher when assumptions have to be proven on paper.
When you post a project or start from a plan, professionals respond with structured proposals—so you can compare scope, fees, and timeline side by side.
Short answers grounded in how real projects move—then use PlanGrounds to compare professionals and proposals when you're ready.
Some full-service residential jobs land near that band, but it is not a law of nature. Small projects often carry higher percentages because there’s a minimum effort to produce permit-ready work; very large or repetitive work can compress the percentage. Always ask what scope the percentage covers and what happens if construction cost shifts.
Ask for an itemized phase list: schematic design, design development, construction documents, bidding or pricing support, and construction administration are often billed separately. Interior architecture, landscape coordination, and extra consultant sets (structural, MEP) may be add-ons. If something isn’t listed, assume it isn’t included until it’s in writing.
Hourly fits early exploration when scope is fuzzy; fixed fees fit when milestones are clear and both sides want predictability. Hybrid models are common (hourly for feasibility, fixed for documentation). Compare proposals on PlanGrounds side by side so you’re not guessing what each firm actually bundled.
Scope growth, late design changes after permits, rush timelines, unusual code or historic requirements, and unknown existing conditions in renovations. A clear brief, realistic schedule, and early decisions on major systems reduce rework—the biggest driver of extra hours.
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This guide is for general education only. It is not legal, engineering, or financial advice. Budgets and codes vary by site and jurisdiction—hire qualified professionals for decisions that affect safety, compliance, or investment.