How Much Does It Cost to Build a House in Des Moines in 2026?
Experience exceptional home building with Busy Builders. Our expert contractors deliver tailored solutions for your dream home. Build your future today!
Des Moines is Iowa’s largest city, and its housing stock spans everything from century-old bungalows in Drake and Sherman Hill to postwar ranches in Beaverdale and newer builds along the city’s expanding edges.
When your family needs more space, a well-designed home addition lets you stay in your neighborhood, your school district, and the home you have already invested in.
Busy Builders designs and builds home additions across Des Moines that match the existing structure, meet Iowa building code, and hold up through decades of freeze-thaw cycles and clay soil movement.
Since 2020, Busy Builders has completed over 1,285 construction and remodeling projects across Central Iowa. We build home additions for Des Moines families who need more space and want it done right the first time.
Every addition we build is designed to match the existing home’s structure, style, and systems. When the project is done, it should feel like it was always there.
Honest pricing, a clear written plan, and no surprise charges on every home addition we take on in Des Moines.
We tell you exactly what your project requires before a single permit is filed. We do not upsell scope the addition does not need.
We want to be the registered general contractor that homeowners in Des Moines, West Des Moines, Ankeny, Johnston, Norwalk, and Grimes call first when the house is not big enough anymore.
Every home addition in Des Moines starts with a full assessment of the existing structure before any design work begins.
We evaluate the foundation, first-floor framing, roof structure, and mechanical systems to understand what the home can support and where connections need to be made.
Des Moines sits on expansive clay soil, and the city’s frost line runs 42 to 48 inches deep. Both factors affect foundation depth and footing design on every addition type, and we account for both before a single drawing is produced.
You get a written scope of work, design, and timeline before any work begins or any contract is signed.
Every home addition in Des Moines requires a building permit, and most require structural drawings submitted with the application.
The City of Des Moines Building Services Division administers permits for residential construction within city limits. Each submission goes through a plan review process before approval is issued.
We file all required permits, submit structural drawings, coordinate with third-party engineers where required, and schedule all inspections as part of the project scope.
Unpermitted additions create real problems at resale, with insurance carriers, and with mortgage lenders. Review the Iowa DIAL permit submission process for Des Moines-specific requirements.
Site prep includes removing existing exterior walls, siding, or other materials at the connection point between the new addition and the existing home.
This step also covers grading, drainage correction, and any landscaping removal needed to clear the footprint.
In Des Moines established neighborhoods like Beaverdale, Oak Park, and Merle Hay, utility locates are completed before any excavation begins, per Iowa law.
Existing mechanical penetrations at the connection point are identified and protected during demolition so they can be properly integrated during the build.
The foundation is the most critical structural element of any home addition in Des Moines.
Footings are set below the 42 to 48 inch frost line on every project without exception. Iowa clay soil expands when wet and contracts when dry, adding lateral pressure to footings and foundation walls year-round.
We match the new foundation type to the existing home’s foundation and the addition’s structural requirements.
Poured concrete walls, block foundations, and monolithic slabs are all used depending on the addition type. Footing inspections are scheduled and completed before any concrete is poured.
Framing is where the addition takes physical shape and where the connection to the existing home becomes permanent.
Load-bearing connections between the new and existing structure are engineered and built to carry the full design load. Headers, beams, and posts are sized per Iowa building code for the spans and loads involved.
Second-story additions on Des Moines homes require particular attention here. The existing first-floor framing must be confirmed to carry the new load before walls go up.
All framing lumber is pressure-treated where it contacts concrete, and structural hardware is rated for outdoor exposure at all connection points.
The roof transition between the addition and the existing home is one of the most detail-critical steps in the entire build.
A poorly executed roofline transition is the most common source of water intrusion in home additions across Des Moines and Central Iowa.
We flash all roof-to-wall connections, valleys, and penetrations using materials compatible with the existing roofing system. Exterior sheathing, housewrap, and siding are installed to create a continuous moisture barrier from the foundation to the roofline.
Siding is matched to the existing home as closely as possible so the addition reads as part of the original structure from the street.
Windows and exterior doors go in once framing and roofing are complete and rough opening sizes are confirmed.
Window selection for Des Moines additions must balance thermal performance with Iowa’s temperature extremes. Temperatures in Des Moines range from well below 0°F in winter to above 95°F in summer, making low-E glass and proper installation critical for year-round energy performance.
All windows and doors are flashed and sealed at the rough opening before interior work begins.
Egress windows are installed in any bedroom added as part of the addition, per Iowa building code requirements.
Mechanical rough-in covers all plumbing, electrical, and HVAC work done while walls are open.
This is the least expensive time to run new supply lines, drain lines, circuits, and ductwork. Access is open, and work can be planned around the framing before anything is closed in.
We assess whether the existing HVAC system in your Des Moines home can handle the added square footage before extending any ductwork. Iowa NEC 2023 with state amendments governs all electrical work, and all plumbing is inspected to Iowa code.
All rough-in work is done by licensed electricians and licensed plumbers, pulled with permits, and inspected before drywall closes the walls.
Insulation in a Des Moines home addition must meet or exceed Iowa’s energy code requirements and perform through the full range of Iowa’s temperature extremes.
Spray foam is used on rim joists and at all penetrations where air sealing is critical. Batt or blown-in insulation fills wall and ceiling cavities, depending on framing depth and R-value requirements.
Iowa’s 42 to 48 inch frost line and below-grade conditions affect insulation choices for additions with basement or crawl space components. Getting this step right determines whether the addition stays comfortable in January.
Read more about Iowa home building costs to understand how insulation choices affect the overall project budget.
Drywall goes up once all mechanical inspections are passed and insulation is complete.
We hang, tape, mud, and sand every surface to a smooth paint-ready finish that matches the texture and finish level of the existing home. For older Des Moines homes with plaster walls, we take extra care to match the finish so the transition is not obvious.
Flooring selection is coordinated with the existing home so transitions between spaces feel intentional rather than patched. Paint colors, trim profiles, door hardware, and light fixture styles are matched to the existing interior throughout.
Read our guide on how to prepare your Iowa home for a remodel to understand what to expect during the interior finish phase.
The final walkthrough is where we go through every room of the addition together before calling the project complete.
We check every surface, connection, and finish detail side by side with the homeowner. Every plumbing fixture, electrical outlet, light switch, HVAC register, and GFCI circuit is tested before the walkthrough begins.
If anything does not meet the standard we set at the start of the project, we fix it before handoff.
The crew removes all tools, materials, debris, and protective coverings so the addition is clean and ready to use from day one. All permit documentation and inspection records are delivered at project close, protecting your investment at resale and with your insurance carrier.
Since 2020, over 1,285 Central Iowa homeowners have trusted Busy Builders to build and remodel their homes, and it shows.
Home addition costs in Des Moines start at approximately $300 per square foot and vary based on addition type, finish level, and structural complexity.
A basic room addition with standard finishes typically runs $300 to $400 per square foot. A more complex addition with custom finishes, a full bathroom, or second-story structural work often runs $400 to $600 or more per square foot.
The biggest cost variables in Des Moines are foundation depth requirements driven by the 42 to 48 inch frost line, existing structural reinforcement needs, and mechanical integration complexity on older homes.
Busy Builders provides a detailed written estimate before any work begins. See our Iowa home building costs guide for broader context on construction pricing across Central Iowa. Costs vary by scope, materials, and complexity.
Yes, without exception. Every home addition in Des Moines requires a building permit, and most require structural drawings to be submitted with the application.
The City of Des Moines Building Services Division administers residential building permits within city limits. Each city in Central Iowa has its own submission and review process, and Des Moines is no exception.
Unpermitted additions create serious problems at resale, with mortgage lenders, and with homeowners’ insurance carriers.
Busy Builders files all permits, submits all required drawings, and schedules all inspections as part of every project scope. Review the Iowa DIAL permit submission process for Des Moines-specific requirements. You can also read our guide on navigating home building permits in Iowa for a broader overview.
Most home additions in Des Moines run 3 to 6 months from permit approval to final walkthrough, depending on size, complexity, and addition type.
A straightforward room addition on an existing foundation can be completed in 10 to 14 weeks. A second-story addition or ADU with full mechanical systems typically runs 4 to 6 months.
Permit processing time through Des Moines Building Services is the most variable factor. Plan review timelines can shift based on submission volume and plan completeness.
Busy Builders builds all permit timelines into the project schedule upfront so there are no surprises mid-build. See our overview of the home additions process in Central Iowa for more detail on what to expect at each phase.
Yes, matching the existing home is a core part of how we design and build every addition in Des Moines.
Rooflines, siding profiles, window styles, interior trim, and flooring transitions are all specified during the design phase. The goal is for the addition to read as part of the original structure, not something bolted on after the fact.
This matters especially in older Des Moines neighborhoods where homes have distinct architectural character. We also match the mechanical systems so heating, cooling, and electrical all feel seamless throughout the connected space.
Read our guide on whole house remodel vs. room by room if you are weighing an addition against a broader remodel of your Des Moines home.
Yes. Bathrooms and kitchens can be incorporated into any room addition, ADU, or second-story addition in Des Moines.
Plumbing rough-in happens while walls are open during the mechanical phase. That is the most cost-effective time to run new supply and drain lines through a Des Moines home.
Bathroom additions in Central Iowa typically add $15,000 to $40,000 to the project cost, depending on size and finish level. Kitchen additions are priced based on square footage and appliance and cabinet layout complexity.
Both are scoped and priced in the written estimate before any work begins. See our kitchen remodeling and bathroom remodeling service pages for finish-level detail. Costs vary by scope, materials, and complexity.
It depends on what you need the space for and what your Des Moines home already has below grade.
A finished basement adds usable square footage at a lower cost per square foot. But it appraises below grade, meaning it contributes less to resale value than above-grade addition square footage under Fannie Mae appraisal rules.
A home addition costs more per square foot but adds fully appraised living area that moves the needle more at resale. For Des Moines families who need a bedroom, a home office, or a primary suite, an addition delivers above-grade space that a basement cannot.
Read our full breakdown of the finished basement vs. home addition in the Des Moines metro before making the decision. You can also explore basement finishing in Central Iowa if below-grade space is the better fit for your situation.
Experience exceptional home building with Busy Builders. Our expert contractors deliver tailored solutions for your dream home. Build your future today!
Deciding between finishing your basement and building a home addition is one of the biggest choices Central Iowa homeowners face. Both options add livable space, but costs, timelines, and...
If you live in Des Moines and feel cramped during long Iowa winters, a 4-season porch might be the solution you have been dreaming about. This guide breaks down...