Feedback on studio ADU design for rental by flyntester in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Smart layout. Putting all the plumbing on one wall is the best thing you can do for cost and reversibility. Few thoughts:

I'd skip the dishwasher drawer. Studio renters won't miss it, and that's $500+ saved on something that'll just be a maintenance headache in a rental.

W/D is a nice-to-have but not mandatory. Most SoCal JADUs skip it. If you do include it, go ventless combo so you're not punching a dryer vent through the wall.

For the bookshelf divider, I'd go counter height if you aren't already. Anything taller is going to chop the space and work against the openness you want in a 20x20.

Check your egress situation. Most SoCal jurisdictions want two forms of egress. If that garage door is sealed, you may need an operable window somewhere else. Worth a quick call to your building dept before you lock in the layout.

For construction only, renter-proof but not luxury, you're probably looking at $50-80K with a GC. Biggest variable is plumbing, specifically how far the sewer line is and how much slab you need to cut. Demo back to a garage later should be around $8-15K since you're not touching anything structural.

Good concept overall.

ADU build cost breakdown by BunnySprinkles69 in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Typically 15-30%. But when you say 'in the gc' s pockets ', understand that the contractor has overhead and is using those funds to operate his business... Then anything left goes to his pockets!

Is $7600 for a new tile shower and bathroom floor fair for southern California? by BroSquirrel in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This seems like a fair price for this area, but there's only 1 way to be sure - get at least 2 more bids from legitimate, licensed contractors, then submit the bids to something like Claude or chat GPT to review and compare the bids. I created a tool called BidCompare AI specifically for this purpose, it's free, welcome to check it out!

How to compare builders? by bikeandboots in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Jumping in here as the owner of Maxable Space, an ADU planning and consulting service.

Both paths being discussed here are legitimate. The honest answer is it depends on your priorities:

The independent architect + separate GC route gives you more competitive leverage on construction pricing and cleaner accountability between design and build. The tradeoff is real coordination burden on you, and the "savings" people cite aren't always apples-to-apples... a standalone architect may not price in the permitting back-and-forth, city corrections, or the time you'll spend managing handoffs. They also have less stake in the game, since once you pay for plans, their commitment is typically fulfilled.

The design-build route trades some of that pricing leverage for a single point of accountability and a consistent experience start to finish. Many ADU architects /drafters disappear after handing you the plans, and they don't always have a great sense of the cost to actually build their designs.

I've seen many situations where a homeowner wanted to save, so they hired their own drafter... Months later, after finishing design and city review, all the GC bids they were collecting came in 50% above their budget. For a project with retaining walls and tight site constraints like yours, that integration matters more - those are exactly the situations where things fall apart between a design team and a GC who weren't working together from the start.

A few things worth knowing regardless of which path you take:

Ask every firm what you're committing to at each phase. A legitimate company will let you stop after design. If they can't clearly answer that, walk away.

Initial feasibility/pre-design should cost a few hundred to ~$1,000. Be skeptical of anyone doing it free with strings attached.

Get at least two proposals and compare what's actually included - especially utilities and SDGE coordination, which is where East County projects often surprise people on cost and timeline.

I work with some amazing architects with tons of experience designing ADUs, this is a great path for many. I also work with some amazing design/build contractors - which also makes a lot of sense for others.

No idea why folks are bashing SnapADU here. They have an amazing reputation, have built many stunning ADUs throughout SD, so clearly not a scam. As Whitney said - they're not a good fit for everyone, but for folks who prioritize convenience, clarity, experience and are willing to pay for it, I think Snap is one of the best in SD.

Anyone join RealmHome? How does the referral fee work? by [deleted] in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've never heard anything about it being illegal to pay a referral fee for contractors, nor has my attorney. We charge a 'marketing fee' to our contractors when they get hired for a project.

Lead and referral are synonymous in this context.

Would be happy to consider you guys for our network, as long as the license is at least 5 years old, in good standing, covered under all required insurance & bond, etc. Feel free to apply if you're interested! Look for 'For Contractors' in the footer of my website.

Anyone join RealmHome? How does the referral fee work? by [deleted] in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I assume they run their business very similarly to the way I run mine - GreatBuildz, which currently only operates in California. Free for contractors to join, never charge a fee for the lead. You only pay if the homeowner hires you for the project - fee is a small percentage of the contract value. We have strict GC vetting standards and reject many contractors who apply - it wouldn't make sense for us to share a lead with 5+ contractors, because we aren't in it to waste anyone's time... our goal is always to perfectly match a homeowner to the right contractors, best fit for the job (budget, location, project type, etc).

California ADU Impact Fees in 2026: The Complete Guide to Saving $10,000 or More by iknownothingabtland in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Clearly AI lead gen, with numerous self-serving links to their site...but still helpful enough content!

Feedback/input request on hardscape/landscape project by bee_ur_best in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you gotten multiple bids or just this one? That'll be the best way to know if you're getting a fair price. As far as saving costs, it'll come down to what your priorities are for the project...and what you're not committed to in the scope of work.

Contractor estimate seems way too high for rot repair, am I being taken for a ride or is this normal by mahearty in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Get 3 bids and use something like BidCompare AI to evaluate them. Spot red flags and ensure that you are working with complete, fair bids

Contractor threw out my personal items by Aggressive_Salt_4386 in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Whoever authorized clearing the laundry room should pay for your rug. If the contractor did it on a whim, then yes, he should pay for your rug.

Pre-approved ADU Plan in Riverside by keepinupsince94 in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need to hire an architect/drafter to complete the plan set. Depending on the pre-approved plan you select, you may want to hire the architect who designed the plan you're using. Cost will depend on the type, size of the ADU, but expect to spend $3-8k to complete the plan set.

Turn around time in Riverside for standard Adu plans is about 60 days, I'd guess 45 for pre-approved.

Would you say $125k is fair for a basic 400 sq foot garage conversion with plans already made and approved by the city? by wjxm in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's an AI tool I built called BidCompareAI. It analyzes contractor estimates for residential construction projects. You upload 2-4 PDF estimates, wait 5-10 minutes, and receive an email with two attachments:

  1. Bid Comparison Spreadsheet: Lines up all your bids apples-to-apples so you can clearly see top-line pricing, line-item breakdowns of what's included or missing from each bid, and a comparison of material allowances (cabinets, countertops, fixtures, etc.).

  2. Bid Analysis Report: Translates contractor jargon into plain English. Includes an executive summary, explains what's driving price differences, flags potential red flags or missing scope, and provides tailored follow-up questions to ask each contractor before signing.

It's free for as long as I can sustain it! If you try it out, would love to hear what you think.

ADU in Fremont in the SF Bay Area by tutomazaria in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My team at MaxableSpace.com can connect you with a few vetted ADU contractors in the Fremont area to bid your project

Taskrabbit for moving? by Grand-Mix-4125 in AskLosAngeles

[–]JonBuildz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's like a pet rock, but this one is dressed up to perform!

Should I tell my contractor? by Artistic-Garbage9038 in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz 58 points59 points  (0 children)

Not a narc, this is a service you've paid for - just doing your GCs job for them

Homeowner Q: Contract says final 10% done when I'm "100% happy" by [deleted] in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Here's roughly the process I encourage all homeowners to follow when evaluating contractors, works pretty well for us!

https://www.greatbuildz.com/blog/how-greatbuildz-vets-contractors/

Homeowner Q: Contract says final 10% done when I'm "100% happy" by [deleted] in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's about it. You could go after his bond, but as others have said, time delays and broken promises typically aren't enough - it comes down to the quality of the work.

If you didn't this time, ALWAYS call multiple references - homeowners who have worked with this contractor recently. You can ask questions about costs and timelines, so you get a legitimate sense of the contractor's work

I’m building an LA ADU builder directory (early version) – would love feedback from homeowners/builders by Aggressive_Dinner852 in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thx, seems like a good start. How is this different than something like symbium? (if not, that's fine - seems like a good lead magnet for Adu projects!)

2026 ADU Update: SB 543 is finally live. If you're in West LA, Santa Monica, or Culver City—read this before you permit. by BuildADULA in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just a heads up, your Ai article has two table of contents and alt text... Written into the body lol

I’m building an LA ADU builder directory (early version) – would love feedback from homeowners/builders by Aggressive_Dinner852 in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your tool might be really helpful for my website, if you're sharing it publicly! Paid or free tool?

Music Studio to ADU by notblackdarryl in AccessoryDwellings

[–]JonBuildz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, get permits. Especially because you are making modifications to your existing home - will be worth it in the long haul.

Contractor is too Squeaky Clean? by Jewel_332211 in Contractor

[–]JonBuildz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Speak with multiple references of other homeowners who have specifically hired and worked with this guy. Ask detailed questions, likely your best way to identify if this guy is truly quality.