Evaluate Your Land - Lot Feasibility Service

Quick, objective pre-build due diligence for Western NC & Upstate SC so you don’t waste money on the wrong lot. If you hire Rustic Reinvented to build, your evaluation fee is credited 100% to your build contract.

Pricing

Single Lot: $750 one-time fee

Annual Memberships (12 months):

2 lots — $1,400 (effective - $700/lot)

3 lots — $1,950 (effective - $650/lot)

4 lots — $2,500 (effective - $625/lot)

5 lots — $3,000 (effective - $600/lot)

Credit Policy: 100% of evaluation fees are credited toward your build contract if Rustic Reinvented is hired.

What’s Included

1. GIS & Topographic Review — contours, slope, floodplain, buffers

2. Zoning & Permitting Scan — zoning district, setbacks, overlays

3. Utilities & Access — power, water/sewer or septic feasibility, road access

4. Site Buildability Notes — potential homesite areas, drainage, clearing

5. Preliminary Cost Framework — big factors that move budget up/down

6. Recommendation Summary — green/yellow/red flag guidance

(Optional: include a rough build-cost band for planning. Not a bid; final pricing requires plans and specs.)

FAQ

  • Do you visit the property? This service is a desktop feasibility analysis. Site visits and tests are available as add-ons.

  • Is this a guaranteed approval? No. It’s an early due-diligence screen to reduce risk before you invest in surveys, engineering, and plans.

  • How does the credit work? If Rustic Reinvented is hired, 100% of your evaluation fees are credited to your build contract.

  • How long is a membership valid? Twelve months from purchase. Unused lot evaluations expire at the end of the term.

Important Disclosures

This feasibility study is not a boundary or topographic survey, geotechnical report, septic perc test, or permit approval. It relies on public and third-party data that may change. Final buildability and costs depend on surveys, soils testing, engineering, and authority reviews. This report is planning guidance and not a bid or guarantee.

Request a Lot Evaluation