SwagerBuilds LLC · 4510 E 168 N, Rigby, ID 83442 · (208) 520-0636

Cost to Build a Custom Home in Driggs, Idaho (2026 Update)

The Arbogast Home — framing stage with Teton Range backdrop from a full GC custom luxury home build, 1791 Mt Moran Rd, Driggs, Idaho (Teton Valley), 2025
Primary bath with walk in glass shower and stone top vanity from the Arbogast custom home build by SwagerBuilds, Driggs, Idaho (Teton Valley), 2025

If you’re trying to figure out what it actually costs to build a custom home in Driggs in 2026, the honest answer is between $400 and $650 per square foot, all in. A 3,500 sq ft custom build runs $1.4M to $2.3M before land. A higher end mountain modern with timber accents and big glass walls? $2.5M and up.

That’s a wide range, and the reason isn’t builder margin. It’s the four cost drivers I’ll walk you through below. By the end of this guide, you’ll be able to ballpark your own build within about 10 percent before you ever sign a contract.

I’m Bryce Swager, founder of SwagerBuilds. We’ve been building custom homes in Eastern Idaho since 2016, including a growing roster of luxury projects in Teton Valley and Jackson Hole. The numbers below come from real, current jobs, not a national average that gets quoted on every blog and ages out by spring.

What does it cost to build a custom home in Driggs, Idaho in 2026?

Between $400 and $650 per square foot for a luxury custom build. A typical 3,000 to 3,500 sq ft Teton Valley home runs $1.5M to $2.3M before land costs. Add 15 to 25 percent for site work, septic, well, and access if your lot is undeveloped. Land in Driggs ranges from $250K to $2M and up depending on view, acreage, and access.

Why Driggs Costs More Than Idaho Falls (And Why It Should)

If you’ve gotten quotes in Idaho Falls or Rexburg and now you’re getting Driggs numbers, the gap probably feels brutal. It’s not arbitrary. Building in Teton Valley is a different job than building on the valley floor, for four reasons.

  • Mountain logistics. Material delivery to Driggs is 60 to 90 minutes from the major suppliers. Concrete trucks, lumber yards, and equipment rentals all add freight.
  • Climate engineering. Teton Valley sees lows of 25 below, more than 12 feet of snow a year, and winds that hammer a roof line. Code minimum insulation gets you a comfortable home in Boise. In Driggs, code minimum gets you ice dams and a $900 heating bill. We build well above code here, and that costs more.
  • Subcontractor scarcity. Idaho Falls has more than 200 HVAC contractors. Teton Valley has fewer than 20 who’ll work on a luxury build, and the best ones are booked 9 to 12 months out. When the good crews are scarce, the price goes up.
  • Permitting and jurisdictional fees. Teton County permits cost more than the lower valley, especially with the new wildfire zone overlays.
The Arbogast Home, framing stage with Teton Range backdrop from a full GC custom luxury home build, 1791 Mt Moran Rd, Driggs, Idaho (Teton Valley), 2025

The honest builder math: a $300 a square foot Idaho Falls build is roughly the same scope of work as a $440 a square foot Driggs build. The home isn’t 47 percent nicer. The job is 47 percent harder.

The Real Cost Breakdown: Where Every Dollar Goes

Here’s the actual line item split for a $1.8M Teton Valley custom home (3,500 sq ft, $515 a square foot). Numbers are 2026 averages from SwagerBuilds active jobs.

Cost Category% of Total$ on $1.8M Build
Site work (excavation, septic, well, drive)12%$216,000
Foundation and framing18%$324,000
Exterior (siding, roof, windows, doors)17%$306,000
Plumbing, HVAC, electrical14%$252,000
Interior finishes (flooring, trim, paint)12%$216,000
Kitchen and bathrooms (cabinets, counters, fixtures)13%$234,000
Permits, fees, insurance, builder overhead8%$144,000
Builder profit6%$108,000
Total100%$1,800,000

A few things to notice. First, kitchen and bath finishes alone are $234K, and that’s a luxury but not over the top spec. Push toward Wolf, Sub-Zero, and stone slab counters and you’re at $350K easy. Second, builder profit is 6 percent, not 30. Anyone quoting you a 30 percent builder fee in Teton Valley is either misinformed or padding hard.

The Arbogast Home, finished kitchen with custom alder cabinets and granite island from a full GC custom luxury home build, 1791 Mt Moran Rd, Driggs, Idaho (Teton Valley), 2025

What Drives the $400 to $650 Per Square Foot Spread

Most of the price spread comes down to four specific decisions. Each one moves the needle 5 to 10 percent on total cost.

  • Glass to wall ratio. A standard window package on 3,500 sq ft runs $35,000 to $50,000. The big window mountain modern look with Marvin or Sierra Pacific 8 foot panels runs $90,000 to $130,000. That single decision is a $50,000 to $80,000 swing.
  • Roof complexity. A simple gable is cheapest. Hips with dormers, complex valleys, and exposed timber rafter tails run 25 to 35 percent more.
  • Mechanical systems. A standard 95 percent AFUE furnace with a ducted system is included. In floor radiant with a ducted HRV and a heat pump for shoulder seasons runs $40,000 to $65,000 extra. Worth it for the efficiency, but a real budget lever.
  • Cabinet and millwork level. Big box semi custom cabinets run $45,000 to $60,000 for a full house. Local custom millwork, built for the job out of real wood, runs $90,000 to $140,000.

If you want to spend less, the highest leverage cuts are usually scaling back the window package, simplifying the roof, and using semi custom cabinets in the secondary spaces like the laundry and mudroom. That’s typically $80,000 to $120,000 back into the budget without the home looking cheap.

Hidden Costs Most Builders Won’t Bring Up

These don’t show on a builder estimate, but they hit your wallet just as hard. Plan for them or you’ll be over budget by $80,000 to $200,000 when you move in.

  • Septic system in Teton County: $18,000 to $35,000 depending on soil and lot. Often $45,000 and up if you need a pressure dosed mound system.
  • Well drilling: $15,000 to $25,000 typical. If you hit a dry hole or have to drill past 600 feet, $35,000 to $55,000.
  • Access road and snow plowing: $10,000 to $30,000 to build. Then $3,000 to $6,000 a winter for plowing if you’re not on a county maintained road.
  • Propane tank and line: $4,000 to $8,000. Most Teton lots aren’t on natural gas.
  • Soft costs: architect ($25,000 to $75,000), interior designer ($15,000 to $50,000), construction loan interest, county impact fees, and builder’s risk insurance. Easily another $80,000 to $150,000 total.

Real Project Spotlight: The Arbogast Build

The Arbogast home in Driggs is one of our recent benchmark projects. 3,200 sq ft modern mountain on 5 acres, glass heavy with timber accents, in floor radiant, and a custom kitchen built around entertaining.

The Arbogast Home, full height custom stone fireplace, built in walnut shelving, and timber mantel. SwagerBuilds craftsmanship detail, Driggs, Idaho.

Final numbers:

  • Land cost: $640K (5 acres, west facing Teton view)
  • Site work, septic, and well: $185K
  • Build cost: $1,920K, about $600 a square foot including the high end finish package
  • Soft costs: $115K (architect, designer, financing, insurance)
  • Total all in: $2,860K

The Arbogasts came in $40K under their $2.9M budget, finished on schedule, and moved into a home that’s already appraising 8 percent above project cost. That’s what a clean Teton Valley luxury build looks like in 2026.

Common Questions About Building in Driggs

How much does it cost to build a 2,500 sq ft custom home in Driggs?

Between $1.0M and $1.6M for a luxury build, plus land. At the lower end you’re getting builder grade finishes. At the upper end, real custom millwork, premium windows, and high efficiency mechanicals.

Is it cheaper to buy or build in Teton Valley?

In 2026, building is roughly 5 to 15 percent cheaper per square foot than buying comparable luxury inventory in Driggs and Victor, but only if you already own the land or buy a good lot. Add the land cost and they’re close to even, with the build giving you exactly what you want.

How much should I budget for upgrades and change orders?

Plan 8 to 12 percent of total build cost. On a $1.8M build, that’s $145,000 to $215,000 for the inevitable “let’s change this” decisions during construction. Builders who tell you they never have change orders aren’t being honest about how a real custom build actually goes.

What’s the cheapest way to build in Driggs without it looking cheap?

Three biggest levers: simplify the roof line, use a smaller premium window package paired with bigger windows in only the great room, and put your custom millwork budget into the kitchen and primary bath only. You can save $150,000 to $250,000 and still get a knockout home.

How long will it take to build my custom home in Driggs?

14 to 18 months from contract signing to keys in hand for most luxury builds. We break down every phase in How Long Does It Take to Build a Custom Home in Idaho.


Ready to talk numbers on your build?

If you’re inside 12 months of breaking ground in Driggs, Victor, Tetonia, or Felt, let’s talk. We do a free 30 minute discovery call where we look at your land, your wishlist, and your budget, and tell you straight whether the math works.

Schedule a discovery call

Or DM “BUILD” to @swagerbuilds on Instagram and we’ll send you a sample budget breakdown for a Teton Valley build at your size.

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