Guide

What is in a house kit and what is counted separately

A kit is the scope fixed in the package - no more, no less. Around it there are always decisions that, depending on the client, the site and local requirements, may be counted separately. A clear wording in the offer protects both sides.

Kit, assembly and turnkey

A kit is the product itself with its factory content. Assembly is delivery and placement on the foundation. Turnkey is kit, assembly and the agreed finishing as one scope. The exact content of each level depends on model and package.

What is usually in the kit

On the factory side a typical kit includes the frame, insulation and wall layers, façade and roof elements, window and door installation and the prep of the main utilities inside the module. The exact scope varies between models and package tiers.

What is usually not included by default

Several decisions depend on the client and the site and are handled separately in the offer:

  • Furniture and interior items
  • Kitchen units and appliances
  • Solar panels and water heater
  • Foundation and site works
  • Transport based on plot location
  • Local permits and approvals

The exact scope, materials and conditions are always fixed in the written offer and depend on the selected model and package.

Foundation and transport - separate

Foundation depends on soil and site and cannot be “automatically” inside every offer. Transport depends on site location and access. We price both separately so the cost is tied to the real situation and the client can see how the number builds up.

What to check in the offer

A clear offer describes the house package, the foundation logic, the transport logic and all typical extras as separate items. If any of these is missing or vaguely worded, that is the first signal to ask for clarification.

  • Specific model and package tier
  • Clear line between factory and site work
  • Separate lines for foundation, transport and extras
  • Validity period and conditions

How to compare offers

Two offers are comparable only when written out with the same logic: same model tier, same package content, same delivery and assembly scope. A lower total may hide a narrower package or decisions parked “outside the offer” that still arise later.

Site condition, access and logistics affect the final process and schedule.

Next step

When the house scope is clear, send a request. We will prepare a written offer with explicit content and separate foundation and transport logic so you can see exactly how the total is built.