Building a custom home in Riverside or the surrounding Inland Empire is one of the most significant investments you will make. Between California's building code, the Title 24 energy requirements, expansive soils, fire-zone considerations, and seismic design, there's more to get right here than in most markets. The difference between a project that goes smoothly and one that doesn't almost always comes down to what was asked, confirmed, and documented before construction began.
Work through each section at your own pace. Your progress saves automatically. Items marked with a red indicator are warning signs that deserve a direct conversation with your builder before moving forward.
Worth noting: California's Title 24 energy code (Part 6) and CALGreen (Part 11) apply to all new residential construction, and the California Solar Mandate requires PV on new single-family homes. The 2025 Energy Code took effect for permit applications on or after January 1, 2026 — it makes heat pumps the prescriptive baseline for space and water heating and tightens envelope, ventilation, and battery-readiness requirements. Ask your builder how the home is being designed to comply and what that means for your HVAC, water heating, windows, insulation, and long-term operating costs.
Good to know: If your project involves a construction loan, your lender will have their own draw inspection process. Confirm with your builder early that their payment schedule aligns with how your lender releases funds. Misalignment here causes cash flow problems mid-build.