Resource · ADU Decision Guide
Hiring a General Contractor vs. Managing Your Own ADU Build
What You Actually Take On When You Build Your Own ADU
The Coordination Load — Who Carries the Weight While the Build Happens
The owner-builder path looks different on paper than it does at month three of a build. I've seen what the coordination load looks like when it falls on the homeowner mid-project.
Shay Zilber · CEO, Rhino Builders
The Two Paths, Side by Side
- Permit liability in your own name
- Workers'-comp exposure across every sub
- All trade coordination & scheduling
- Insurance-certificate verification for each trade
- 8–15 hrs/week during active construction
- Added lender & resale scrutiny on self-permitted work
- Permit liability on the GC's CSLB license
- One insured party carrying the coverage
- One contract holding the full schedule
- One point of contact for every trade
- The GC absorbs sub slips & rescheduling
- A verifiable, bonded, insured license number
Permit Liability — What Each Path Means When Work Fails Inspection
Workers' Compensation Exposure — The Cost That Isn't in Any Bid
What Shapes the Outcome
A simple detached ADU on a flat lot is more forgiving of owner-builder coordination than a hillside lot with expansive clay and a Chapter 7A WUI requirement. In Lafayette, projects above Reliez Valley Road or in upper Happy Valley frequently carry geotechnical and fire-zone conditions that add real layers to the compliance burden.
Subcontractor lead times in Contra Costa County are real — a framer with a three-week gap doesn't hold that window indefinitely. When a prior trade slips, the question is whether you have the relationships and leverage to reschedule quickly. Contractors who pull permits regularly here tend to have working crew relationships an owner-builder hasn't had time to build.
Lafayette permits run through Contra Costa County. A first-round submission missing a soils report or fire-zone compliance statement comes back with a correction letter and restarts the plan-check clock — adding weeks. Under owner-builder, you assemble that package; under a GC, a contractor who submits to this department regularly knows what complete looks like before it goes in.
Self-managing an ADU build is part-time construction management. Industry estimates put active owner-builders at eight to fifteen hours per week on coordination, communication, and site oversight during construction. That time compounds and rarely appears in the financial comparison. For homeowners in Lafayette, Orinda, or Walnut Creek juggling full-time careers, it's often the factor that tips the decision.
Work completed under an owner-builder permit can affect how future buyers and lenders view the property. Some lenders apply extra scrutiny to owner-built structures, and California disclosure requirements mean a buyer will know the ADU was self-permitted. Worth understanding before the permit is pulled — not after the unit is complete.
Both Paths Are Legal. Only One Is Right for Your Situation.
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Talk Through What Your Project Actually Involves
Call or email to get a straight answer about scope, timeline, and which path fits your situation — without a sales pitch attached. Tell us your city, your lot, and what you’re planning, and we’ll give you a clear read.