Quote:
Originally Posted by
Piobaire 
I am pretty sure you can't just declare yourself a general contractor and start hiring subs, that you need to pass some sort of licensing exam. Building a house is a specialized endeavor. I would suggest you hire a specialist you can trust to do this for you.
I'm thinking this is on a state by state basis. Could you imagine telling a bunch of Texans that they couldn't build their own house? If you
can't buy a piece of rural land and build your own house, something is seriously wrong with America. Why did we steal it from the Indians if we aren't allowed to build houses on it? But I digress . . .
I would advise against it though. People I have know that have done this either are subcontractors with extensive business connections, GC's themselves, or serious "mountain men" (my shop teacher from high school built a modest log cabin that he lives in, and seems to love).
The process of building a custom home is hard enough on most marriages, as you agonize over every little detail (with every changed-mind and delay costing money). Before the 'house flipping' shows were popular on cable TV, there were a lot of 'be your own contractor' shows filled with drama.
Good contractors make good money (and live in nice houses

) for a reason. You can consider them blue-collar professionals. Like a lawyer or accountant, you are buying their experience and advice, as well as their managerial skills. You could do your own taxes, but if they are complicated its cheaper and easier in the long run to hire a CPA. You could be your own lawyer in many cases, but lawyers increase certainty and reduce risk in business transactions. Like a lawyer or accountant, you are giving them a big ball of stress and headaches, and they are going to figure it out for you.
Some of your ideas from TV and magazines may not translate well into real life, or that things that sound simple will actually be costly. They will know which subs have a reputation for good work, which ones have a reputation for being sober and showing up to work, which subs won't steal from the jobsite to fuel a meth habit, which subs aren't borderline insolvent, etc. Lots of people have the physical skills to be a builder or sub, but often lack the business management skills and are often teetering on bankruptcy (especially right now).
The last thing you want to do is hire a guy you don't know to do some _____ for your house, you pay him upfront, and then he never comes to do the work. Then you've got a lawsuit in the middle of your construction project, killing your cashflow to build the home, and you're suing a deadbeat drunk carpenter who you won't be able to get anything more than a pickup truck from anyway.
At least in my state, if you are building a home for yourself and plan to live there for 12 months, you do not need a license. If you plan to build for someone else, and it will cost more than $30,000, then you're required to have a contractors license to even bid on the project.
I wouldn't choose a GC without references and without talking to people who live in homes that the person has built. I would rather have golden references than someone with better credentials on paper.
That's my .02. Pretty worthless, but my father's held a GC license for decades (since before they were required!) and I've been around contractors most of my life.