What you need to know now about quick move-in homes:
- A quick move-in home is a new construction home that’s already built or close to finished, so you close and move in within weeks instead of waiting out a 7 to 9 months build.
- Nationally, roughly a quarter of new homes for sale are already finished and sitting empty, giving buyers a real pool of ready inventory to choose from.
- You get modern systems, a builders warranty (in most cases), and a price locked in at contract signing, but the floor plan, homesite, and most finishes are already set.
- Omaha-metro move-in-ready inventory is available in communities from Bellevue to Bennington. The selection is large featuring both ranch and 2-story homes.
What Is a Quick Move-In Home?
A quick move-in home is a new construction house that a builder has already finished, or is close to finishing, before a buyer signs a contract on it. Builders also call these spec homes or inventory homes, and the terms are interchangeable.
The idea is simple. Instead of choosing a lot and a plan and waiting through every phase of construction, you’re stepping into a home that’s already at, or near, the finish line.
That distinction changes almost everything about the buying process. You’re not picking a floor plan.
You’re evaluating a physical, walkable house, the same way you would with a resale property, except everything inside it is new.
Why Do Builders Have Quick Move-In Homes Available in the First Place?
Builders start homes ahead of a signed contract for a few practical reasons: to provide a selection of move-in ready homes for the buyer who can’t or chooses not to wait for the home to be built, or for the buyer who wants all of the selections and choices done for them (see it before you buy it). These starts also help to balance the overall complaint construction workflow.
Model home rotation is one driver. A builder finishes a home to a high standard, uses it to show off a floor plan for a season or two, then lists it for sale once a newer model takes its place.
Community phasing is another reason. Builders often start a handful of homes in a new phase before every lot has a buyer.
That keeps construction crews moving and gives shoppers something to walk through instead of an empty lot.
And occasionally, a home was under contract with a buyer whose financing or life circumstances changed. The builder finishes it anyway and puts it back on the market.
How Many Quick Move-In Homes Are Actually Available Right Now?

More than you might expect. As of March 2026, roughly 119,000 completed, move-in-ready homes were sitting unsold nationally, according to NAHB‘s Eye on Housing analysis of Census data, up 5.3% from a year earlier. That’s just one slice of the total new-home pipeline.
The rest of that pipeline breaks down by construction stage, and the split matters if you’re shopping right now.
| Construction Stage | Share of U.S. New-Home Inventory (March 2026) | What It Means If You’re Touring Now |
| Not Yet Started | 24% | Still just a homesite and a plan; longest wait |
| Under Construction | 51% | Mid-build; move-in date depends on the phase |
| Completed & Move-In Ready | 25% | Walkable today; fastest possible close |
The Midwest stands out in that data specifically. New home sales in the region climbed 8.0% year over year even as growth cooled elsewhere.
That tracks with what we’re seeing across the Omaha metro’s active communities.
Curious how many quick move-in homes are sitting finished right now? Browse current inventory across the Omaha metro and see what’s ready today. See Available Homes →
How Fast Can You Actually Close on a Quick Move-In Home?

Closing timelines on quick move-in homes typically run somewhere between two weeks and two months, depending on how finished the home is when you sign and how quickly your financing clears. A home that’s 100% complete closes faster than one still waiting on flooring or a final inspection, sometimes as soon as 30 days.
Compare that to a from-scratch build, where permitting, framing, mechanical rough-ins, and finish work routinely stretch from seven months to well over a year.
The exact timeline depends on three things: how far along the home is, whether you’re financing or paying cash, and how quickly your lender can turn around underwriting once you’re under contract.
What Do You Gain With a Quick Move-In Home?
You gain speed, price certainty, and a finished home you can walk through before committing to it, all without the months of decision fatigue that come with a from-scratch build. You also skip nearly every design appointment, since the finish selections are already made for you.
- Speed. You skip the waiting entirely. What you see during the tour is what you get on closing day, give or take some final punch-list items.
- Price certainty. The price is set at contract signing and doesn’t move because of a labor shortage or a lumber price swing mid-build.
- A finished product, not a promise. You can walk every room and stand in the primary suite before you sign anything, instead of trusting renderings and a sample board.
- A step up from resale. Compared with an existing home, you also get new mechanical systems and current code compliance.
That’s a builder warranty in hand, instead of an inspection report full of items to negotiate.
Weighing a quick move-in home against something already lived-in? Here’s how new construction and existing homes actually compare in today’s Omaha market. Read: New Construction vs. Existing Home in Omaha →
What Are the Trade-Offs of Buying a Home That’s Already Built?
The main trade-off is control. Because the home is already built or nearly there, you can’t move a wall, swap a layout, or pick a different countertop than what’s already installed. Your choices come from the builder’s current inventory, not a blank slate.
Your options are also limited to whatever the builder currently has available. If you want a specific homesite orientation or a particular elevation, you may need to wait for the next one.
| What You’re Deciding | Quick Move-In Home | Home You Build From Scratch |
| Floor Plan | Already chosen | You choose from available plans |
| Homesite | Whatever is currently available | You pick from open lots |
| Interior Finishes | Pre-selected by the design team | You select most finishes yourself |
| Structural Layout | Fixed, no changes possible | Changeable during pre-drywall phase |
| Design Appointments Needed | Typically none | Several, spread across the build |
| Typical Time to Move In | Weeks | 7 to 12+ months |
None of that makes a quick move-in home a worse choice. It makes it a different one, better suited to buyers who value speed and certainty over customization.
Quick Move-In vs. Building Semi-Custom: Which Fits Your Timeline?
The right choice comes down to how much you value control versus speed. A quick move-in home suits someone who needs to be settled quickly. A semi-custom build suits someone who wants a say in the floor plan and finish selections from day one.
Some buyers split the difference. They tour available inventory first to get a feel for finishes and layouts, then decide whether to buy what’s already built or start a build of their own.
Want more say in the floor plan and finishes? A semi-custom build gives you room to make those calls from the start. Explore: Semi-Custom Home Building →
What Should You Look For When Touring a Quick Move-In Home?
Look at what you can’t easily change later: the home’s orientation on the lot, ceiling height, window placement, and mechanical system quality, since finishes are cosmetic but those elements are not. A careful walkthrough catches problems while there’s still time to fix them before closing.
Check the walkable basics first. Walk every room with doors and cabinets open and closed. Run every faucet. Flush every toilet. Test every light switch.
Small punch-list items are normal, but they should be documented and fixed before closing, not after.
Ask about the mechanical systems specifically. According to the Nebraska Department of Environment and Energy, the entire state falls within Climate Zone 5.
The state’s mandatory energy code sets minimum insulation and air-sealing standards for new homes built here.
A home built to code should perform predictably through both a Midwest winter and a humid summer, so ask what insulation and HVAC equipment went into the specific home you’re touring.
Ask who inspects it, and how. A builder with a defined quality-control process, not just a final cleaning crew, walks every home through multiple checkpoints before it’s shown.
Our team walks every quick move-in home through a documented, multi-point inspection before it goes on tour, precisely so surprises don’t show up after closing.
Is Omaha’s Housing Market a Good Fit for Quick Move-In Buyers?
Yes, for buyers who want to move on a shorter timeline. The Omaha metro’s growing suburbs, including Papillion, Bellevue, Elkhorn and Gretna, regularly have new construction homes at various stages of completion, including some that are already finished.
Nationally, new home sales ran at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 580,000 in May 2026, with 496,000 homes for sale, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Regional strength in the Midwest means Omaha-area buyers generally aren’t competing against the same tight inventory squeezing faster-growing Sunbelt markets.
Families relocating for a new school year in particular tend to lean toward quick move-in homes, since a fixed move-in date is easier to plan around than an open-ended construction timeline.
Still deciding if the Omaha metro is the right move? Here’s an honest look at what living here is actually like. Read: Is Omaha a Good Place to Live? →
How to Reserve a Quick Move-In Home in the Omaha Metro
Browse Current Inventory
Start by looking at what’s actually finished or close to it across active communities. Inventory changes weekly, so what’s available depends heavily on timing.
Schedule a Private Tour
Walk the home in person before making any decisions from photos alone. Bring a notepad and check the details that matter most to your household.
Lock In Your Financing
Get pre-approved before you tour if possible. A cleared financing path is often what determines how quickly you can move from an offer to a closing date.
Frequently Asked Questions about Quick Move-In Homes
Can I still make changes to a quick move-in home before closing?
Usually only minor ones. Depending on how far along the home is, you may be able to select items like light fixtures or appliance packages that haven’t been ordered yet. Structural changes and major finish swaps typically aren’t possible once a home is under construction or complete.
How is a quick move-in home different from a model home?
A model home is used to show off a floor plan to shoppers, often with staging furniture, before it’s ever listed for sale. Occasionally a builder will lease back a former model for a period after closing while a replacement model is finished elsewhere. A quick move-in home has usually never been staged and is available immediately.
What happens to the price once I’m under contract on a quick move-in home?
The price is set at contract signing and doesn’t change due to shifts in material or labor costs during any remaining finish work. That predictability is part of what makes a completed or nearly completed home appealing to buyers who want a fixed number going into closing.
Are quick move-in homes only available in certain Omaha-area communities?
Availability shifts month to month, but Regency Homes typically has quick move-in inventory across multiple Omaha-metro communities at any given time, including areas in Papillion, Bennington, Gretna, and Elkhorn. Checking current listings with a Regency Homes sales team member is the most reliable way to know what’s available where you want to live.
Do quick move-in homes come with the same warranty as a home I build from scratch?
Yes, in most cases. A quick move-in home carries the same builder warranty coverage as a home built to order, since it’s still new construction built to the same code and standards. The only difference is the timeline, not the coverage.
Your Next Home Doesn’t Have to Wait a Year
Regency Homes has been building in the Omaha metro since 1961, and our team was named a 2026 Best of Omaha winner for the work we do across communities from Bellevue to Bennington. We know the difference between a home that’s merely finished and one that’s finished right, and every quick move-in home we release for touring has been through our own inspection process first.
If a shorter timeline matters to your family right now, a quick move-in home gives you a real, walkable option instead of a rendering and a promise. The best way to know if one fits is to see what’s actually available today.
Ready to see what’s move-in ready near you? Call 402-256-5727 or send a message and a New Home Counselor will walk you through current inventory. Contact Regency Homes →


