The four largest production builders in the Richmond region in 2025 were Ryan Homes (961 homes built locally, $405 million in sales), Stanley Martin Homes (383 homes, $159 million), HHHunt Homes (365 homes, $164 million), and Eagle Construction of Virginia (156 homes, $112.1 million) [verify HBAR 2025 rankings]. Combined, they delivered well over half of new construction units in the metro.
Each of them has a distinct sweet spot, distinct construction practices, and a distinct buyer experience. This guide is for buyers trying to compare them honestly before signing, and for current owners trying to understand what they actually bought.
The short version
- Ryan Homes: highest volume, broadest price range, fastest pace. Strong fit for first-time and move-up buyers in the $350,000 to $550,000 band who want a known floor plan and predictable timeline.
- Stanley Martin Homes: strong design and finish at a similar price point. Slightly more flexibility on options. Strong fit for buyers who want a polished delivered product without a true semi-custom budget.
- HHHunt Homes: local Richmond roots, strong customer service reputation, broad price range from $400,000s through $900,000s. Strong fit for buyers who want a bigger-builder process with a regional feel.
- Eagle Construction: semi-custom at the higher end, especially in Hallsley. Strong fit for $700,000-plus buyers who want more design flexibility and a more attentive build experience.
The longer version
Ryan Homes (Reston-based, NVR Inc.)
Ryan is the production volume leader in Richmond by a wide margin. Their strengths are pace, predictable pricing, and a tight set of refined floor plans that have been built thousands of times.
Where Ryan tends to fit best:
- First-time buyer in the $350,000 to $475,000 band, especially townhomes and entry single-family
- Buyers who care more about move-in date than design flexibility
- Communities in Chesterfield’s growth corridor, eastern Henrico, and Hanover
Where Ryan can frustrate buyers:
- Limited flexibility on structural changes
- Design-center pricing on small upgrades runs higher than competitors
- Standardization can feel like a factory experience compared to semi-custom builders
Standard inclusions in 2026: granite or quartz on most plans, LVP first-floor flooring, included stainless appliances. Specifics vary by community and floor plan; ask for the current spec sheet.
Stanley Martin Homes (Reston-based)
Stanley Martin runs at a similar volume tier but with a distinct design language. Their finish levels at the included tier tend to read as a step above other production builders, especially in the kitchen and primary bath.
Where Stanley Martin fits best:
- Move-up buyers in the $475,000 to $700,000 band
- Buyers who want a “looks-like-semi-custom” delivered product
- Buyers who value design coherence between cabinets, counters, and lighting
- Communities in Henrico’s West End and Chesterfield’s Midlothian corridor
Where Stanley Martin can frustrate buyers:
- Less commodity-priced than Ryan at entry points
- Some plan flexibility, but still a production builder at heart
- Wait times on certain finishes can stretch in tight quarters
Standard inclusions in 2026: quartz, ceramic tile in primary baths, LED can lighting throughout, structured wiring on most plans [verify against current spec sheet].
HHHunt Homes (Glen Allen-based)
HHHunt is the largest Richmond-headquartered builder of the four and tends to draw buyers who want a regional, locally rooted feel. Their reputation for customer service and warranty handling is generally stronger than the national-volume builders.
Where HHHunt fits best:
- Buyers in the $400,000 to $900,000 range across Henrico and Chesterfield
- Buyers who want a builder physically headquartered in the region (warranty calls go to a local team)
- Communities in Glen Allen, parts of Chesterfield, and Hanover
Where HHHunt can frustrate buyers:
- Fewer simultaneous communities active than Ryan or Stanley Martin
- Some plans price slightly above comparable competitors at the same square footage
Standard inclusions in 2026: similar to Stanley Martin at the included tier, with strong cabinet packages and competitive flooring [verify].
Eagle Construction of Virginia
Eagle is the smallest of the four by volume and the most semi-custom in feel. Hallsley is their flagship community and the highest-concentration of homes in the $1 million to $1.5 million range in Chesterfield.
Where Eagle fits best:
- Luxury and semi-custom buyers in the $700,000 to $1.5 million-plus band
- Buyers who want plan modification flexibility and a smaller, more attentive build team
- Hallsley specifically, plus a handful of other premium communities
Where Eagle can frustrate buyers:
- Lower-volume builder; communities can feel less “production-machine” but build timelines can vary more
- Pricing above the volume builders at comparable square footage
Standard inclusions in 2026: significantly above production-builder norms, with semi-custom level cabinet, counter, and tile packages [verify against current Hallsley spec].
Where each builder is most active in Richmond
| Builder | Primary 2026 communities |
|---|---|
| Ryan Homes | Chesterfield growth corridor, eastern Henrico, Hanover, Tri-Cities |
| Stanley Martin | Glen Allen and West End Henrico, Midlothian Chesterfield, Hanover |
| HHHunt | Glen Allen, Chesterfield, Hanover, multiple price tiers |
| Eagle | Hallsley (Chesterfield) and select Henrico communities |
[verify exact community lists in current 2026 inventory]
Warranty comparison
All four builders offer the standard one-year workmanship warranty plus the longer structural warranty common to production builders. Practical differences:
- HHHunt’s local warranty team responds faster than the national builders for most Richmond-region buyers, based on consistent customer feedback.
- Eagle’s smaller community count means warranty issues escalate quickly internally.
- Ryan and Stanley Martin both run their warranty programs through regional teams, with mixed individual experiences depending on superintendent.
The eleventh-month walkthrough (just before the one-year warranty expires) is universally recommended. See our new construction agent guide for why.
How to choose between them
Five questions that usually settle the debate:
- Price band. First-time buyer at $385,000? Ryan or HHHunt are most likely fits. Move-up at $625,000? Stanley Martin or HHHunt. Luxury at $1.1 million? Eagle.
- Geography. The right builder is the one with the right community in the right zone for the buyer’s life. School zone matters more than builder logo.
- Design coherence. Walk the model homes. Standard finish quality varies more than buyers expect.
- Build flexibility. Buyers who want plan modifications should lean Eagle. Buyers who want a known plan should lean Ryan or Stanley Martin.
- Warranty experience. Locally headquartered builders (HHHunt, Eagle) tend to have faster warranty response.
For deeper guides on the new construction process itself, see our new construction upgrades worth paying for and how to choose a lot in a new construction community.
Frequently asked questions
Which Richmond builder has the best resale value? At similar communities and finish levels, resale tracks more closely with neighborhood, school zone, and lot than with builder logo. All four major builders here resell well in their respective price bands.
Is Stanley Martin better than Ryan Homes? Different sweet spots. Stanley Martin tends to feel more designed at the included tier; Ryan tends to be more cost-aggressive at the same square footage. Either can be the right answer.
Does HHHunt build luxury homes? HHHunt builds across price tiers, including homes in the $700,000 to $900,000 range in select communities. For true Hallsley-level luxury, Eagle is more typical.
Are Eagle Construction homes worth the premium? For the buyer who wants a Hallsley level of finish and community, yes. For a buyer who would be just as happy in a Stanley Martin home in Magnolia Green, the premium is harder to justify.
Which builder offers the best incentives in 2026? All four offer different incentive packages each quarter. Standing inventory homes routinely come with $10,000 to $30,000 in concessions, rate buy-downs, or upgrade credits. A buyer’s agent who works new construction regularly knows which builder is pushing what this month.
Want builder-by-builder current intel?
We track active community pricing, current incentives, and inventory homes across Stanley Martin, Ryan, HHHunt, Eagle, and the smaller Richmond-region builders. If a quick conversation comparing two or three communities would help, that is what we do. Reach out to Daniel.
[Featured image to upload. Image prompt: Photoreal streetscape of finished new construction homes in a Richmond Virginia community, varied facades mixing brick, hardie, and stone, traditional rooflines, golden afternoon light, no people, editorial real estate photography]