A home construction schedule works best when it is connected to real stages, contractors, costs and documents.
Why schedules drift
On a build, one delayed stage can move several contractors. Windows, services, plastering, screeds and finishing depend on each other.
BuildIQ helps show not only a date, but also context: who owns the stage, what documents are needed and what blocks the work.
Stages instead of a loose task list
A useful schedule follows construction stages: foundations, walls, roof, external joinery, services, finishing and handover.
Each stage can have status, deadline, photos, invoices and contractor. That gives a practical view of progress.
Delay control
For an owner, the key is noticing early when something blocks the next step.
BuildIQ helps separate planned, active, completed and delayed stages instead of relying on memory.
How to read the schedule in practice
The most useful schedule view shows what is waiting on materials, what is waiting on a contractor and what is waiting on an owner decision.
That makes it easier to adjust the next handoff before the whole project drifts.
BuildIQ helps track
construction stages and deadlines
work and acceptance status
delays and blockers
contractors assigned to stages
photos and documents next to the right work
dependencies before the next trade starts
When does BuildIQ make the most sense?
BuildIQ is strongest when a build stops being one task list: invoices, contractors, decisions, photos, documents and dates start living in different places. That is when the owner needs one control view instead of memory, spreadsheets and folders.