Roughly how much would it cost to hire a team of dwarves to build a home into a mountainside?How much does a house cost?How long does it take to mine rock?How much does it cost to build or rent a building?How much would it cost to hire mercenaries for a couple days?How much does a house cost?How much would a glue bomb cost?How much do illegal explosives cost?How much does mandrake root cost?How much does equipment cost?How much do sheep cost?How much would firearms cost?How much does Plate Armor of Gleaming cost?

Expenditure in Poland - Forex doesn't have Zloty

What is the difference between a game ban and a VAC ban in Steam?

Is there a way to save this session?

arcpy.GetParameterAsText not passing arguments to script?

Why is there a need to modify system call tables in Linux?

How crucial is a waifu game storyline?

What is a simple, physical situation where complex numbers emerge naturally?

If Sweden was to magically float away, at what altitude would it be visible from the southern hemisphere?

How to properly maintain eye contact with people that have distinctive facial features?

Term for checking piece whose opponent daren't capture it

Select row of data if next row contains zero

Are there mythical creatures in the world of Game of Thrones?

What does War Machine's "Canopy! Canopy!" line mean in "Avengers: Endgame"?

How can an eldritch abomination hide its true form in public?

Accidentally cashed a check twice

Can I ask a publisher for a paper that I need for reviewing

Are grass strips more dangerous than tarmac?

What should I do about a religious player who refuses to accept the existence of multiple gods in D&D?

Different PCB color ( is it different material? )

Could a guilty Boris Johnson be used to cancel Brexit?

What does the behaviour of water on the skin of an aircraft in flight tell us?

If a massive object like Jupiter flew past the Earth how close would it need to come to pull people off of the surface?

How should I push back against my job assigning "homework"?

The qvolume of an integer



Roughly how much would it cost to hire a team of dwarves to build a home into a mountainside?


How much does a house cost?How long does it take to mine rock?How much does it cost to build or rent a building?How much would it cost to hire mercenaries for a couple days?How much does a house cost?How much would a glue bomb cost?How much do illegal explosives cost?How much does mandrake root cost?How much does equipment cost?How much do sheep cost?How much would firearms cost?How much does Plate Armor of Gleaming cost?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








6












$begingroup$


Since I began playing D&D I have had the idea to hire dwarven miners to build a home into a cliff face. I am not expecting it to be huge and extravagant, but it needs to be big enough for 4 people, one of whom has a large beast companion.



Looking at How long does it take to mine rock?, I think this would only take 100 to 150 hours of manpower (dwarfpower?), but I don’t know how to get a cost for that.



This is just something I would be looking to do in the future, but if the cost is less than I expected I’m going to build it now.



This is different from How much does a house cost?, as this is not a normal house. I figure that almost the entire cost of building is in labour and a small amount in furnishings, rather than materials. I also believe a cliff mined house would allow me to avoid many of the extra costs which would affect a normal house.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Related: How long does it take to mine rock?
    $endgroup$
    – Someone_Evil
    Apr 14 at 9:50










  • $begingroup$
    Even on this I’m unsure. I’m quite new to dnd so I was thinking that maybe there would be something that would have a large impact on time needed. I immediately would imagine dwarves as I’ve always been a fan of fictions and dwarves are always very skilled in this area
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 9:52






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    no worries, linking related questions in comments is as much for the benefit of answerers and future readers who are looking for information. If that link answers the question for you, then this can be closed as a duplicate.
    $endgroup$
    – Someone_Evil
    Apr 14 at 9:57






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Possible duplicate of How much does a house cost?
    $endgroup$
    – Quentin
    Apr 14 at 10:19






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Ive looked at the question you pointed to and whilst it explains cost in a more normal house the idea i have in mind is quite different as it would possibly be able to avoid many cost in being hidden away in a mountainside. This would also reduce material costs and could even reduce costs of furtnishings. Therefore I believe that this question is not a duplicate and that if an answer is given i should leave it open.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:30

















6












$begingroup$


Since I began playing D&D I have had the idea to hire dwarven miners to build a home into a cliff face. I am not expecting it to be huge and extravagant, but it needs to be big enough for 4 people, one of whom has a large beast companion.



Looking at How long does it take to mine rock?, I think this would only take 100 to 150 hours of manpower (dwarfpower?), but I don’t know how to get a cost for that.



This is just something I would be looking to do in the future, but if the cost is less than I expected I’m going to build it now.



This is different from How much does a house cost?, as this is not a normal house. I figure that almost the entire cost of building is in labour and a small amount in furnishings, rather than materials. I also believe a cliff mined house would allow me to avoid many of the extra costs which would affect a normal house.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Related: How long does it take to mine rock?
    $endgroup$
    – Someone_Evil
    Apr 14 at 9:50










  • $begingroup$
    Even on this I’m unsure. I’m quite new to dnd so I was thinking that maybe there would be something that would have a large impact on time needed. I immediately would imagine dwarves as I’ve always been a fan of fictions and dwarves are always very skilled in this area
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 9:52






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    no worries, linking related questions in comments is as much for the benefit of answerers and future readers who are looking for information. If that link answers the question for you, then this can be closed as a duplicate.
    $endgroup$
    – Someone_Evil
    Apr 14 at 9:57






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Possible duplicate of How much does a house cost?
    $endgroup$
    – Quentin
    Apr 14 at 10:19






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Ive looked at the question you pointed to and whilst it explains cost in a more normal house the idea i have in mind is quite different as it would possibly be able to avoid many cost in being hidden away in a mountainside. This would also reduce material costs and could even reduce costs of furtnishings. Therefore I believe that this question is not a duplicate and that if an answer is given i should leave it open.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:30













6












6








6





$begingroup$


Since I began playing D&D I have had the idea to hire dwarven miners to build a home into a cliff face. I am not expecting it to be huge and extravagant, but it needs to be big enough for 4 people, one of whom has a large beast companion.



Looking at How long does it take to mine rock?, I think this would only take 100 to 150 hours of manpower (dwarfpower?), but I don’t know how to get a cost for that.



This is just something I would be looking to do in the future, but if the cost is less than I expected I’m going to build it now.



This is different from How much does a house cost?, as this is not a normal house. I figure that almost the entire cost of building is in labour and a small amount in furnishings, rather than materials. I also believe a cliff mined house would allow me to avoid many of the extra costs which would affect a normal house.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




Since I began playing D&D I have had the idea to hire dwarven miners to build a home into a cliff face. I am not expecting it to be huge and extravagant, but it needs to be big enough for 4 people, one of whom has a large beast companion.



Looking at How long does it take to mine rock?, I think this would only take 100 to 150 hours of manpower (dwarfpower?), but I don’t know how to get a cost for that.



This is just something I would be looking to do in the future, but if the cost is less than I expected I’m going to build it now.



This is different from How much does a house cost?, as this is not a normal house. I figure that almost the entire cost of building is in labour and a small amount in furnishings, rather than materials. I also believe a cliff mined house would allow me to avoid many of the extra costs which would affect a normal house.







dnd-5e pricing dwarf






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 14 at 16:29









SevenSidedDie

212k33680959




212k33680959










asked Apr 14 at 9:48









AdamAdam

655




655











  • $begingroup$
    Related: How long does it take to mine rock?
    $endgroup$
    – Someone_Evil
    Apr 14 at 9:50










  • $begingroup$
    Even on this I’m unsure. I’m quite new to dnd so I was thinking that maybe there would be something that would have a large impact on time needed. I immediately would imagine dwarves as I’ve always been a fan of fictions and dwarves are always very skilled in this area
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 9:52






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    no worries, linking related questions in comments is as much for the benefit of answerers and future readers who are looking for information. If that link answers the question for you, then this can be closed as a duplicate.
    $endgroup$
    – Someone_Evil
    Apr 14 at 9:57






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Possible duplicate of How much does a house cost?
    $endgroup$
    – Quentin
    Apr 14 at 10:19






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Ive looked at the question you pointed to and whilst it explains cost in a more normal house the idea i have in mind is quite different as it would possibly be able to avoid many cost in being hidden away in a mountainside. This would also reduce material costs and could even reduce costs of furtnishings. Therefore I believe that this question is not a duplicate and that if an answer is given i should leave it open.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:30
















  • $begingroup$
    Related: How long does it take to mine rock?
    $endgroup$
    – Someone_Evil
    Apr 14 at 9:50










  • $begingroup$
    Even on this I’m unsure. I’m quite new to dnd so I was thinking that maybe there would be something that would have a large impact on time needed. I immediately would imagine dwarves as I’ve always been a fan of fictions and dwarves are always very skilled in this area
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 9:52






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    no worries, linking related questions in comments is as much for the benefit of answerers and future readers who are looking for information. If that link answers the question for you, then this can be closed as a duplicate.
    $endgroup$
    – Someone_Evil
    Apr 14 at 9:57






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Possible duplicate of How much does a house cost?
    $endgroup$
    – Quentin
    Apr 14 at 10:19






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Ive looked at the question you pointed to and whilst it explains cost in a more normal house the idea i have in mind is quite different as it would possibly be able to avoid many cost in being hidden away in a mountainside. This would also reduce material costs and could even reduce costs of furtnishings. Therefore I believe that this question is not a duplicate and that if an answer is given i should leave it open.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:30















$begingroup$
Related: How long does it take to mine rock?
$endgroup$
– Someone_Evil
Apr 14 at 9:50




$begingroup$
Related: How long does it take to mine rock?
$endgroup$
– Someone_Evil
Apr 14 at 9:50












$begingroup$
Even on this I’m unsure. I’m quite new to dnd so I was thinking that maybe there would be something that would have a large impact on time needed. I immediately would imagine dwarves as I’ve always been a fan of fictions and dwarves are always very skilled in this area
$endgroup$
– Adam
Apr 14 at 9:52




$begingroup$
Even on this I’m unsure. I’m quite new to dnd so I was thinking that maybe there would be something that would have a large impact on time needed. I immediately would imagine dwarves as I’ve always been a fan of fictions and dwarves are always very skilled in this area
$endgroup$
– Adam
Apr 14 at 9:52




2




2




$begingroup$
no worries, linking related questions in comments is as much for the benefit of answerers and future readers who are looking for information. If that link answers the question for you, then this can be closed as a duplicate.
$endgroup$
– Someone_Evil
Apr 14 at 9:57




$begingroup$
no worries, linking related questions in comments is as much for the benefit of answerers and future readers who are looking for information. If that link answers the question for you, then this can be closed as a duplicate.
$endgroup$
– Someone_Evil
Apr 14 at 9:57




1




1




$begingroup$
Possible duplicate of How much does a house cost?
$endgroup$
– Quentin
Apr 14 at 10:19




$begingroup$
Possible duplicate of How much does a house cost?
$endgroup$
– Quentin
Apr 14 at 10:19




2




2




$begingroup$
Ive looked at the question you pointed to and whilst it explains cost in a more normal house the idea i have in mind is quite different as it would possibly be able to avoid many cost in being hidden away in a mountainside. This would also reduce material costs and could even reduce costs of furtnishings. Therefore I believe that this question is not a duplicate and that if an answer is given i should leave it open.
$endgroup$
– Adam
Apr 14 at 10:30




$begingroup$
Ive looked at the question you pointed to and whilst it explains cost in a more normal house the idea i have in mind is quite different as it would possibly be able to avoid many cost in being hidden away in a mountainside. This would also reduce material costs and could even reduce costs of furtnishings. Therefore I believe that this question is not a duplicate and that if an answer is given i should leave it open.
$endgroup$
– Adam
Apr 14 at 10:30










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















11












$begingroup$

First we need to figure out how much we need to dig. To cut costs a little, let's say each person needs the same amount of space as an average person in Hong Kong; 161 square feet. Let's also say (to make the math easier) you have 10 feet heights and that the beast companion just takes up the same amount of space as another person. This means our (fairly small house) needs $ 161 times 10 times 5 = 8050$ cubic feet carved out.



From the answer to this question we get that properly equipped dwarves can each mine 70 to 35 cubic feet per hour, depending on the hardness of the stone. If we assume hard stone (better structural stability and accounting for structures (like rooms, stairs etc.) they need to make) our small house needs $8050 / 35 = 230$ dwarven work hours to excavate.



The services table of page 159 of the Player's Handbook lists the wage of a skilled hireling at 2 gold per day, and assuming 8 work hours per day the cost of excavating the house becomes $2times230/8 = 57.5 approx 58$ gold.



Now you may wish to have more space than this, and perhaps dwarves in your world take higher rates or are unionized and only work 6 hour days. The general equation takes the form:
$$
mathrmcost = fracwagework daytimesfractextspace per persontimestextheighttimestextnumber of peopletextexcavation rate
$$



You (or your DM) may wish to also account for smoothing the walls and so on, which might reasonably be accounted for as a doubling to the work amount (or halving the excavation rate).



You will also need to pay for furnishings and so on, which will be difficult to account for, and will likely depend of your standard. See the tables in chapter 5 of the Player's Handbook particularly adventuring gear and trade goods.



This should go without saying, but your DM has every right to set the cost higher than this. There are concerns not addressed here and the final say fall to your DM.




The closest I can find in the books to doing something like this is from Building a Stronghold in the DMG (p. 128) which puts a Town Hall or Trading post at 5,000 gp and 60 days. How exactly this translates into carving a house out of a cliff is difficult to say, but 2,000 gp and 30 days might be a good estimate for a decently sized home. (Cost and time does not scale linearly in the table.)






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for this. Originally I assumed the size would be smaller as we would spend a lot of time away from the home however the formula still applies so thanks again.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:33










  • $begingroup$
    There's a relevant side-quest+reward in *Storm King's Thunder" that could serve as another touchstone, if you have it and are interested in comparing.
    $endgroup$
    – nitsua60
    Apr 14 at 13:39











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "122"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2frpg.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f145167%2froughly-how-much-would-it-cost-to-hire-a-team-of-dwarves-to-build-a-home-into-a%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









11












$begingroup$

First we need to figure out how much we need to dig. To cut costs a little, let's say each person needs the same amount of space as an average person in Hong Kong; 161 square feet. Let's also say (to make the math easier) you have 10 feet heights and that the beast companion just takes up the same amount of space as another person. This means our (fairly small house) needs $ 161 times 10 times 5 = 8050$ cubic feet carved out.



From the answer to this question we get that properly equipped dwarves can each mine 70 to 35 cubic feet per hour, depending on the hardness of the stone. If we assume hard stone (better structural stability and accounting for structures (like rooms, stairs etc.) they need to make) our small house needs $8050 / 35 = 230$ dwarven work hours to excavate.



The services table of page 159 of the Player's Handbook lists the wage of a skilled hireling at 2 gold per day, and assuming 8 work hours per day the cost of excavating the house becomes $2times230/8 = 57.5 approx 58$ gold.



Now you may wish to have more space than this, and perhaps dwarves in your world take higher rates or are unionized and only work 6 hour days. The general equation takes the form:
$$
mathrmcost = fracwagework daytimesfractextspace per persontimestextheighttimestextnumber of peopletextexcavation rate
$$



You (or your DM) may wish to also account for smoothing the walls and so on, which might reasonably be accounted for as a doubling to the work amount (or halving the excavation rate).



You will also need to pay for furnishings and so on, which will be difficult to account for, and will likely depend of your standard. See the tables in chapter 5 of the Player's Handbook particularly adventuring gear and trade goods.



This should go without saying, but your DM has every right to set the cost higher than this. There are concerns not addressed here and the final say fall to your DM.




The closest I can find in the books to doing something like this is from Building a Stronghold in the DMG (p. 128) which puts a Town Hall or Trading post at 5,000 gp and 60 days. How exactly this translates into carving a house out of a cliff is difficult to say, but 2,000 gp and 30 days might be a good estimate for a decently sized home. (Cost and time does not scale linearly in the table.)






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for this. Originally I assumed the size would be smaller as we would spend a lot of time away from the home however the formula still applies so thanks again.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:33










  • $begingroup$
    There's a relevant side-quest+reward in *Storm King's Thunder" that could serve as another touchstone, if you have it and are interested in comparing.
    $endgroup$
    – nitsua60
    Apr 14 at 13:39















11












$begingroup$

First we need to figure out how much we need to dig. To cut costs a little, let's say each person needs the same amount of space as an average person in Hong Kong; 161 square feet. Let's also say (to make the math easier) you have 10 feet heights and that the beast companion just takes up the same amount of space as another person. This means our (fairly small house) needs $ 161 times 10 times 5 = 8050$ cubic feet carved out.



From the answer to this question we get that properly equipped dwarves can each mine 70 to 35 cubic feet per hour, depending on the hardness of the stone. If we assume hard stone (better structural stability and accounting for structures (like rooms, stairs etc.) they need to make) our small house needs $8050 / 35 = 230$ dwarven work hours to excavate.



The services table of page 159 of the Player's Handbook lists the wage of a skilled hireling at 2 gold per day, and assuming 8 work hours per day the cost of excavating the house becomes $2times230/8 = 57.5 approx 58$ gold.



Now you may wish to have more space than this, and perhaps dwarves in your world take higher rates or are unionized and only work 6 hour days. The general equation takes the form:
$$
mathrmcost = fracwagework daytimesfractextspace per persontimestextheighttimestextnumber of peopletextexcavation rate
$$



You (or your DM) may wish to also account for smoothing the walls and so on, which might reasonably be accounted for as a doubling to the work amount (or halving the excavation rate).



You will also need to pay for furnishings and so on, which will be difficult to account for, and will likely depend of your standard. See the tables in chapter 5 of the Player's Handbook particularly adventuring gear and trade goods.



This should go without saying, but your DM has every right to set the cost higher than this. There are concerns not addressed here and the final say fall to your DM.




The closest I can find in the books to doing something like this is from Building a Stronghold in the DMG (p. 128) which puts a Town Hall or Trading post at 5,000 gp and 60 days. How exactly this translates into carving a house out of a cliff is difficult to say, but 2,000 gp and 30 days might be a good estimate for a decently sized home. (Cost and time does not scale linearly in the table.)






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for this. Originally I assumed the size would be smaller as we would spend a lot of time away from the home however the formula still applies so thanks again.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:33










  • $begingroup$
    There's a relevant side-quest+reward in *Storm King's Thunder" that could serve as another touchstone, if you have it and are interested in comparing.
    $endgroup$
    – nitsua60
    Apr 14 at 13:39













11












11








11





$begingroup$

First we need to figure out how much we need to dig. To cut costs a little, let's say each person needs the same amount of space as an average person in Hong Kong; 161 square feet. Let's also say (to make the math easier) you have 10 feet heights and that the beast companion just takes up the same amount of space as another person. This means our (fairly small house) needs $ 161 times 10 times 5 = 8050$ cubic feet carved out.



From the answer to this question we get that properly equipped dwarves can each mine 70 to 35 cubic feet per hour, depending on the hardness of the stone. If we assume hard stone (better structural stability and accounting for structures (like rooms, stairs etc.) they need to make) our small house needs $8050 / 35 = 230$ dwarven work hours to excavate.



The services table of page 159 of the Player's Handbook lists the wage of a skilled hireling at 2 gold per day, and assuming 8 work hours per day the cost of excavating the house becomes $2times230/8 = 57.5 approx 58$ gold.



Now you may wish to have more space than this, and perhaps dwarves in your world take higher rates or are unionized and only work 6 hour days. The general equation takes the form:
$$
mathrmcost = fracwagework daytimesfractextspace per persontimestextheighttimestextnumber of peopletextexcavation rate
$$



You (or your DM) may wish to also account for smoothing the walls and so on, which might reasonably be accounted for as a doubling to the work amount (or halving the excavation rate).



You will also need to pay for furnishings and so on, which will be difficult to account for, and will likely depend of your standard. See the tables in chapter 5 of the Player's Handbook particularly adventuring gear and trade goods.



This should go without saying, but your DM has every right to set the cost higher than this. There are concerns not addressed here and the final say fall to your DM.




The closest I can find in the books to doing something like this is from Building a Stronghold in the DMG (p. 128) which puts a Town Hall or Trading post at 5,000 gp and 60 days. How exactly this translates into carving a house out of a cliff is difficult to say, but 2,000 gp and 30 days might be a good estimate for a decently sized home. (Cost and time does not scale linearly in the table.)






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



First we need to figure out how much we need to dig. To cut costs a little, let's say each person needs the same amount of space as an average person in Hong Kong; 161 square feet. Let's also say (to make the math easier) you have 10 feet heights and that the beast companion just takes up the same amount of space as another person. This means our (fairly small house) needs $ 161 times 10 times 5 = 8050$ cubic feet carved out.



From the answer to this question we get that properly equipped dwarves can each mine 70 to 35 cubic feet per hour, depending on the hardness of the stone. If we assume hard stone (better structural stability and accounting for structures (like rooms, stairs etc.) they need to make) our small house needs $8050 / 35 = 230$ dwarven work hours to excavate.



The services table of page 159 of the Player's Handbook lists the wage of a skilled hireling at 2 gold per day, and assuming 8 work hours per day the cost of excavating the house becomes $2times230/8 = 57.5 approx 58$ gold.



Now you may wish to have more space than this, and perhaps dwarves in your world take higher rates or are unionized and only work 6 hour days. The general equation takes the form:
$$
mathrmcost = fracwagework daytimesfractextspace per persontimestextheighttimestextnumber of peopletextexcavation rate
$$



You (or your DM) may wish to also account for smoothing the walls and so on, which might reasonably be accounted for as a doubling to the work amount (or halving the excavation rate).



You will also need to pay for furnishings and so on, which will be difficult to account for, and will likely depend of your standard. See the tables in chapter 5 of the Player's Handbook particularly adventuring gear and trade goods.



This should go without saying, but your DM has every right to set the cost higher than this. There are concerns not addressed here and the final say fall to your DM.




The closest I can find in the books to doing something like this is from Building a Stronghold in the DMG (p. 128) which puts a Town Hall or Trading post at 5,000 gp and 60 days. How exactly this translates into carving a house out of a cliff is difficult to say, but 2,000 gp and 30 days might be a good estimate for a decently sized home. (Cost and time does not scale linearly in the table.)







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 15 at 8:47









NathanS

28.5k11142303




28.5k11142303










answered Apr 14 at 10:29









Someone_EvilSomeone_Evil

5,7352149




5,7352149











  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for this. Originally I assumed the size would be smaller as we would spend a lot of time away from the home however the formula still applies so thanks again.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:33










  • $begingroup$
    There's a relevant side-quest+reward in *Storm King's Thunder" that could serve as another touchstone, if you have it and are interested in comparing.
    $endgroup$
    – nitsua60
    Apr 14 at 13:39
















  • $begingroup$
    Thanks so much for this. Originally I assumed the size would be smaller as we would spend a lot of time away from the home however the formula still applies so thanks again.
    $endgroup$
    – Adam
    Apr 14 at 10:33










  • $begingroup$
    There's a relevant side-quest+reward in *Storm King's Thunder" that could serve as another touchstone, if you have it and are interested in comparing.
    $endgroup$
    – nitsua60
    Apr 14 at 13:39















$begingroup$
Thanks so much for this. Originally I assumed the size would be smaller as we would spend a lot of time away from the home however the formula still applies so thanks again.
$endgroup$
– Adam
Apr 14 at 10:33




$begingroup$
Thanks so much for this. Originally I assumed the size would be smaller as we would spend a lot of time away from the home however the formula still applies so thanks again.
$endgroup$
– Adam
Apr 14 at 10:33












$begingroup$
There's a relevant side-quest+reward in *Storm King's Thunder" that could serve as another touchstone, if you have it and are interested in comparing.
$endgroup$
– nitsua60
Apr 14 at 13:39




$begingroup$
There's a relevant side-quest+reward in *Storm King's Thunder" that could serve as another touchstone, if you have it and are interested in comparing.
$endgroup$
– nitsua60
Apr 14 at 13:39

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Role-playing Games Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2frpg.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f145167%2froughly-how-much-would-it-cost-to-hire-a-team-of-dwarves-to-build-a-home-into-a%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Tamil (spriik) Luke uk diar | Nawigatjuun

Align equal signs while including text over equalitiesAMS align: left aligned text/math plus multicolumn alignmentMultiple alignmentsAligning equations in multiple placesNumbering and aligning an equation with multiple columnsHow to align one equation with another multline equationUsing \ in environments inside the begintabularxNumber equations and preserving alignment of equal signsHow can I align equations to the left and to the right?Double equation alignment problem within align enviromentAligned within align: Why are they right-aligned?

Where does the image of a data connector as a sharp metal spike originate from?Where does the concept of infected people turning into zombies only after death originate from?Where does the motif of a reanimated human head originate?Where did the notion that Dragons could speak originate?Where does the archetypal image of the 'Grey' alien come from?Where did the suffix '-Man' originate?Where does the notion of being injured or killed by an illusion originate?Where did the term “sophont” originate?Where does the trope of magic spells being driven by advanced technology originate from?Where did the term “the living impaired” originate?