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Maison Laprise: Models, Pricing, Timelines and What You Need to Know (2026)

By Jeremy Soares · July 2, 2026

Disclosure — This site is a reference publication on modular construction in Quebec. It may receive compensation when a reader is connected with a partner manufacturer. Maison Laprise has neither commissioned nor reviewed this profile: all facts come from the public sources cited at the end of the article, and we publish no invented figures or statistics.

In short — Maison Laprise is a Quebec prefabricated home manufacturer active since 1989, according to its site, which displays its RBQ licence (2634-7666-98) and works through a network of certified Entrepreneurs Partenaires in the majority of Quebec regions. Its offer covers custom turnkey homes, the H.O.M series with pre-set finishes, and multi-unit housing through Laprise Immobilier. A rare feature in the market: Laprise publishes price ranges — from approximately $180 to more than $400/sq. ft. depending on the level of finish, according to its April 2026 blog post. Here is the factual portrait, sources included.

Within the trio of major Quebec manufacturers, Laprise occupies a singular position: it is the most forthcoming. Where most manufacturers keep their figures for the sales meeting, Laprise publishes an active blog, a detailed FAQ and — above all — price ranges. That does not exempt you from verifying; it simply gives you more to verify. This profile gathers what is verifiable, attributes it to its source, and flags what remains unpublished.

The company at a glance

According to the maisonlaprise.com home page (consulted in July 2026), Maison Laprise:

  • has been building custom and prefabricated homes since 1989, more than 35 years;
  • displays its RBQ licence 2634-7666-98 directly on its site — a transparency reflex one would like to see everywhere;
  • offers customizable models in five styles: cottage, contemporary, classic, traditional and farmhouse;
  • manages its build sites through a network of certified Entrepreneurs Partenaires, selected and supervised by the manufacturer, according to its FAQ;
  • offers an English version of its site.

The company is part of a broader brand ecosystem: Laprise H.O.M (a line of prefabricated homes with pre-set finishes, on its own subdomain), Laprise Immobilier (multi-unit housing and real estate projects), a technology division (laprise.ca) and Lorendo, its door and window brand. This is worth understanding before you shop: depending on the type of project, you will not be dealing with the same storefront.

Panels, modules: the Laprise method

The manufacturer's FAQ describes a mixed prefabrication approach. H.O.M series homes are built from pre-machined panels and prefabricated mechanical modules; multi-unit housing uses factory-prefabricated modules. In other words, Laprise works in both panelized and modular construction — two methods that are often confused and that imply different build sites and different transport logistics. The distinction is explained in plain language in our modular construction glossary, and our guide to types of prefab homes helps determine which suits your project.

The product lines

Custom turnkey homes

This is the flagship offer shown on the site: customizable plans, design support, then a turnkey build entrusted to the manufacturer's certified partners. The FAQ specifies that the client chooses materials and finishes — cladding, doors and windows, kitchen, bathrooms. What "turnkey" actually includes varies from manufacturer to manufacturer: our guide Turnkey or shell explains what to insist on in writing.

H.O.M series

The H.O.M series, presented on its own subdomain, is the manufacturer's more standardized offer: prefabricated homes whose finishes are pre-determined by Laprise's designers, according to the FAQ. Fewer choices, a more structured process — the standard logic of a pre-set series.

Multi-unit: Laprise Immobilier

The multi-unit and real estate projects segment runs through Laprise Immobilier, a separate entity. Its FAQ states that these buildings are constructed from factory-prefabricated modules. For a developer, a non-profit or a municipality, the questions to ask are still those in our guide for developers, regardless of the manufacturer.

Pricing: what Laprise publishes — a rare case

Here is what most sets Laprise apart from its major competitors: the manufacturer publishes price ranges. In a blog post dated April 24, 2026, Laprise gives the following order-of-magnitude figures for a prefabricated home in Quebec:

Format Price range published by the manufacturer (April 2026)
Shell / structure approximately $180 to $230/sq. ft.
Semi-finished approximately $230 to $300/sq. ft.
Turnkey approximately $280 to $400+/sq. ft.

Three caveats apply. One, these figures come from the manufacturer itself — it is its own reading of the market, not an independent study. Two, the same post lists what these prices generally exclude: land, excavation and foundation, unfinished basement, exterior landscaping and service connections. These items weigh heavily in a total budget. Three, Laprise itself writes that inclusions "can vary significantly between manufacturers" — which is accurate, and precisely why you need to compare equivalent quotes.

To place these ranges in the market context, see our modular home price guide and our analysis of the real cost in 2026, which detail the costs that come on top of the manufacturer's price.

Timelines: no published grid

Unlike its price ranges, Laprise does not publish a numbered timeline grid. Its FAQ states that installation time depends on the architecture, the size of the project and the type of construction, and that the schedule is set project by project. Its April 2026 post offers general benchmarks — a few weeks of factory production, then a few days to a few weeks of on-site work — without a standard commitment. Before signing, have the signing-to-delivery schedule specified in writing; our guide on timelines and scheduling for a modular project sets out the milestones to require.

Warranty, support and territory

Still according to the manufacturer's FAQ:

  • Laprise homes are covered by the GCR warranty, the mandatory new residential building warranty plan in Quebec, with coverage "of up to 5 years, depending on the conditions and elements included." Our article on the GCR warranty explains what it actually covers.
  • Build sites are carried out by certified Entrepreneurs Partenaires, which the manufacturer says it rigorously selects and supervises.
  • This network allows Laprise to manage projects "in the majority of Quebec regions," according to its FAQ. For a project in a region, ask who the local partner will specifically be and what the manufacturer's oversight covers.

How to evaluate Laprise for your project

A factual profile does not replace your own due diligence. Before signing with Laprise — or any manufacturer — apply the checklist in our guide How to choose your builder: RBQ licence on the public registry (Laprise displays its own — verify it anyway), GCR coverage confirmed in writing, detailed inclusions list, signed schedule and verifiable references — including on the partner contractor who will carry out your build. Our comparison of Quebec builders places Laprise among the other families of players in the market.

In summary

  • Established Quebec manufacturer (since 1989 per its site), RBQ licence displayed, network of certified partner contractors covering the majority of Quebec regions.
  • Three offers: custom turnkey homes (five styles), H.O.M series with pre-set finishes, multi-unit housing through Laprise Immobilier.
  • Panelized and modular construction methods, depending on the product line.
  • Published price ranges — approximately $180 to more than $400/sq. ft. depending on the format, per the manufacturer's blog (April 2026) — with major exclusions (land, foundation, service connections) to budget separately.
  • GCR warranty up to 5 years per its FAQ; no published timeline grid.

Sources: maisonlaprise.com (home page, FAQ, blog post of April 24, 2026 — consulted July 2, 2026); hom.maisonlaprise.com; lapriseimmobilier.com. Independent profile written by Jeremy Soares. Last updated: July 2, 2026. No figure or statistic on this page is invented; every claim about the manufacturer is attributed to its source.

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Frequently asked questions

Does Maison Laprise publish its prices?
Yes, and this is rare: its blog (April 2026) gives ranges of approximately $180 to $230/sq. ft. for a shell, $230 to $300/sq. ft. semi-finished, and $280 to $400+/sq. ft. turnkey. These figures come from the manufacturer and exclude, among other things, land, excavation, foundation and service connections.
What are the production timelines at Laprise?
The manufacturer does not publish a timeline grid: its FAQ states that the schedule depends on architecture, size and type of construction, and is set project by project. Insist on a written schedule before signing.
Does Laprise deliver throughout Quebec?
According to its FAQ, the manufacturer can manage projects in the majority of Quebec regions through its network of certified Entrepreneurs Partenaires. Have the local partner's identity confirmed and region-specific costs included in the quote.
Are Maison Laprise homes under warranty?
Yes. According to the manufacturer's FAQ, they are covered by the GCR warranty, the mandatory new residential building warranty plan in Quebec, with coverage of up to 5 years depending on the conditions and elements covered.

Sources

  1. Construction de maisons sur mesure et maisons préfabriquées depuis 1989 (site officiel) Maison Laprise (maisonlaprise.com)
  2. Maison préfabriquée, usinée et modulaire au Québec : ce qu'il faut savoir sur les coûts et inclusions Maison Laprise, blogue (24 avril 2026)
  3. Foire aux questions Maison Laprise (maisonlaprise.com)
  4. Maisons de série H.O.M Laprise H.O.M (hom.maisonlaprise.com)
  5. Multilogement et projets immobiliers Laprise Immobilier (lapriseimmobilier.com)
JS
Jeremy Soares
Real estate broker

Real estate broker in Quebec, passionate about modular construction. jeremysoares.com

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