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Country House Plans

Country house plans translate rural-friendly proportions into livable, modern homes. Pitched rooflines, generous porches, dormers, and practical mudroom/utility planning set the tone. The plans below work on rural and semi-rural lots, from small-acreage builds to working-farm settings.

Curated and published by HomePlanHQ. Every plan on HomePlanHQ links directly to the licensed designer for purchase, with no markup.

What defines country

  • Pitched rooflines, classic American silhouettes
  • Generous front and rear porches
  • Dormers and gables for visual interest
  • Practical mudroom and utility planning
  • Often farmhouse-adjacent in feel
  • Rural-friendly proportions

Who buys this style

Rural and semi-rural builders, farm and acreage settings, buyers who want a classic American silhouette without traditional fussiness.

4 country house plans

4 plans · each links to the designer for purchase
Truoba
CLASS

Truoba Class 316

2754 sqft · 3 bed · 2.5 bath

$2100
Truoba
CLASS

Truoba Class 216

2736 sqft · 3 bed · 2.5 bath

$2200
Truoba
MINI

Truoba Mini 217

858 sqft · 2 bed · 1.0 bath

$700
Truoba
MINI

Truoba Mini 319

795 sqft · 2 bed · 1.0 bath

$800

What to look for when shopping country house plans

Three checks save most buyers from a bad plan match. First, confirm the plan's square footage methodology. Some publishers report ANSI Z765 living area (the standard); others include garage and porches in the headline number. A 2,400-sq-ft plan that includes an attached two-car garage is meaningfully smaller than one that excludes it. Ask the designer if the listed total follows ANSI Z765 before you compare across sources.

Second, verify the foundation type matches your site. A plan drawn for a slab-on-grade lot in Florida needs structural rework for a basement-foundation lot in Minnesota. Most publishers offer foundation modifications for $300 to $1,200; confirm the cost and turnaround in writing before purchasing the base set. The same applies to flip plans (mirror image), which usually run $50 to $200 extra.

Third, read the license terms. The standard PDF set is licensed for one build; the CAD set typically allows modifications but still prohibits resale or republication. If you plan to build the same plan twice (rental cabins, for instance), purchase a multi-build license at the time of order. Retroactive multi-build licenses cost roughly twice as much.

How country house plans compare to other styles

Style is a starting point, not a constraint. Builders routinely adapt a plan from one style category to another by changing exterior materials, roof slope, and trim while keeping the floor plan intact. The structural shell is the expensive part to change. The cosmetic envelope is the cheap part. If a floor plan in this category fits how your family actually lives but the exterior reads wrong for your neighborhood, talk to the designer about a façade-only modification. Most will quote the work for under $800.

For comparison shoppers, the categories most adjacent to country house plans usually share floor plan logic with different exterior treatments. Browse the related-style links below to see neighboring options. The plans there share build cost ranges within roughly 15 percent of plans in this style at the same square footage.

Why HomePlanHQ curates these plans

HomePlanHQ exists because the house-plan market is fragmented across 30+ publishers, each with its own search interface and pricing inconsistencies. We curate plans from designers we trust, normalize the spec data so you can compare across publishers, and link directly to the seller without markup. Every plan on HomePlanHQ that you click goes to the licensed designer's purchase page, not a reseller. The publisher pays HomePlanHQ a small affiliate commission when you buy; you pay the same price you would have paid going direct.