U.S. Housing Starts and Permits (March 2025)
Andrew Foran, Economist | 416-350-8927
Date Published: April 17, 2025
- Category:
- U.S.
- Data Commentary
- Real Estate
Homebuilding activity fell in March amid policy uncertainty
- Housing starts fell 11.4% month-on-month (m/m) in March to 1.32 million (annualized) units, notably below expectations for a smaller decline. Revisions to the data for the two prior months added 4k units to the previous reported tallies.
- March's large decline in housing starts was concentrated in the single-family segment - down 14.2% m/m (or 156k units). The smaller multi-family segment recorded a smaller decline of 3.5% m/m (or 14k units).
- Residential permits increased 1.6% m/m to 1.48 million annualized units. This was driven by a 9.3% m/m increase in multi-family permits, while single-family permits fell 2.0% m/m.
- Among the four Census regions, gains were recorded in the Midwest (+76.2% m/m) and the Northeast (+1.5% m/m). Declines were recorded in the South (-17.1% m/m) and West (-30.9% m/m).
Key Implications
- March's homebuilding report was decidedly negative, with the monthly decline in single-family starts being the largest since April 2020. This occurred despite a modest decline in mortgage rates during the month, as elevated policy uncertainty clouded the outlook for home sales this year. The multi-family segment also remained in a relatively restrained state last month despite the modest rebound in permits.
- Shifting into April, we have seen homebuilder confidence remain subdued amid elevated trade uncertainty and the impact it is having on input costs. The National Association of Homebuilders noted that 60% of surveyed homebuilders had reported an increase in supplier costs, with input costs rising by 6.3% on average. This will likely only add to existing affordability challenges, which combined with an expected slowdown in the economy will weigh on the homebuilding industry over the coming quarters.
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