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U.S. Housing Starts and Permits (February 2025)

Andrew Hencic, Senior Economist | 416-944-5307

Date Published: March 18, 2025

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Homebuilding activity bounces back in February

  • Housing starts rose 11.2% month-on-month (m/m) in February to 1.5 million (annualized) units, well ahead of expectations for a smaller improvement to 1.385 million and almost offsetting all of January's decline. Revisions to the data for the two prior months removed 5k units from the previously reported tallies.
  • February's monthly starts increase was shared between the single-family and multi-family segments. Single-family starts were up 11.4% m/m (113k units) and multis rose 10.7% m/m (or 38k units).
  • Residential permits were down 1.2% from January, falling to 1.46 million units. However, single-family permits were virtually unchanged on the month (992k in February vs 994 in January).
  • Three of the four Census regions saw gains, with the West (+5.9% m/m), Northeast (+47.4% m/m), and South (+18.3% m/m) all posting improved readings. The Midwest was the lone region to post a decline, falling 24.8% m/m.

Key Implications

  • Homebuilding bounced back in February, almost completely offsetting January's slump. The longer-term picture shows a housing market that appears to be in a relatively stable, albeit cautious state, with single family starts down 2.3% year-on-year (y/y), while multis are down 4.6%.
  • Uncertainty remains the name of the game. The National Association of Home Builders reported builder confidence fell again in February as concerns about tariffs and elevated construction costs offset optimism on potential regulatory changes. From our lens, the general economic uncertainty and increasingly downbeat consumer sentiment mean that the housing sector is likely to drag on overall growth in the coming months.  

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