The single-family home-construction market continued to show signs of softening in March, as permits and starts declined due to rising mortgage interest rates and ongoing supply-chain bottlenecks that continue to delay construction projects and raise home building costs.
Single-family starts decreased 1.7 percent to a 1.2 million seasonally adjusted annual rate, according to federal data reported by the National Association of Home Builders, even as the multi-family sector showed an increase.
“Higher mortgage-interest rates and rising construction costs are pricing buyers out of the market, and these higher costs are particularly hurting entry-level and first-time buyers,” said Jerry Konter, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and a home builder and developer from Savannah.
“The shift in affordability can be seen in the March data with strength for multi-family construction and some weakness for single-family permits,” said NAHB chief economist Robert Dietz. “Our builder surveys show that confidence levels in the single-family market have declined for four straight months as affordability conditions continue to worsen, and this is a sign that single-family production will face challenges moving forward.”
On a regional and year-to-date basis, combined single-family and multi-family starts are 17.3 percent higher in the Northeast, 6.6 percent higher in the Midwest, 11.2 percent higher in the South and 7.5 percent higher in the West.
Overall permits increased 0.4 percent to a 1.87 million unit annualized rate in March. Single-family permits decreased 4.8 percent to a 1.15 million unit rate, while multi-family permits increased 10 percent to an annualized 726,000 pace.
Looking at regional permit data on a year-to-date basis, permits are 5.5 percent higher in the Northeast, 4 percent higher in the Midwest, 7.5 percent higher in the South and 4.9 percent higher in the West.
Single-family permits authorized but not started stood at 149,000, up 14.6 percent year-over-year as material delays slow projects.