
Private residential construction spending was up 0.8% in April
2026, following the monthly gain of 0.6% in March. This increase
was largely driven by gains in single-family, and home
improvement spending. Moreover, total private residential
construction spending was 1.7% higher than a year ago.
According to the latest construction spending data from the U.S.
Census, single-family construction spending increased 1.4% in
April, consistent with the steady builder confidence reflected
in the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI). Despite the
monthly gain, single-family construction spending was down 2.9%
over a year ago. Improvement spending (remodeling) also
increased in April, rising 0.4% for the month. Remodeling
remained a bright spot on a year-over-year basis, with spending
up 7.5% from April 2025. Meanwhile, multifamily construction
spending edged down 0.3% in April. This marks the first monthly
decrease after two consecutive months of modest gains. Compared
to a year earlier, multifamily spending was 1.1% higher.
The NAHB construction spending index is shown in the graph
below. The index illustrates how spending on single-family
construction has slowed since early 2024, reflecting the impacts
of elevated interest rates and ongoing uncertainty over building
material tariffs. Multifamily construction spending growth has
also slowed down after the peak in July 2023, with the index
largely plateauing since late 2024. In contrast, improvement
spending has been on an upward trend since the beginning of
2025, supported in part by the aging housing stock and sustained
demand for renovation.

Spending on private nonresidential construction was down 2.1%
over a year ago. The annual private nonresidential spending
decrease was driven by a $41.8 billion drop in manufacturing
construction spending.

Source: NAHB