US Housing Starts Plunge to Six-Year Low
2026-06-16 12:33
By
Joana Ferreira
1 min. read
US housing starts fell 15.4% month-on-month in May 2026, reaching a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.177 million, the lowest since May 2020.
This follows a downwardly revised 1.392 million in April and fell short of market forecasts of 1.43 million.
The data indicates that high mortgage rates are curbing builder activity, with contractors adopting a cautious approach as they reduce the inventory of new homes for sale due to sluggish demand.
To attract buyers, many have lowered prices, provided mortgage rate subsidies, and slowed the construction of spec homes, which are properties built without a signed contract.
Multi-family starts plunged 41.6% to 284,000, the lowest since November 2024, while single-family starts slipped 1.9% to an eight-month low of 882,000.
Regionally, construction activity declined sharply in the South (down 17.0% to 594,000), the West (down 17.2% to 264,000), and the Northeast (down 26.8% to 123,000), while the Midwest saw a 3.7% increase to 196,000.