By

Abbe Will
on Apr 30, 2020
11:58 am
Expenditures for home improvements to the owner-occupied
housing stock are anticipated to decline in most of the nation’s largest
metropolitan areas this year in response to the severe economic impacts of
the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new projections released today by our
Remodeling Futures Program.
Even before the pandemic hit, nearly all of the 47 tracked
metros were expected to see slowdowns in improvement spending through 2020
as generated by our standard methodology projections, with growth of 1-5
percent expected in 37 metros and declines in only 9 metros. Revising these
projections based on the estimated effect of the pandemic on national
remodeling spending, the COVID-adjusted projections, illustrated
in the interactive map below, show annual homeowner remodeling spending
will likely contract in the majority of metros (24), while only 15 could
still see gains (1-3 percent), relative to 2019 activity.
With the pandemic exacerbating localized slowdowns in house
prices, existing home sales, and homebuilding, many metros will see even
more pronounced erosion of home renovation activity this year. The largest
remodeling spending declines are not isolated to any one region, but are
projected to occur in markets throughout the country including Orlando,
Kansas City, Omaha, San Jose, and Portland.
Although the pandemic is lowering prospects for remodeling
everywhere, relatively more affordable metros in the Midwest and Sunbelt
should be among the brighter spots for home improvements this year with
annual gains of about 2-3 percent in Cleveland and Cincinnati, as well as
Charlotte, Atlanta, Tampa, and Phoenix.
With the country still in the early stages of the COVID-19
pandemic, there is substantial uncertainty about how long the economic
downturn will last and how quickly a recovery will take hold. As more and
more data become available, we will continue to provide insights and analysis
for understanding the varied impacts of the pandemic on local and regional
home improvement activity.
The Joint Center for Housing Studies’ Metro Area Home Improvement Projections are
released annually in the Spring and provide a short-term outlook of home
improvement spending to owner-occupied homes across approximately 50 major
metropolitan areas. The indicator, developed with biennial estimates from
the American Housing Survey, is designed to
project the annual rate of change in spending for the current quarter and
subsequent four quarters, and is intended to help identify future turning
points in the local business cycles of the home improvement industry.
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