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Indicators/Topics/Housing/Housing starts/United States

United States

Housing starts

New residential construction starts.

Not available

No mapped provider series for Housing starts in United States

This is a valid canonical URL. The availability layer does not currently map an observation series for this pair.

Suggested alternatives

Home price indexMortgage rate

Region peers

Related measures

Adjacent and similar concepts available for United States.

Home pricesMortgage rate
Open country pivot

The reading right now

As of April 2026, Housing starts for United States stood at 1.5K. That is down 42 from the prior month. Over the trailing five years, the series has averaged 1.5K, ranging from a low of 1.3K in July 2024 to a high of 1.8K in April 2022. The current reading sits 96 above its trailing ten-year mean of 1.4K.

Computed from the observation series on this page. Numbers update when the underlying provider revises the data.

About this indicator

About

Housing starts is the count of new privately owned residential construction projects begun in a given month, published jointly by the Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The release covers single-family and multi-family units separately, broken out by census region. The data comes from a sample of building permit offices in 900 jurisdictions, scaled up to the full universe through statistical weights.

Why it matters

Housing is one of the few sectors that consistently leads the business cycle. Starts respond quickly to mortgage rates and credit conditions, often turning over six to nine months before the broader economy. The Federal Reserve treats housing as a primary transmission channel for monetary policy. A sharp drop in starts is a classic early-recession signal; a sharp rise after a cutting cycle starts is what unblocks the labor market through construction hiring.

How it's computed

Census counts a 'start' as the beginning of excavation for the footings or foundation of the structure. Building permits are reported separately and lead starts by roughly 1-2 months. The series is highly volatile month-to-month because individual large multi-family projects can swing the national total; the three-month moving average is what most analysts actually plot.

Pitfalls

Single-family and multi-family starts respond to different conditions. Single-family tracks household formation and mortgage rates; multi-family tracks rental market conditions and developer financing. The headline is the sum, which often masks the divergence. Weather can swing the seasonally-adjusted number significantly in any given winter month. The companion building permits series leads starts by one to two months and is less weather-sensitive, which is why it gets cited as the cleaner cyclical signal even though starts is the headline.

Editorial vintage
Reviewed 2026-05-21
Hand-written by the Macro by Mark editorial team. Source data and methodology links live in the series-details panel above.