Single-Family Home Builders NAICS 236115

        Single-Family Home Builders

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Purchase Report

Industry Summary

The 59,300 single-family home construction service providers in the US oversee the entire construction of new single-family detached houses, townhouses, and row houses. The industry includes general contractors and design-build firms. Firms do not own the land they are building upon.

Variable Material and Labor Costs

The cost of construction materials and labor can vary significantly and affect profitability for new home builders.

Dependence on Subcontractors

New home construction is highly dependent on subcontractors, with most firms directly employing a limited number of workers to oversee subcontracting activity.


Recent Developments

Mar 18, 2026 - Homebuilder Confidence Remains Low
  • Home builder confidence in the single-family market rose slightly in March, but builders remain concerned about housing affordability, higher construction costs, and shortages of buildable lots and labor, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). Home builder sentiment, as measured by the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), rose one point to 38 in March 2026. Any HMI reading over 50 indicates that more builders see conditions as good than poor. The HMI survey also showed that 37% of builders reduced home prices in March to lure potential buyers off the sidelines, although the average price reduction of 6% remained unchanged from February. While the war in Iran and resulting higher oil prices could pose additional challenges, recent executive orders by President Trump aimed at reducing regulatory hurdles to homebuilding are seen as a positive step.
  • The rapid expansion of data center development driven by artificial intelligence is reshaping land markets and creating new challenges for the home building industry, according to The Wall Street Journal. Tech companies are outbidding residential developers for land, making housing projects less financially viable. In Northern Virginia, data centers accounted for 20% to 30% of land development from 2013 to 2021, with activity from 2022 to 2024 rising 50% above the prior nine years. Rising land costs, limited available sites, and competition for labor and materials are constraining new housing supply. Builders say elevated prices make projects difficult to justify, contributing to shortages that already exceed 75,000 homes in some regions and pushing affordability further out of reach for many buyers.
  • Single-family housing starts fell 2.8% month over month and 6.5% year over year in January. The Census Bureau report was delayed by the government shutdown late last year. The number of building permits issued for single-family, privately-owned housing units fell 0.9% month-over-month and dropped 11.6% year-over-year in January 2026. Homebuilders have faced several headwinds, including tariffs that have increased the cost of key inputs like lumber and cabinets, and labor shortages, according to Reuters. While interest rates have fallen in 2026, the US war with Iran is pushing oil prices higher, along with US Treasury yields. Mortgage rates could begin to rise again because they are tied to the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield.
  • Affordability constraints in the US housing market are impacting demand for new homes. According to the National Association of Home Builders' (NAHB) 2026 Priced Out Analysis, 52% of US households (70 million) cannot afford a $300,000 home. The median home price in 2026 is about $410,000. At a mortgage rate of 6%, the minimum income needed to purchase a $200,000 home is $55,500, and only 47.5% of US households meet this home-price and minimum income threshold, even though $200,000 is less than half the US median home price. Affordability has been a key roadblock to more Americans joining the ranks of homeownership.

Industry Revenue

Single-Family Home Builders


Industry Structure

Industry size & Structure

The average single-family home construction services provider operates out of a single location, employs 6 workers, and generates about $2.4 million annually.

    • The single-family home construction services industry consists of about 59,300 firms that employ over 381,400 workers and generate almost $139.9 billion annually.
    • The industry is highly fragmented; the top 50 companies account for less than 15% of industry revenue. Most firms serve a limited geographical area.
    • About half of firms generate less than $1 million annually and 40.9% generate less than $500,000 annually.

                          Industry Forecast

                          Industry Forecast
                          Single-Family Home Builders Industry Growth
                          Source: Vertical IQ and Inforum

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