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

May 20, 2026 - New Single-Family Home Sales Rise
  • New single-family home sales rose 7.4% month-over-month and were up 3.3% year-over-year in March 2026, according to the US Census Bureau. March’s total new home sales reached 682,000 units. The National Association of Home Builders noted the uptick was due to moderating home prices and a lack of inventory in the existing home market. In March, the US median home price was $387,400, down 6.2% from $412,900 a year earlier. To address ongoing affordability constraints, builders have made strides toward offering more homes at the lower end of the price spectrum. In March, 20% of new homes were priced below $300,000.
  • US single-family homebuilding rose to a 13-month high in March, but economists say the gain may be temporary as permits and builder confidence declined, according to Reuters. Single-family housing starts jumped 9.7% to a 1.032 million annual rate, up 8.9% from a year earlier, while permits fell 3.8% to 895,000 units and dropped 7.9% year over year, according to the US Census Bureau. Rising material and energy costs, along with higher mortgage rates, continue to weigh on housing construction. The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate climbed to 6.23% in late April from 5.98% in late February. Economists expect residential investment to contract for a fifth straight quarter as GDP growth is forecast at 2.3% after slowing sharply in the prior quarter.
  • Home builders are cutting costs by using cheaper materials, simplifying designs, and reducing features to make homes more affordable amid high prices, mortgage rates, and economic uncertainty, according to The Wall Street Journal. Builders are installing particle-board cabinets, thinner countertops, fewer windows, and lower-end appliances, while shrinking home sizes and standardizing layouts. Some are also offering mortgage-rate buydowns to attract buyers, but homes still often sell for more than $400,000. Buyers face trade-offs between affordability and quality, with some reporting missing or lower-quality finishes. Industry analysts say these changes are spreading as builders prioritize efficiency and profit margins. While companies argue that homes remain durable and accessible to first-time buyers, critics say newer houses feel less customized and lower in quality than older homes.
  • North American construction and engineering spending in the single-family market is expected to decline by approximately 2% in 2026, following a decrease of 3% in 2025, as affordability constraints continue to weigh on demand, according to FMI’s second-quarter 2026 North American Engineering and Construction Outlook. Elevated mortgage rates, hovering around the low-6% range and subject to upward pressure from rising Treasury yields and energy-driven inflation, are limiting purchasing power and housing turnover. New home sales started 2026 weak, with declining prices, rising inventory levels, and a continued shift toward smaller home sizes. Builders are relying heavily on incentives, including price reductions, to sustain demand. Broader cost pressures, including higher material costs tied to tariffs and rising energy prices, along with persistent affordability challenges, are expected to constrain near-term growth, even as policy discussions focus on improving housing accessibility.

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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