Markets with faster-rising home values have
seen a greater surge in permitting, on average
- Builders finished about 1 million single-family homes in 2023,
the second-largest number since the global financial crisis of
2007–2009.
- Starts for attached single-family homes rose 3% year over year,
while starts for detached single-family homes declined 9%.
- Houston, Dallas and Phoenix have seen the largest increase in
permits since 2020.
SEATTLE, Oct. 17,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- America's housing stock
continues to grow faster than it did before the pandemic-induced
housing frenzy, as builders race to fill a shortage of 4.5 million
homes. The latest analysis from Zillow® shows roughly 1
million single-family homes were completed in 2023, the
second-highest annual total since before the global financial
crisis. That's about 11% more homes than were completed in
2019.
To achieve this pace, builders pivoted toward higher density,
building more townhomes as opposed to detached single-family homes
— similar to what they did in 2022. Construction starts for
detached single-family homes declined by nearly 9% from 2022 to
2023, but starts for attached single-family homes rose by more than
3% over the same time span.
"The housing affordability crisis still grips America. It was
precipitated by decades of underbuilding, and despite builders'
recent efforts, the unmet need for homes is growing," said Orphe
Divounguy, Zillow senior economist. "The best long-term solution is
more supply. Builders are helping where they can by shifting to
more cost-conscious and space-efficient designs. But promoting
density through local laws is key — that will go a long way to
bring in more affordable homes where they're needed the
most."
Focusing on attached homes allows builders to overcome some of
the challenges related to land acquisition costs and also provide
homes that are more affordable to cost-challenged buyers. They
are building more units on smaller lots — the median size of
a new home remained steady at around 2,200 square feet, while
median lot area fell by 700 square feet, when compared to
2022.
But the pace of construction is slowing, likely due in large
part to slowing demand amid housing affordability challenges.
Construction began on 946,000 single-family homes in 2023, about 7%
fewer than in 2022 and 16.5% fewer than in 2021. This is a decline
from a very strong couple of years; it still represents a solid
number, historically speaking, 6% higher than 2019.
Markets that have issued the most single-family permits since
2020 are Houston, Dallas and Phoenix. That is good news for housing
affordability in these markets, which have already been stretched
by population growth.
Markets with faster jobs and income growth, and thus higher
housing demand, have historically seen larger increases in new
construction activity relative to lower growth markets. The Zillow
analysis further illustrates this relationship – markets with
higher increases in home values from 2020 through 2024 also tended
to see higher permitting over the same period of time, on
average.
New construction has taken on more importance by providing
options to buyers at a time when existing owners have pulled back
from listing their homes. Home shoppers can find more new
construction communities on Zillow than any other U.S.
platform.
Where the most
single-family construction has been permitted since the
pandemic
|
Metro Area
|
Single-family
permits
(Jan 2020—August 2024)
|
Single-family home
value change
(Jan 2020—August 2024)
|
Houston, TX
|
232,810
|
39 %
|
Dallas, TX
|
207,471
|
47 %
|
Phoenix, AZ
|
138,445
|
54 %
|
Atlanta, GA
|
128,202
|
59 %
|
Austin, TX
|
94,361
|
43 %
|
Charlotte,
NC
|
87,987
|
61 %
|
Orlando, FL
|
76,355
|
55 %
|
Tampa, FL
|
74,265
|
62 %
|
Nashville,
TN
|
70,850
|
50 %
|
Jacksonville,
FL
|
65,510
|
53 %
|
About Zillow Group
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(Nasdaq: Z and ZG) is reimagining real estate to make home a
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affiliate. Zillow Home Loans, LLC is an Equal Housing Lender, NMLS
#10287 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org). © 2024 MFTB Holdco, Inc., a
Zillow affiliate.
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SOURCE Zillow