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Remodeling outperforms single-family as rates lock in owners

July 9, 2026 at 04:26 PM John McManus HousingWire

Remodeling contractors remained optimistic in the second quarter of 2026 even as material costs and economic uncertainty delayed larger jobs, according to new data from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).

The NAHB Remodeling Market Index (RMI) came in at 61 in Q2 2026, down one point from the prior quarter but solidly above the break-even level of 50, NAHB reported on its Eye on Housing blog. The index has held in the low 60s for the past year and continues to outperform sentiment in both the single-family and multifamily new construction sectors.

The RMI is based on a national survey of professional remodelers who rate current conditions and future expectations for the residential remodeling market as “good,” “fair” or “poor.” Readings above 50 indicate more remodelers view conditions as good than poor.

Lock-in, low inventory and equity keep demand flowing

NAHB economists attributed the resilience of remodeling to several structural tailwinds that matter directly to builders, remodelers and suppliers.

For residential construction firms with both building and remodeling operations, the data reinforces that remodeling remains a comparative bright spot in a housing market still constrained by rates, prices and regulatory burdens.

Small and mid-size jobs hold up better than big-ticket projects

The RMI’s Current Conditions Index, which averages sentiment for small, medium and large projects, held at 70 in the second quarter, unchanged from Q1.

That pattern mirrors what many design-build and remodeling firms have reported anecdotally: smaller tickets are easier for homeowners to greenlight in an uncertain macro environment, while large, discretionary additions and whole-house jobs are facing more scrutiny, scope reductions or delays.

For builders and trades that rely heavily on high-dollar renovation work, the shift toward mid-range and smaller projects may require adjustments in pipeline management, pricing strategy and crew allocation.

Future indicators soften but stay positive

The Future Indicators Index, which aggregates remodelers’ views on leads and backlogs, slipped two points to 52 in Q2, NAHB said. Both components remain just above the 50 threshold:

The modest drop suggests demand is easing from the peak levels seen during the pandemic-era remodeling boom but remains consistent with a solid, sustainable pipeline rather than a cliff in activity.

Inflation and fuel costs pressure margins

Cost and pricing pressures continue to shape project timing and profitability:

NAHB noted that inflation and broader economic uncertainty are driving more project delays, particularly for large jobs. For remodelers and homebuilders with renovation divisions, the data underscores the need to:

With operating costs moving higher and homeowners still price sensitive, firms that can manage procurement efficiently and lock in costs where possible will be better positioned to protect margins.

Why this matters for homebuilders and residential construction

NAHB’s baseline forecast calls for remodeling spending to remain “robust” in both the near term and over the long run. For The Builder’s Daily and broader HousingWire homebuilding audience, the RMI results highlight several strategic implications:

For now, NAHB’s latest read on the RMI confirms that remodeling remains one of the most resilient segments in the housing ecosystem, supported by rate lock-in, equity and aging housing stock—even as cost inflation and macro uncertainty test budgets and timelines.

Originally reported by HousingWire.
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