×

US construction spending rebounds in March

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 9:39 AM

WASHINGTON, May 7 (Reuters) – U.S. construction spending rebounded in March, boosted by a surge in single-family homebuilding, but higher mortgage rates could ​limit further gains.

The Commerce Department’s Census Bureau ‌said on Thursday that construction spending rose 0.6% after falling 0.2% in February. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast construction spending would rise 0.2% in March.

Construction spending advanced 1.6% ‌on ​a year-over-year basis in March. ⁠The Census Bureau has ⁠caught up on construction spending releases following delays caused by the federal government shutdown last year.

Spending on private construction projects increased 0.8% in March ​after slipping 0.2% in February. Investment in residential construction rose 1.7% after easing 0.1% in ⁠February. Spending on new single-family ⁠housing projects jumped 2.7%.

The U.S.-Israel war ​with Iran is fanning inflation, keeping mortgage rates elevated. ​Builders also face higher prices from tariffs. Residential ‌investment has declined for five straight quarters. Spending on multi-family housing units, which account for a small share of the housing market, gained 0.3% in ⁠March.

Spending on private nonresidential structures such as offices and factories fell 0.2% in March. Spending on nonresidential structures ⁠has contracted for ‌nine consecutive quarters, the longest such ⁠stretch on record, despite a surge ​in ‌the construction of data centers to ​support artificial ⁠intelligence.

Investment in public construction projects slipped 0.2% after falling 0.3% in February. State and local government construction spending dipped 0.1% in March while outlays on federal government projects dropped 2.6%.

(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by ​Paul Simao)