Building Material Prices Post Record Monthly Decline in April

Economics
Published

Prices paid for goods used in residential construction decreased 4.1% in April (not seasonally adjusted) — the largest monthly decline on record — according to the latest Producer Price Index (PPI) report released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The year-to-date decline (-5.4%) in residential construction inputs prices is more than three times larger than the previous record (-1.3% in 2009).

Price changes for key materials

Gypsum: Prices paid for gypsum products decreased 1.3% in April (seasonally adjusted) after climbing 2.2% in March. Gypsum product prices have declined 4.4% year-to-date, the largest January-to-April decrease since seasonally adjusted data became available in 2012. Prices are down 9.5% from the most recent peak in March 2018.

Softwood lumber:Although the PPI report shows that softwood lumber prices declined 10.8% (seasonally adjusted) in April, the decrease is at odds with recent prices reported by Random Lengths. According to their weekly data, prices fell a more modest 2.7% over the month.

The discrepancy between the BLS and Random Lengths data stems from known differences in survey timing. NAHB economists anticipated this in last month’s PPI post, stating that the decline over the last 10 days of March “should be captured in next month’s PPI report.”

Ready-mix concrete: Prices paid for ready-mix concrete (RMC) decreased 0.4% in April (seasonally adjusted), following a 0.7% increase in March. The RMC index has increased 1.1% year-to-date, which is close to the historical average year-to-date price change in April.

NAHB economist David Logan provides further analysis in this Eye on Housing blog post.

Subscribe to NAHBNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from NAHBNow

Economics

Oct 17, 2025

How Diverse Is the Construction Workforce?

Diversifying the construction labor force remains a key priority amid persistent skilled labor shortages. The most notable trend has been the steady rise of Hispanic participation, according to the American Community Survey.

Codes and Standards | Resiliency

Oct 16, 2025

Are Today’s Building Codes Enough to Improve Home Resilience?

In the face of rapidly increasing losses from natural disasters, many housing advocates are pushing for more stringent building codes to make homes more resilient to disaster. But is that the best path forward?

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Oct 17, 2025

Better Growth, Larger Deficits: CBO Fiscal Outlook

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is a key nonpartisan score keeper that measures the effects of policy changes by the Federal Government. With several policy changes since January of this year, including the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), stricter immigration, and higher tariffs, the CBO updated its economic projections through 2028.

Economics

Oct 16, 2025

Amid Market Challenges, Builder Expectations Rise in October

Even as builders continue to grapple with market and macroeconomic uncertainty, sentiment levels posted a solid gain in October as future sales expectations surpassed the 50-point breakeven mark for the first time since last January.

Economics

Oct 15, 2025

Builders Stay Cautious as Single-Family Permits Weaken

In August, single-family permit activity softened, reflecting caution among developers amid persistent economic headwinds. This trend has been consistent for eight continuous months.