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

Nov 20, 2025

Remodeling Growth Drives Uptick in Residential Construction Spending

Private residential construction spending inched up 0.8% in August, continuing steady growth since June 2025, primarily driven by more spending on multifamily construction and home remodeling.

Sponsored Content

Nov 19, 2025

The New Frontier of Jobsite Efficiency: How Flat-Packed Door Systems Are Transforming Installs

Pre-hung doors have long been the default choice for builders and remodelers. But with their benefits, they also come with logistical downsides. More builders are turning to a new alternative: flat-packed, “knocked-down” door systems that ship efficiently and assemble cleanly on-site.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Nov 19, 2025

Affordability Impacts: Young Adults Are Once Again Moving Back Home

The share of young adults living with parents increased in 2024, interrupting the post-pandemic trend of moving out of parental homes.

Economics

Nov 18, 2025

Location, Location, Location: How Place and Neighborhood Shape Home Values

The value of a single-family home depends not only on its physical features but also on its location and neighborhood context.

Economics

Nov 18, 2025

Builder Sentiment Relatively Flat in November as Market Headwinds Persist

Market uncertainty exacerbated by the government shutdown along with economic uncertainty stemming from tariffs and rising construction costs kept builder confidence firmly in negative territory in November.