Building Material Prices: Large Increases Year to Date
Although the recent drop in softwood lumber prices since mid-May is helping bring costs down (after having driven them up drastically earlier in the year), the decline has been offset by large increases in the prices of several other building material products.
The prices of these 10 have increased the most thus far in 2021, and all are up at least 30%:
- Steel mill products
- Building paper and building board mill products
- Asphalt
- Plastic water pipe
- Fertilizer materials
- Laminated veneer lumber
- Thermoplastic resins and plastics materials
- Structural metal joists and concrete reinforcing bars
- Wood window and door frames
- Copper pipe and tube
Over the first seven months of 2021, the majority of these products’ prices have increased many times more than they did in 2020. The price change of steel mill products is the most glaring example, up 81.3% year to date following a 2020 increase of 11.1%.
The prices of a subset of building materials were stable in 2020 but have seen substantial price increases in 2021. Some building materials and inputs to building materials have seen especially acute increases over the last three months.
Of the goods analyzed here, nine experienced price increases exceeding 20% between April and July:
- Laminated veneer lumber
- Building paper & building board mill products
- Fertilizer materials
- Plastic water pipe
- Fabricated structural metal
- Other engineered structural wood members
- Copper pipe and tube
- Steel mill products
- Aluminum base scrap
NAHB economist David Logan provides more analysis in this Eye on Housing blog post.
Latest from NAHBNow
Jun 18, 2025
Podcast: Mid-Year Update on Economic Indicators and Advocacy PrioritiesOn the latest episode of NAHB’s podcast, Housing Developments, COO Paul Lopez welcomes NAHB Chief Economist Dr. Robert Dietz and Chief Advocacy Officer Ken Wingert for a mid-year check in on key economic indicators and NAHB policy priorities driving home building for the rest of 2025.
Jun 18, 2025
Sharp Drop in Multifamily Production Brings Overall Housing Starts DownOverall housing starts decreased 9.8% in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.26 million units, according to a report from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the U.S. Census Bureau.
Latest Economic News
Jun 18, 2025
Sharp Drop in Multifamily Production Brings Overall Housing Starts DownA sharp decline in multifamily production pushed overall housing starts down in May, while single-family output was essentially flat due to economic and tariff uncertainty along with elevated interest rates.
Jun 17, 2025
Builder Sentiment at Third Lowest Reading Since 2012In a further sign of declining builder sentiment, the use of price incentives increased sharply in June as the housing market continues to soften.
Jun 16, 2025
Permit Activity Weakens in April 2025Housing permits continued a downhill trend for the fourth month in a row, pointing to a broader residential construction slowdown for 2025. Over the first four months of 2025, the total number of single-family permits issued year-to-date (YTD) nationwide reached 320,259.