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Business Confidence High and Expectations Strong for Home Renovation Professionals

October 16, 2017

Houzz has released the Q3 2017 Houzz Renovation Barometer, which tracks confidence in the home renovation market among industry professionals. The Q3 2017 Barometer reflected high quarter-over-quarter confidence for all industry sectors including architects, designers, general contractors (GCs)/remodelers, design-build, specialty building/renovation and specialty landscape/outdoor, with readings of 62* or higher. Expectations for Q4 are strong across all sectors.

Coupled with this positive business outlook are persistent labor shortages, as reported by 78 percent of GCs, remodelers and design-build firms. For homeowners, this translates to higher costs and longer project timelines. Fifty-six percent of renovation firms report increasing costs of subcontractors in Q3 2017 (versus 53 percent in Q3 2016) and 54 percent report increasing project lengths (versus 50 percent in Q3 2016) due to labor shortages.

The Houzz Renovation Barometer Backlog Index increased slightly from Q2 2017 to Q3 2017, with project backlogs of five to eight weeks on average across sectors, reflecting significant wait times before companies can take on new projects. General contractors (GCs), remodelers and design-build companies have the longest average backlogs (7.1 and 7.7 weeks, respectively).

“Residential renovation and design professionals report another strong quarter of new business activity and a very positive outlook in the near term,” said Nino Sitchinava, principal economist at Houzz. “That said, widespread skilled labor shortages leave little wiggle room for businesses to absorb sudden demand pressures such as recent hurricanes in the South or more localized damage from wildfires in the West, driving up wait times.”

Hurricane Impact

Given the recent severe impact of hurricanes Harvey and Irma in the Houston metropolitan area and Southwestern Florida, Houzz took a deeper look at conditions among renovation professionals in these areas.

Within the first two weeks of landfall, the hurricanes caused 28 percent of renovation-related businesses in the Houston metropolitan area and 41 percent in Southwestern Florida to suspend business operations in these areas. Among companies that suspended operations, 91 percent of those impacted by Hurricane Harvey kept their doors closed for a week or longer, and 65 percent of those affected by Hurricane Irma.

The hurricanes also exacerbated labor shortages across the region and increased project backlogs by nearly two weeks, on average. Top business challenges exacerbated by the hurricane disruptions are the shortage of subcontractors (38 percent for both Irma and Harvey-stricken areas), managing cost-concerned consumers (23 and 46 percent, respectively), and managing consumer expectations (23 and 31 percent, respectively). A shortage of products and/or materials is also a top challenge for many (23 and 15 percent, respectively).

Renovation-related companies estimate the average total cost of repairs and renovations to homeowners to be $13K for the hardest Irma-stricken areas, and a staggering $111K for the hardest Harvey-stricken areas.