Header: Header: Header:

U.S. Housing Starts Were Soft In January

 

U.S. housing starts began the new year ticking downward 4.5% in January from December to a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.309 million starts. Single-family starts came in at a rate of 841,000 in January, down 4.3%, while multi-family (five units or more) were at 457,000, down 5.4% from December.

The decline in January marked the fourth consecutive monthly decline for the combined starts.

Updated numbers show that housing starts were 1.555 million in 2022, compared to 1.601 million in 2021, with single-family at 1.005 million and multi-family at 533.2 million.

Building permits were at a rate of 1.339 million in January, slightly above the December number. Single-family permits were 718,000, down 1.8% from December, and multi-family was 563,000, up a half percent.

Housing completions were at a rate of 1.406 million in January, a percent above the December rate, with single-family completions at 1.04 million, 4.4% above December, and multi-family at 349,000, down 8.6%.

RELATED ARTICLES

U.S. Housing Starts Dipped Slightly In 2022

U.S. Housing Starts Dip Slightly In November

Housing Starts Continue Negative Pattern

U.S. Housing Starts Dip In September, Both Single-Family & Multi-Family Soften

U.S Housing Starts Break Negative Pattern: Both Single-Family, Multi-Family Increase

U.S. Housing Starts Take Another Dip, Single-Family Declines For Fifth Straight Month

U.S. Single-Family Housing Starts Dip, But Multi-Family Shows Strength

Armor In Housing Starts Reveals Crack

Multi-Family Housing Continues Surge

Multi-Family Housing Takes Up Slack For March

U.S. Housing Starts Gain Momentum

New Year Brings In Housing Starts Dip

U.S. Housing Starts Complete Robust Year

Single-Family, Multi-Family Starts Flourished In November

Single-Family Housing Has Narrow Drop, Multi-Family Rises, Permits Looking Good

Housing Starts Show Modest Decline In September

Multi-Family Leads Way In U.S. Housing Jump

Housing Starts Dip, Permits Still Gain

Housing Starts Gain Steam, Though Permits Show Slight Decline

Housing Starts Increase In May, Far Ahead Of One Year Ago

Single-Family Starts Dip, But Multi-Family Ticks Upward

U.S. Housing Starts Hit A High Note

U.S. Housing Dips Again in February; Pandemic Started Hitting Home A Year Ago

Housing Starts Jump Out Of Gate Slowly, But Building Permits Looking Good

Housing Starts Finish Year With A Bang

U.S. Housing Starts Continue Upward

U.S. Single-Family Starts Jump for Sixth Month In Row

Single-Family Housing Starts Rise Again

Single-Family Housing Starts Go Up

U.S. Housing Starts Show Big Increase

Latest News

All The World’s A Stage

Story by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief Are you aware that Timber Processing magazine has gone global? We haven’t publicized this development much, so it may have slipped by you. This issue, for example, is in the hands of more than 1,200 sawmill owners, managers and...

Here’s The Pitch

Story by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief I was in a good mood on a recent Friday, thinking ahead to the weekend and planning to watch college football, when our receptionist placed the Western Wood Products Assn. 2009 lumber production report on my desk. End of good...

Housing Trends

Story by Jennifer McCary, Senior Associate Editor As a baby boomer I grew up with certain expectations and accepted truisms. One of them was: Renting a home is as foolish as throwing money down the drain. Perhaps borne out of the Great Depression when so many became...

Old School Reporting Will Return One Day

Story by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief I teach now and then at my undergraduate alma mater, Auburn University, which is only an hour up the interstate from our office in Montgomery, Ala. I usually teach when the journalism faculty finds itself one instructor short of...

The Great (Okay, Not So Great) Debate

Story by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has approved ArborGen permit applications for planting and growing genetically engineered (GE) eucalyptus trees in several Southern states. APHIS reached a finding of no...

Seeking Signs Of Sustainable Recovery

Story by Dan Shell, Managing Editor Right now housing starts are up for the past three months, and after a revision of March statistics to an annual rate of 636,000, housing starts are currently at their highest level since November 2008. Of course, it’s important to...

Sawdust Musings

Story by Jennifer McCary, Senior Associate Editor During the last 25 years, sawdust, trimmings and shavings have gone from being a waste disposal problem to being a revenue stream that helped some mills keep running even in the face of declining lumber demand. Today...

What More Can You Ask For?

Story by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief We are only a quarter into the year, and it has already been a good one for Steve Singleton. There are two reasons. One reason is because he is named Timber Processing’s 2010 Man of the Year. Singleton is general manager of...

Shoot! No- Don’t Shoot!

Story by Dan Shell, Managing Editor Deep in southwest Oregon, where the Coast Range melts into the Siskiyou Mountains, Jim, an out-of-work choker setter, and Scott, a former sawmill green end supervisor, ride in the back of a muddy pickup driven by former yarder...

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.

 

Subscribe/Renew

Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.