Moderate gains in homeowner spending for improvements and repairs are expected through much of next year as concerns of a possible pandemic-induced downturn have largely dissipated, according to a report released by the Remodeling Futures Program at the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University.
With greater clarity about the pandemic’s impact on the US economy and given the surprising resilience of housing markets, the Remodeling Futures Program is no longer providing a downside range for its home remodeling outlook. The LIRA’s standard methodology projects annual growth in renovation and repair spending of 4.1% by the first quarter of 2021 with gains softening to 1.7% by the third quarter.
This amounts to a 1.5% uptick from the prior LIRA, which had been projecting a downturn in remodeling activity.
“The remodeling market is bouncing back from the initial shocks caused by the pandemic, as homeowners continue to spend significant time in their home and are adapting it for work, school, and leisure,” says Chris Herbert, managing director of the Joint Center for Housing Studies. “The surge in DIY and small project activity is lifting the remodeling market, but it remains to be seen if the strong sales market this summer translates into larger improvements that would drive even stronger growth in the coming quarters.”