Roadblocks in the purchase market could be the green light for other types of home financing.
Annual spending for
Carlos Martin, director of the Remodeling Futures Program at the JCHS, said the remodeling uptick will stem from lagging construction and muted sales of existing homes – what the market has deemed the “lock-in” effect.
“Additionally, stronger gains in home values and thus home equity levels should boost both discretionary and ‘need-to-do’ replacement projects for owners staying in place,” said Martin in a press release.
Renovation spending could be a driver for refi volume
Mortgage rates are expected to drop to around 6% to end this year, and average 5.7% across 2025, according to the government-sponsored enterprise. Many borrowers appear to be hanging on to their ultra-low rates they secured during the pandemic, and
The Remodeling Futures Program’s Leading Indicator of Remodeling Activity expects annual expenditures for renovations to grow by 1.2% through the third quarter of 2025. That would be far below the 17.2% growth in that metric in the third quarter of 2022, but still well above total spending levels of yesteryear.
Lenders are keen on the apparent cash-out refinance opportunity,
Homebuilders are catching up to the nation’s inventory shortage, and some green shoots in building statistics