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Growth in housebuilding cost inflation unchanged from last quarter finds BCIS

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Annual housebuilding cost inflation, as measured by the BCIS Private Housing Construction Price Index (PHCPI), continued to cool in 4Q 2023, standing at 1.7%, down from a peak of 15.3% in 2Q 2022.

On a quarterly basis, this represented no change compared with 3Q 2023, the Building Cost Information Service (BCIS) reported.

At the same time, ONS construction output figures clearly demonstrate the continued pressure on the private housing sector.

Dr David Crosthwaite, chief economist at BCIS said: “Although headline inflation has eased, with the Bank of England’s base rate held at 5.25%, household budgets stretched and no significant housing stimulus included in the Spring Budget, residential output is likely to be impacted for some time.”

In 4Q 2023, private new housing output was down by 8% on the previous quarter, or by 22.5% on the same quarter a year earlier.

One of the respondents to Private Housing Construction Price Index survey noted delays in the planning system as a concern, particularly relating to shortages in planning staff dealing with reserved matters applications.

In the Spring Budget, the Chancellor pledged £3 million to match industry-led funding for a skills and education programme to attract more people to take up roles as local planners in planning authorities.

Data published by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities shows that in 4Q 2023, district level planning authorities in England received 85,200 applications for planning permission, down 9% from the same quarter a year earlier.

They decided 80,700 applications, down 12% on 4Q 2022.

There was also commentary around associated costs of meeting Part L, the energy efficiency requirements of the building regulations. One respondent suggested this could bring as much as a 10% uplift on future projects.

Looking to 1Q 2024, the housebuilders surveyed said they expected to see a slight increase in costs, an average of 0.3%.

If you are a housebuilder and would like to participate in the BCIS Private Housing Construction Price Index quarterly survey email: contactbcis@bcis.co.uk

For more information about BCIS, please visit: www.bcis.co.uk

Ends

Editors notes

About the Private Housing Construction Price Index

The BCIS Private Housing Construction Price Index is a measure of the prices paid by housebuilders for constructing houses/flats, i.e. changes in the costs of direct/subcontracted labour, plant and materials, overheads and profit attributed to the construction, but excluding the cost of land and other development costs and any development profit.

A range of small, medium and national housebuilders are surveyed each quarter to identify the change in prices paid for constructing a standard house type. Contributors are also asked to provide their expectations for price changes in the following quarter and the mean of these projections is published as a forecast for the current period.

About BCIS:

The Building Cost Information Service (BCIS) is the leading independent provider of construction data to the built environment and insurance sectors. For some 60 years, BCIS has been collecting, collating, analysing, modelling and interpreting cost information to support built environment professionals, helping them provide cost advice, to have confidence in commercial decision-making and to mitigate risk.

www.bcis.co.uk

Annual growth in the ONS private housing output and BCIS PHCPI.jpg

Annual growth in the ONS private housing output and BCIS PHCPI.jpg

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