The latest NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index shows sentiment ticking up to 39 in December. That’s an improvement, but it’s still well below the breakeven level of 50, where builders feel conditions are more good than bad.
In other words, “slightly better” doesn’t mean easy. The details tell the real story.
Two-thirds of builders are offering incentives. Forty percent are cutting prices. Material and labor costs remain elevated, while tariffs and regulatory friction continue to squeeze margins. Buyer traffic hasn’t meaningfully recovered, even as inventory increases competition across many markets.
There is one bright spot worth noting.
Builders’ expectations for future sales have stayed above 50 for three straight months, suggesting cautious optimism heading into 2026. Easing monetary policy may help loan conditions at the margin—but it won’t eliminate the underlying pressures builders are managing day to day.
This is the environment builders know well: progress comes in inches, not breakthroughs.


