Architecture Resilient as RIBA Revenue Tops £4bn

15 November 2024

Architecture Resilient as RIBA Revenue Tops £4bn

A RESILIENT UK architecture sector with total revenue up 13% to top £4 billion, are revealed by annual figures released today.

However, it also shows that architectural practices continue to face tighter profit margins amid rising costs.

The figures from the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) come from its annual Business Benchmarking report.

Architecture Resilient

Key findings from the RIBA Business Benchmarking 2024 report include:

  • Total revenue from RIBA Chartered Practices increased by 13% to £4 billion for the first time. This follows 2023’s 17% increase in revenue.
  • Average practice revenue has grown, with the biggest boost for medium-sized practices (10-50 employees).
  • Despite increasing revenues, a steep rise in overheads caused profits as a percentage of revenue to fall by 2%.
  • Payroll made up 54% of total practice expenditure. For most practices, payroll grew faster than revenue, squeezing profit margins, with large practices feeling the squeeze the most.
  • Practices are optimistic about the coming year, predicting 8% growth in revenue.
  • While private housing work was responsible for 27% of revenue overall, it remains vital to small practices, making up over 50% of revenue for practices with <10 staff.
  • Revenue from international work surged by 25%, building on last year’s strong growth.
  • The EU accounted for nearly half of all international work. Work in traditional markets such as Asia and the Middle East declined.
  • Large practices (100+ staff) were responsible for 81% of international revenue.
  • The overall contribution of international projects to total practice revenue has almost doubled in two years.
  • Staff numbers increased by 8% to over 40,000 people.
  • Improvements in Diversity and Inclusion are slow. 39% of staff identified as female and <1% non-binary/other. 84% of staff were white. The gender pay gap was 16% and the ethnicity pay gap was 13%.
Muyiwa Oki, RIBA President

Muyiwa Oki, RIBA President

RIBA President Muyiwa Oki said: “Our annual Business Benchmarking report … demonstrate the resilience of RIBA Chartered Practices who have increased overall revenue in a challenging year and remain optimistic about near-term prospects as they recover from economic and political instability.

“One thing is clear: architecture remains a powerhouse of the UK’s creative economy and global trade.

“Despite the fact that higher revenue has not necessarily brought higher profits, architecture has proven it can overcome considerable external challenges, from delays in the planning system to raised interest rates.”

The report uses data submitted by UK-based RIBA Chartered Practices in the 12 months to May 2024. It includes revenue, expenditure, profitability, salaries, types of work and global areas of growth.

Read a summary of the RIBA Business Benchmarking 2024 report.

>> Read more about RIBA in the news

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