Latest Figures Show Fall in 2020 New Build Homes Starts and Completions

18 March 2021

Housing builds 2020

NEW FIGURES by the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government show a fall in both the number of new build homes started and completed during 2020. The government figures put the government target of building 300,000 homes a year by the middle of the decade in doubt.

Starts also fell in all regions apart from London – with the largest decrease in the north-west – putting Boris Johnson’s aim of ‘levelling up’ at risk.

According to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, the indicators of new housing supply statistics should be regarded as a leading indicator of overall supply.  They show:

  • An estimated 148,630 new build dwellings were completed in the year to December 2020, a decrease of 17 per cent compared to the year to December 2019.
  • There were 127,600 estimated new build dwellings starts in the year to December 2020, a 16 per cent decreasecompared to the year to December 2019.
  • In the year to December 2020,starts fell in all regions except for London. In London, starts were 11 per cent higher in the year to December 2020 than the year to December 2019The largest decrease was 27 per cent in the North West.
  • The number of dwellings where building work has started on site was 42,110 in October to December 2020. This is a 16 per cent increase when compared to last quarter.
  • The number of dwellings on site was 46,950 in October to December 2020. This is a 4 per cent increase compared to the previous quarter.
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Clive Docwra MD of McBains

Clive Docwra, managing director of property and construction consultancy McBains, said: “The impact of COVID no doubt has had an impact on housebuilding rates, but it’s clear that even with starts and completions increasing in the last quarter of 2020 as construction sites fully returned after lockdown, that housebuilding is still way off the rate needed to meet the government’s target.

“They also show the challenge of levelling up disparity between the number of new homes in London compared to other parts of England, especially the north.

“The volume housebuilders won’t be able to deliver this target on their own, so the government needs to support small and medium-sized housebuilders to help meet the target, and also ensure that it delivers on its rhetoric to cut red tape and speed up ‘permission in principle’ for new homes.”

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