Twin Cities Home Building Permits Hit 4-Year Low in March

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The Twin Cities saw the fewest number of residential construction permits pulled for the month of March since 2015. Both single-family and multifamily permitted units fell by double digits. Single-family units fell to 339, a 12 percent drop from the 389 units in March of 2018. With permits pulled for 623 units in March 2019, multifamily fell by 24 percent compared to the 821 units permitted in March of last year.

“We are still feeling the lingering effects of a longer than usual winter on the housing market,” said John Rask, president of Housing First Minnesota “We have seen homebuyers out in numbers during the Spring Parade of Homes, and we expect homebuilding activity to pick up in the coming months.”

According to data compiled by the Keystone Report for Housing First Minnesota, there were 359 permits issued for a total of 962 units during four comparable weeks in the month of March.

“The recent drop in mortgage rates will certainly help homebuyers this spring,” said David Siegel, executive director of Housing First Minnesota. “Even with rising wages and lower mortgage rates there are still too many Minnesota families that are being priced out of the housing market. We need to address the housing affordability problem here in our state.”

For the month, Lakeville took the top spot with 35 permits issued. Lake Elmo came in next with 30 permits, followed by Woodbury with 27 permits and Plymouth with 21 permits issued. Rounding out the top five were Otsego and Dayton both with 17 permits issued.

Download the March Data Chart >>