Daily News (Los Angeles)

Constructi­on permits dip in California, but less than U.S.

- Jonathan Lansner is the business columnist for the Southern California News Group. He can be reached at jlansner@scng.com .

Permits for new California housing dipped slightly in 2023 — but it was still better than the national norm.

My trusty spreadshee­t looked at the National Associatio­n of Home Builders' tally of housing permits last year, comparing that with 2022 for all U.S. states and the District of Columbia.

California builders filed 111,221 permits last year (No. 3 among the states).

That was off 6% from 2022 — but that dip was still the 16th-best performanc­e nationally.

Of those California permits, 57,959 were for single-family houses (No. 4 nationally) — off 8% in a year (No. 31). California multifamil­y permits totaled 53,262 (No. 3) — off 3%

(No. 16).

Elsewhere in the U.S., 1.26 million permits were pulled in the 49 states and D.C. That's off 11%. Just nine states had increases.

Single-family permits were 851,268, off 6%. Only six states were up for the year.

Multifamil­y permits totaled 508,107, off 19%, with 15 states having increased filings.

Bottom line

Developers often complain that home-building is frequently limited by bureaucrat­ic hurdles. But 2023 was far more about a cloudy economic outlook, a mortgage rates jump and fears that too many apartments were being built.

Note that last year's California permits equaled 2.8 per 1,000 residents, the lowest ratio since 2020. Yet it's also above the average 2.2 permits per 1,000 residents pace since 2008.

Remember, the Great Recession changed how builders build. From 1990 to 2007, California permitting averaged 4 per 1,000.

Locally speaking

Here's how California's biggest home-building markets fared within the nation's 100 most-active metropolit­an areas for permitting.

Ponder the geographic

divide, with southern metros having a combined 6% increase in permits versus a 10% drop to the north …

LOS ANGELES-ORANGE

COUNTIES >> 30,691 overall permits in 2023 (No. 7 of

100) — off 6% versus 2022 (No. 46 change of the 100). Single-family houses? 11,810 permits (No. 14) — up 7% (No. 10). Multifamil­y? 18,881 permits (No. 5) — off 13% (No. 50).

INLAND EMPIRE >> 19,710 overall (No. 17) — up 21% (No. 11). Houses? 11,924 (No. 13) — off 2% (No. 39). Multifamil­y? 7,786 (No. 20) — up 89% (No. 10).

SACRAMENTO >> 11,917 overall (No. 29) — up 11% (No. 15). Houses? 7,941 (No. 24) — off 2% (No. 41). Multifamil­y? 3,976 (No. 35) — up 54% (No. 14).

SAN DIEGO >> 11,468 overall (No. 30) — up 21% (No. 10). Houses? 3,048 (No. 66) — off 13% (No. 75). Multifamil­y? 8,420 (No. 18) — up 42% (No. 15).

SAN FRANCISCO >> 7,478 overall (No. 39) — off 32% (No. 93). Houses? 3,037 (No. 67) — off 6% (No. 52). Multifamil­y? 4,441 (No. 32) — off 43% (No. 81).

SAN JOSE >> 6,288 overall (No. 51) — off 7%

(No. 51). Houses? 2,200 (No. 89) — off 40% (worst of the 100). Multifamil­y? 4,088 (No. 33) — up 32%

(No. 17).

FRESNO >> 3,223 overall (No. 90) — off 12%

(No. 62). Houses? 2,398 (No. 85) — off 17%

(No. 90). Multifamil­y? 825 (No. 83) — up 5% (No. 31).

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States