A
Accounting Solutions LLP
CPA & Advisory for Contractors
Data updated automatically from official government & Federal Reserve sources

Construction Economy & Interest Rate Tracker

Current interest rates, construction activity, material-cost trends, and economic indicators that affect contractor cash flow, financing, and profitability.

Last updated: July 16, 2026 · 3:53 PM GMT+0000 Figures are drawn from official government and Federal Reserve sources. This page is for general information only — not accounting, tax, or lending advice.
Some data sources have not refreshed recently. Showing the most recent successfully stored values — figures may be stale.
Live data feed is temporarily unavailable. The dashboard is displaying the last values stored successfully — nothing has been blanked out.
Live Dashboard

Current Economic Indicators

U.S. Prime Rate

Jul 14, 2026
6.75%
+0 bps
Previous: 6.75%

Often influences business lines of credit, variable-rate loans, and contractor working-capital financing.

Source: Federal Reserve (H.15)

SOFR

Jul 15, 2026
3.64%
+1 bps
Previous: 3.63%

A major benchmark used in commercial and floating-rate financing.

Source: Fed. Reserve Bank of New York

Federal Funds Rate

Jul 16, 2026
3.50–3.75%
+0 bps
Previous: 3.50–3.75%

Helps shape overall borrowing costs and lending conditions across the economy.

Source: FOMC / Federal Reserve

10-Year Treasury Yield

Jul 14, 2026
4.58%
−4 bps
Previous: 4.62%

A broad indicator of longer-term financing conditions and economic expectations.

Source: U.S. Treasury / FRED

Total Construction Spending

May 2026 (SAAR)
$2,210.2B
+0.1% MoM
Previous: $2,207.1B

Shows the overall direction of public and private construction activity nationwide.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Building Permits

May 2026 (SAAR)
1.41M
−0.9% MoM
Previous: 1.42M

A forward-looking indicator of future residential construction activity.

Source: Census / HUD

Additional Construction Indicators

A broader read on demand, labor, and material-cost pressure across the construction economy.

Housing Starts

SAAR
1.18M
−8.7% YoY
Prior: 1.39M · May 2026 (SAAR)

New residential projects breaking ground — a near-term pipeline signal for residential trades.

Source: Census / HUD

Residential Construction Spending

SAAR
$942.8B
+1.8% YoY
Prior: $939.3B · May 2026 (SAAR)

Private residential building activity, tied to homebuilder and remodel demand.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Nonresidential Construction Spending

SAAR
$1,267.4B
−3.8% YoY
Prior: $1,267.7B · May 2026 (SAAR)

Commercial, institutional, and infrastructure work — key for GCs and specialty subs.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Manufacturing Construction Spending

SAAR
$174.8B
−21.9% YoY
Prior: $177.2B · May 2026 (SAAR)

Factory and plant construction, a bright spot driven by reshoring investment.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Construction Employment

jobs
8.33M
+0.8% YoY
Prior: 8.32M · Jun 2026

Total payroll employment in construction — a gauge of labor availability and demand.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

Construction Unemployment Rate

NSA
4.7%
+1.3 pts YoY
Prior: 4.1% · Jun 2026

Lower rates typically mean tighter labor markets and upward wage pressure.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

PPI: Construction Inputs

index
344.2
+6.9% YoY
Prior: 347.1 · Jun 2026

Producer prices for materials and inputs — the leading edge of estimating cost pressure.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

Avg. 30-Year Mortgage Rate

avg
6.49%
−0.2 pts YoY
Prior: 6.43% · Jul 9, 2026

Shapes homebuyer affordability and, downstream, residential project demand.

Source: Freddie Mac PMMS
Contractor Economic Snapshot

What the Current Economy Means for Contractors

Plain-English interpretation of the numbers above — written for contractors, not economists.

Financing

With the prime rate at 6.75% and SOFR near 3.64%, variable-rate credit lines and equipment loans have eased from their peak but remain well above pre-2022 levels. Lock rate quotes quickly and weigh fixed versus floating structures before financing new equipment, vehicles, or customer projects.

Cash Flow

Borrowing is still costly, so idle receivables are expensive — every dollar stuck in a slow-paying job may be financed near prime. Bill on milestones, invoice promptly, chase aging receivables, and keep line-of-credit balances lean to protect working capital.

Estimating & Margins

Construction input prices are up roughly 6.9% year over year, so bids priced months ago may no longer protect your margin. Shorten bid-validity windows, add price-escalation clauses on longer jobs, and document every change order to avoid absorbing cost creep.

Growth Decisions

Building permits and housing starts have softened year over year while manufacturing construction stays strong. Model new debt against realistic backlog rather than peak-season revenue, and favor disciplined, job-costed growth over overextending while financing remains expensive.

Interpretation generated 2026-07-16 17:09:39 from the official figures above.

Historical Trends

Explore how each indicator has moved over time. Hover any point for detail.

U.S. Prime Rate

Source: Federal Reserve (FRED), U.S. Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics
Interactive Tool

How Much Are Higher Interest Rates Costing Your Business?

Estimate the monthly and annual cash-flow impact of a rate change on any business loan.

Estimated Impact

Enter your loan details and select Calculate Impact to see the estimated monthly and annual cost of a rate change.

Previous monthly payment
Current monthly payment
Monthly payment increase
Annual cash-flow impact
Extra interest over remaining term

Estimates only, based on standard amortization. This calculator is not a lending offer and does not reflect fees, compounding conventions, or your actual loan terms.

Need help determining whether your company can safely afford new debt?

Schedule a Contractor Financial Review

Get the Monthly Contractor Economic Update

Receive a concise monthly update explaining changes in interest rates, construction demand, material pricing, and contractor financing conditions.

  • What changed and why it matters for contractors
  • Practical cash-flow and financing takeaways
  • No spam — unsubscribe anytime

You’re on the list

Check your inbox to confirm. Your first monthly update is on its way.

Something went wrong. Please check your name and a valid email address, then try again.

By subscribing you consent to receive email from Accounting Solutions LLP. We never sell your data. Unsubscribe anytime.

Data Sources & Methodology

This dashboard draws on official government and central-bank data. Each metric shown above lists its specific source and observation date. Values are fetched server-side on a schedule, stored in WordPress, and served from that store — so the page stays fast and continues to show the last good value even if a source is briefly unavailable.

Federal Reserve Board
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)
U.S. Census Bureau
Bureau of Labor Statistics

Economic data may be revised after initial publication. Financing terms available to an individual business depend on creditworthiness, collateral, lender policies, loan structure, and other factors. This page is provided for general informational purposes and does not constitute accounting, tax, investment, or lending advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

The U.S. Prime Rate shown in the dashboard above reflects the most recent value published by the Federal Reserve. The prime rate is set by banks and typically moves with the Federal Reserve’s federal funds target. Always confirm the live figure in the dashboard before making financial decisions.

Many business lines of credit, working-capital loans, and variable-rate equipment loans are priced as “prime plus a margin.” When prime rises, your monthly interest cost on any variable-rate balance rises with it, which directly reduces available cash flow.

SOFR (the Secured Overnight Financing Rate) is a benchmark interest rate based on overnight transactions in the U.S. Treasury repurchase market. It is published by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and is widely used to price commercial and floating-rate business loans.

SOFR replaced LIBOR as the primary U.S. dollar benchmark interest rate. LIBOR was phased out, and most new commercial loans and floating-rate contracts now reference SOFR instead.

Interest rates influence contractors in several ways: the cost of financing equipment and vehicles, the interest on lines of credit used to bridge payroll and materials, customer demand for financed projects, and homebuyer affordability that drives residential work.

Higher rates tend to cool interest-rate-sensitive segments first — residential building and speculative development — because financing costs rise for both developers and buyers. Infrastructure, public, and reshoring-driven manufacturing work is often more resilient.

Equipment loan rates depend on your credit profile, the equipment as collateral, loan term, and lender. Rates generally track prime and Treasury yields. Use the calculator on this page to model how a given rate affects your monthly payment and total interest.

Bill and collect faster, shorten bid validity windows, add price-escalation clauses, keep a lean line-of-credit balance, and job-cost every project so you know true margins. A fractional CFO or advisory review can help you model debt affordability before you commit.

Watch the prime rate and SOFR for financing costs, total and residential construction spending for demand, building permits and housing starts as leading indicators, and the producer price index for construction inputs to anticipate material cost pressure.

Each metric updates on the publishing schedule of its official source — daily for market rates like SOFR and Treasury yields, and monthly for series such as construction spending and building permits. The “last updated” timestamp reflects the most recent successful data refresh.

Accounting Solutions LLP
Contractor-focused CPA & advisory. Bookkeeping · Tax · Payroll · Fractional CFO · Job Costing. © 2026 Accounting Solutions LLP. For informational purposes only.