Architectural Billings Declined to 46.8 in June
Washington, DC, July 23, 2025-Architectural billings declined to 46.8 in June, down from 47.2 in May as more firms reported a decrease in billing, according to the AIA/Deltek Architecture Billings Index (ABI).
Inquiries into new projects increased for the second consecutive month and grew at the strongest pace since last fall with a score of 53.6, indicating clients are starting to send out RFPs and initiate conversations with architecture firms about potential projects after a lull since mid-winter. These inquiries do not necessarily translate into actual projects, as the value of newly signed design contracts declined for the 16th consecutive month in June. It is unlikely that firm billings will return to positive territory until the value of new design contracts also starts to increase again.
“Business conditions were soft nationwide in June, with a slight billing increase in the South for the first time since October,” said Kermit Baker, PhD, AIA chief economist. “Other regions saw declining billings, though at a slower pace. While all specializations experienced softer billings, the decline slowed for commercial/industrial and institutional firms. Multifamily firms faced the weakest conditions, with further declines.”
Regional averages were as follows South (50.6); Northeast (46.5); Midwest (45.7); West (45.8).
The sector index breakdown was institutional (49.2); commercial/industrial (47.4); mixed practice (firms that do not have at least half of their billings in any one other category) (45.5); multifamily residential (43.8).
The project inquiries index was 53.6, and the design contracts index was 46.0.
Related Topics:The American Institute of Architects