Architecture Billings Declined to 43.8 in January
Washington, DC, February 18, 2026--The AIA/Deltek Architecture Billings Index (ABI) dropped to 43.8 in January, down from 47.1 in December, signaling a greater number of firms experienced a decline in billings compared to the previous month.
In January, inquiries for new projects dropped for the first time since April 2025, alongside a decline in newly signed design contracts, as client uncertainty persisted and new projects tended to be smaller in scale. Billings decreased across the country, except in the South, where they held steady. Firms in the Midwest, which saw growth in late 2025, are now experiencing declines again. Business conditions remained challenging across all specializations, with multifamily residential firms seeing a slower rate of decline but no billings growth since mid-2022.
"Overall economic conditions remain subdued, with revised 2025 employment data revealing smaller gains than anticipated and nonfarm payrolls increasing by just 130,000 in January 2026," said AIA chief economist, Richard Branch. "That said, construction employment was a bright spot, adding 33,000 jobs, including 25,000 in nonresidential specialty trades, signaling a positive shift after stagnant growth last year. Architectural services also showed resilience, with a net gain of 1,300 positions in 2025 despite early declines and a slight dip in December."
• Regional averages: South (50.2); Midwest (46.3); West (46.3); Northeast (42.3)
• Sector index breakdown: multifamily residential (48.4); institutional (46.8); commercial/industrial (43.9); mixed practice (firms that do not have at least half of their billings in any one other category) (43.4)
• Project inquiries index: 49.3
• Design contracts index: 42.7