Spending on DIY has declined to its lowest level in over 15 years amid the continued squeeze on household finances and a subdued housing market, according to research by Lloyds TSB.
Households spent a total of £7.8 billion on DIY in 2011 – equivalent to around £300 per household; the lowest total since records began in 1996 and almost half of the £15.5 billion spent at the peak in 2004. There was a fall of 17 per cent in real terms (ie, after allowing for inflation) from the total of £9.4 billion spent in 2010.
Significant declines in spending on both DIY tools and materials in 2011
Between 2010 and 2011, real expenditure on tools and equipment for home improvements – ranging from plumbing tools to the garden trimmer – declined by almost a fifth (-19 per cent) from £3.8 billion in 2010 to £3.1 billion in 2011. This is slightly more negative than the 16 per cent (£5.6 billion to £4.7 billion) drop in spending on DIY materials such as paint and plaster.
Total spending on home maintenance (ie, DIY and tradesmen’s services) fell by 10 per cent to £14.8bn in 2011 from £16.4bn in 2010. In contrast to the significant fall in DIY spending, expenditure on tradesmen’s services rose by 1 per cent in real terms over the past year from £6.97bn to £7.04bn.
Despite the small rise last year, there has been a steady decline in spending on tradesmen’s services in the past 10 years, which have fallen 40 per cent overall since 2001. Over the same period, real household spending on DIY fell by just over a third (-34 per cent).
The past ten years has been very much a period of two highly differing halves. Between 2001 and 2007, spending on DIY increased by almost a fifth (18 per cent) as the housing market boomed. This was particularly reflected in an 82 per cent rise in spending on tools. Since the peak of the housing market in 2007, the decline in real DIY spending has been dramatic, falling by 44 per cent in real terms.
Households spent 10 per cent more on DIY than on tradesmen in 2011. This is in contrast to a decade ago when homeowners were spending slightly more (one per cent) on hiring tradesmen than on DIY.
Suren Thiru, Lloyds TSB housing economist, commented:
“Consumers have been experiencing the biggest squeeze on their discretionary income for over a year. Couple that with a very subdued housing market, and it is unsurprising that so many are cutting back on home improvements. With economic conditions expected to remain challenging, the current squeeze on spending on both DIY and tradesmen is likely to continue for some time yet.”