Latest Industry Figures Show Decline in Backlog Projects

Construction Worker graphic courtesy of

Contractors doing commercial work are reporting their lowest backlog numbers in six months, perhaps indicating tougher economic times ahead, according to a new survey just released by the American Builders and Contractors.

That survey reveals that the group’s Construction Backlog Indicator is now down to 8.4 months. That figure represents a trendline that has been generally declining since the summer of 2023, with variations here and there.

The 8.4-month backlog is specific to commercial and institutional projects, notes the survey, while the figures for the heavy industrial sector reveal a higher 8.8-month backlog, with the numbers in the infrastructure sector at 9.8 months.

The backlog figures show a decided regional flavor: the Northeast is reporting a 7.7-month backlog, followed by the Midwest and West at 8.1 months each. The greatest breathing room was seen in the South where contactors reported a 9.6-month backlog.

In a statement, Anirban Basu, ABC chief economist, noted that some 65% of firms said they “think the U.S. construction industry is contracting.”

Characterizing that input as a “dismal assessment,” Basu added that “23% of contractors expect their sales to decline over the next month, the highest share in over a year.”

Not for the first time, it is the smaller firms that are experiencing the shortest backlog. For companies with revenue at the $30 million or less level, the October backlog stood at 7.3 months, notably below the national average.

Companies with revenue in the $30 million to $50 million range reported an overall backlog of 9.4 months, followed by companies at the $50 million to $100 million level with a 10.4 month backlog.

The greatest backlog, at 12.2 months, was recorded with firms reporting revenue in excess of $100 million.

Whatever the backlog figures, construction firms in general, noted Basu, remain “sustained by still-elevated manufacturing construction and a surging data center sector.”

Basu added that just under 15% of all contractors are currently under contract to work on a data center, and that those companies have a markedly high backlog of 10.9 months.

November 14, 2025

By Garry Boulard

Image courtesy of Pixabay

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