Home service economy saw mixed signals in Q2: Report

High borrowing costs and economic uncertainty shaped homeowners' behavior during the quarter, per a new Jobber report

Houses

Image: Unsplash

While inflation and interest rates remained relatively stable, high borrowing costs and economic uncertainty shaped homeowners’ behavior in Q2, according to software company Jobber’s quarterly home service report released Tuesday. 

The big picture: The annual rate of inflation hit 2.7 percent to wrap the quarter in June, while sales of both new and existing homes fell during the month, compared to last year, the report notes.  

  • Meanwhile, consumer sentiment recovered slightly, but overall confidence remained below last year’s levels throughout the quarter.

Why it matters: “Many homeowners are opting to invest in what they already own rather than take on large new projects, creating a steady stream of demand, though with tighter budgets and higher expectations for value,” the company writes.  

By the numbers: For ‘contracting’ businesses, including HVAC, plumbing, and electrical, ‘new work scheduled’ declined by 1.5 percent year-over-year during the quarter, according to the report, based on customer data.  

  • However, average invoice sizes rose 6.8 percent, and median revenue climbed 5.2 percent, it adds.
  • Digital payments represented 49 percent of all Jobber transactions in Q2 — the highest rate ever, and up from 33 percent during the same quarter in 2020.
  • Go deeper

What we’re watching: “Looking ahead, demand will likely continue to be shaped by macro cross-winds such as high borrowing costs, shifting consumer confidence, and uneven housing activity,” the report says

  • But, but, but: “Despite a more cautious economic backdrop in Q2, the home service sector has largely remained resilient,” it continued.

Keep reading

Tech giants should pay for residential HVAC installs, reports suggest

Tech giants should pay for residential HVAC installs, reports suggest

In recent months, some energy analysts have proposed a way for tech companies to free up grid capacity amid the AI-driven data center boom

The Department of Labor has a new boss: What to watch

The Department of Labor has a new boss: What to watch

The Senate on Monday confirmed Lori Chavez-DeRemer to lead the Department of Labor, where she'll oversee wage regulations, unions, and more

Charted: A decade of heat pump shipments

Charted: A decade of heat pump shipments

While heat pumps have carried total shipment growth in 2025, the longer-term data tells an even stronger story