The overlooked obstacle keeping America from building the homes it needs

National Association of Home Builders CEO Jim Tobin says the US is short approximately 250,000 workers

High mortgage rates aren't the only reason homeownership remains out of reach for many Americans.

Behind the scenes, homebuilders are grappling with an overlooked challenge — a shortage of skilled workers — that is slowing construction and making it harder to close the nation's housing gap.

Builders say the labor shortage is creating a ripple effect throughout the housing market, delaying projects, raising construction costs and limiting the number of new homes coming online at a time when demand continues to outpace supply.

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New homes being built by CastleRock Communities in Kyle, Texas.

NAHB estimates government regulations add nearly $132,000 to the price of a typical new home. (Matthew Busch/Bloomberg/Getty Images / Getty Images)

"Labor is one of the largest and most expensive inputs when it comes to home production and land development," Jim Tobin, president and CEO of the National Association of Home Builders, told Fox News Digital.

He said that every month, the construction industry is short by approximately 250,000 workers.

"It's been as high as 400,000 jobs short when we were really cooking along a few years ago," Tobin said, adding that the labor gap "is a persistent shortage."

And the industry's labor needs are only expected to grow in coming years.

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Builders lift wood frames that are part of a home.

Housing industry leaders say states that have prioritized homebuilding have been better positioned to accommodate population growth and economic expansion. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

A recent Home Builders Institute and National Association of Home Builders report estimates builders will need roughly 723,000 new workers annually to keep pace with demand and help close the nation's 1.5 million-home housing gap.

The shortage is already affecting how quickly homes can be built. According to Home Builders Institute President and CEO Ed Brady, labor constraints are extending construction timelines and driving up costs.

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"This shortage adds nearly two extra months to building timelines, inflating costs and delaying delivery," Brady told Fox News Digital.

Builders say replenishing the skilled trades pipeline is only part of the solution.

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A home is seen in California with a an "open house" sign in front of it.

An "Open House" sign in front of a home for sale in the Woodland Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles, California on July 13, 2025.  (Eric Thayer/Bloomberg/Getty Images / Getty Images)

Tobin said many construction jobs do not require a four-year college degree and can provide stable, middle-class careers, but the home construction industry has struggled for years to attract enough workers to replace retiring tradespeople.