Around £3.65 is spent on DIY tools and materials for every £1 spent on tradesmen, showing how important DIY is to UK households.
DIY is as much a part of a British Bank Holiday as terrible weather and sausages on the BBQ. New figures released by Lloyds Bank reveal that DIY spending increased by 13% to £5.8bn last year - equivalent to £210 per household.
By contrast, the amount spent on tradesmen's services fell by 15% between 2014 and 2015 to £1.6bn. DIY spending is at its highest level since 2008, although it is still 7% below the peak of £6.2bn in 2008 and 14% lower than a decade ago (£6.7bn in 2005).
The recent resurgence in DIY has seen spending on tools and equipment for home improvements, ranging from plumbing tools to lawnmowers, increase by 5% from £4.8bn in 2014 to £5.1bn in 2015. Real spending on DIY materials rose by 13% from £0.6bn to £0.7bn.
Andrew Mason, Lloyds Bank Mortgage Products Director, said: “Taking a DIY approach to home improvementshelps cut costs and provides homeowners with the opportunity to put their own distinctive stamp on their property. Although we’re not quite back to the spending heights of about a decade ago, these latest figures do show sustained growth in home improvement spending over the past seven years. This indicates a growing confidence in the housing market and wider economy, in stark contrast to the sharp fall in spending between 2007 and 2011, which reflected the worst of the economic and housing downturns during this period."
Overall home maintenance spending up in 2015
Total spending on home maintenance (i.e. DIY and tradesmen's services) increased by 0.3% to £7.38 billion in 2015 from £7.36 billion in 2014. This was the third successive annual increase, taking overall spending on home maintenance to its highest level since 2008 (£7.9 billion).
The past ten years have demonstrated how spending on home maintenance has a strong link to the performance of the housing market. Spending reduced by around 31% between the height of the housing market in 2007 (£9.0 billion), and the bottom of the market in 2011 (£6.3 billion). As the housing market picked up between 2011 and 2015, spending on DIY increased by 18% again to bring home maintenance spending closer to 2005 levels.
Home maintenance spending 5% lower than in 2004
Total spending on home maintenance is 15% lower than ten years ago, at £7.4 billion in 2015 against £8.6 billion in 2005. This decline has been entirely due to a fall in expenditure on materials, which declined by more than 63% over the decade. In contrast, spending on tools rose by 5% whilst spending on trade services declined by 15% since 2005.