How Tariffs Are Quietly Raising the Cost of Keeping Up Your Home

homeowner holding a clipboard in front of a house needing repairs, illustrating how a sell-leaseback with Sell2Rent provides cash for costly home maintenance

The $10,900 Number Hiding in Your Home Budget

 The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) released survey data from their April 2025 Housing Market Index that puts a hard number on the problem: builders estimate that recent tariff actions are adding an average of $10,900 per home in additional costs. That figure comes directly from builders who are already absorbing the impact across lumber, steel, aluminum, and manufactured goods.

To be clear: this isn't a projected fear. Suppliers have already moved. According to NAHB, the average supplier increased prices by 6.3% in response to announced, enacted, or expected tariffs. More than 60% of builders surveyed said they've already seen higher costs show up in their material orders.

And this number is almost certainly growing. The April survey predates several rounds of additional tariff escalation that have followed since, including new duties on lumber and wood products that took effect in October 2025.

If you're a homeowner, you might be thinking: "That's a builder's problem." It isn't. Every cost that hits a contractor, supplier, or builder eventually lands on the person writing the check. That's you.

Tariff Stat Band
$10,900
Added cost per home
from tariff actions
NAHB, April 2025
45%
Total duty on
Canadian lumber
Commerce Dept., 2025
34%
Building material cost rise
since Dec. 2020
NAHB
60%+
Builders already
seeing higher costs
NAHB/Wells Fargo HMI

Lumber: The Backbone of Every Repair Is Getting Pricier

 

Let's start with lumber, because wood is in almost every repair a homeowner makes. Deck boards. Subfloor replacement. A fence. Framing for an addition. Structural repairs after water damage. Even window and door installations involve wood.

Canada supplies roughly 85% of U.S. softwood lumber imports, and that relationship has gotten expensive. The Commerce Department increased antidumping and countervailing duties on Canadian lumber from 14.5% to 35%, and then tacked on an additional 10% Section 232 tariff, bringing the total duty on Canadian lumber to 45%.

The problem is that the U.S. simply doesn't produce enough softwood lumber on its own. According to NAHB, U.S. sawmills are currently operating at just 64% of their potential capacity, a figure that has been declining steadily since 2017. Ramping up domestic production takes years. In the meantime, builders and homeowners are paying the premium on imports.

Brookings Institution put the macro picture in stark terms: current tariffs are expected to add roughly $30 billion to the costs of residential construction investment across the country. The majority of that hits new construction, but renovations and maintenance projects are absorbing the rest.

 

Lumber Tariff Impact Chart
Tariff Impact by Category
How Much More You're Paying Per Material
Canadian Softwood Lumber +45% duty
Steel & Aluminum (structural, roofing) +25% tariff
Kitchen Cabinets & Vanities +25% tariff
Softwood Timber & Lumber (Section 232) +10% tariff
Major Appliances (2025 inflation rate) 2x inflation
Home Furniture (kitchen, living, dining) +75% faster than CPI
Sources: NAHB, Brookings Institution, Commerce Department, 2025. Bar widths are proportional representations, not exact percentage scales.

Steel, Aluminum, and the Projects That Hit the Hardest

 

Steel and aluminum tariffs of 25% took effect in March 2025, and they've sent ripple effects into a long list of common home projects. These aren't obscure materials. They're in roofing panels, gutters, window frames, HVAC systems, appliances, plumbing fixtures, structural framing, and virtually every fastener holding your home together.

For a homeowner considering a roof replacement, the numbers are real. Depending on materials, full roof replacements are now running $1,000 to $4,000 more than they cost in 2023 and 2024. Metal roofing has seen some of the steepest increases, with prices jumping sharply due to steel duties. Even asphalt shingles are more expensive, partly because they use petroleum-based materials and partly because the contractors installing them are paying more for every other material on the job site.

Kitchen and bathroom renovations are similarly affected. The average kitchen remodel now runs around $27,000 nationally, according to HomeAdvisor. Appliances containing steel components or manufactured in countries subject to tariffs have already seen price hikes, and cabinet and vanity tariffs of 25% add another layer on top of that.

HVAC is worth calling out specifically. It's the kind of system homeowners don't think about until it fails, and it typically fails at the worst possible moment. With steel and aluminum costs elevated, HVAC equipment prices have climbed, and that's on top of a labor market where skilled technicians are already expensive and hard to book.

 

The Material Costs Homeowners Often Overlook

 

Tariff conversations tend to focus on the big-ticket items. Lumber. Steel. But for homeowners, the cost pressure is actually showing up across a much wider range of materials.

Appliances prices have risen more than twice as fast as overall inflation in 2025, according to the Brookings Institution. Living room, kitchen, and dining room furniture has gone up more than 75% faster than baseline inflation. These aren't renovation-scale purchases. They're the normal replacement cycles every homeowner deals with: a refrigerator that stops cooling, a dishwasher that starts leaking, a washer that won't spin.

Windows are another pressure point. Insulated glass panes and aluminum or vinyl frames both touch materials subject to current tariffs. A homeowner replacing a few windows is looking at a meaningfully higher quote than they would have gotten two years ago.

And then there are plumbing fixtures: faucets, showerheads, valves, and pipe fittings, many of which are manufactured overseas or contain metal components that now carry an import premium. A bathroom renovation that involves replumbing is touching six or seven categories of tariffed goods simultaneously.

Building material costs overall have risen 34% since December 2020, according to NAHB. That number was climbing before this round of tariffs. It's still climbing now.

 

Home Project Cost Table
2025 Tariff Impact
Common Home Projects: What's Costing More
Project Tariffed Materials Est. Extra Cost Impact Level
Roof Replacement Steel, aluminum, asphalt, fasteners +$1,000–$4,000 High
Kitchen Remodel Cabinets, appliances, steel fixtures +$2,000–$6,000 High
Deck or Structural Repair Softwood lumber, hardware, framing +15–25% High
HVAC Replacement Steel/aluminum units, copper components +$500–$2,000 Medium
Bathroom Remodel Vanities, fixtures, tile, plumbing parts +$1,000–$3,500 Medium
Window Replacement Glass, aluminum/vinyl frames +10–20% Medium
Appliance Replacement Steel, imported components +2x inflation Rising

Why Homeowners Are Delaying Repairs (And Why That Gets Expensive)

 

Here's where the math starts to hurt in a different way. When repair costs spike, homeowners do what any reasonable person does: they wait. They see if the problem gets worse before committing to the expense. They shop for a lower quote. They defer the project to next season.

According to an Ipsos survey from October 2025, nearly 39% of Americans said they had postponed or skipped necessary home repairs to save money. That's up from just 27% in October 2023. In two years, the share of homeowners deferring maintenance has grown by nearly half.

The problem with deferred maintenance is that it compounds. A small roof leak becomes water damage. A faulty HVAC unit becomes a full replacement. A window with a broken seal becomes mold. The repair that might have cost $800 in March can cost $4,000 by December, and that's before materials get more expensive again.

Sixty percent of homeowners in a U.S. News survey said unexpected repairs are their top concern with their current home. Almost half said they're worried a major repair will hit within the next year. That anxiety is not irrational. It's grounded in real math.

 

What This Means for Homeowners Who Are Already Feeling Stretched

 

The conversation about tariffs and home costs tends to stay at the policy level: trade disputes, domestic manufacturing, supply chain resilience. But for a homeowner juggling a mortgage, utilities, insurance, property taxes, and now a spike in every repair estimate they receive, this is a personal budget conversation.

A lot of homeowners are equity-rich but cash-tight. They've watched their home value rise over the past several years, which sounds like good news, but that equity doesn't pay a contractor. It doesn't cover the new water heater. It doesn't replace the garage door or fix the deck boards softening at the edge.

And the irony is real: the rising cost of maintaining a home is hitting the people with the most equity hardest, because they often have the most house to maintain, and the least liquid cash available to do it.

At the same time, the traditional ways of tapping home equity (a home equity loan, a HELOC, a cash-out refinance) all come with the same obstacle. Interest rates are still elevated, lenders have tightened their standards, and adding another monthly payment to an already strained budget is not always a realistic option.

There's a different path worth knowing about. Learn about the sale-leaseback option.

 

A Different Way to Think About Your Equity Right Now

 

A sale-leaseback is a financial arrangement where you sell your home to an investor at market value and continue living in it as a renter. You unlock your equity in one transaction, you eliminate the mortgage payment, and you hand off the ongoing financial burden of maintenance, property taxes, and homeowners insurance to the investor who now owns the property. Learn how Sell2Rent's process works.

It's not a loan. There's no new monthly debt payment. It's a clean transaction that converts the equity you've built into liquidity you can actually use, while letting you stay in the home you know and the neighborhood you love. See why homeowners choose Sell2Rent.

For homeowners who are facing a major repair and don't have the cash, who are watching their monthly expenses climb and don't see relief coming, or who have significant equity sitting in their home but can't access it through traditional channels, a sale-leaseback puts that equity to work without forcing a move.

The maintenance burden alone is worth thinking through. As a renter, you're no longer the person calling contractors when the roof leaks or the HVAC unit fails. You're not absorbing the cost of tariff-inflated lumber when the deck needs replacing. Those responsibilities shift. And in an environment where every repair quote is coming in higher than expected, that shift has real dollar value.

You can estimate your equity with Sell2Rent's free home equity calculator to get a sense of what your home qualifies for.

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Find out how much equity you can unlock, without moving.

Repair costs are rising. Maintenance bills keep climbing. If you're equity-rich but cash-tight, there's a path that puts your home to work for you, on your terms.

No obligation. No pressure. Takes less than 2 minutes.

The Cost of Owning Is Going Up. Your Options Don't Have to Narrow.

 

Tariffs are a policy tool, not a permanent state. Eventually, trade negotiations move, domestic production adjusts, and material costs stabilize. But that timeline is measured in years, not months, and U.S. sawmills operating at 64% capacity aren't going to bridge the lumber gap by summer.

In the meantime, homeowners are absorbing real cost increases on things they have no control over. The question isn't whether repair and maintenance costs are higher. They are. The question is how you position yourself given that reality.

Some homeowners will defer repairs and hope the timing works out. Some will take on debt to cover the gap. Some will sell and move. And some will look at the equity they've built over years and decide that converting it into financial flexibility, while staying in the home they love, is the most sensible move available to them right now.

If you're in that last group, Sell2Rent was built for exactly this moment. Read what other homeowners have said about the process.

You don't have to figure out how to pay for a roof you didn't budget for in a market you didn't ask for. There's another way to look at what you've built. Get your free equity estimate.

FAQ — Tariffs & Home Costs
Frequently Asked Questions
Tariffs, Home Costs, and Your Options

Possibly, but not on a timeline most homeowners can plan around. Trade negotiations move slowly, and NAHB notes that even if tariffs were removed tomorrow, domestic lumber production (currently at 64% of capacity) would take years to fill the supply gap. Material costs tend to fall slower than they rise. Planning as if prices stay elevated is the safer approach.

Projects involving structural lumber, metal roofing, steel framing, HVAC systems, kitchen cabinets, and appliances are seeing the steepest increases. Roof replacements are running $1,000 to $4,000 higher than 2023 prices. Kitchen remodels involving imported cabinets or appliances are similarly impacted. Minor exterior projects and landscaping tend to be less affected.

For structural and weatherproofing repairs (roof, HVAC, foundation, windows), deferring often costs more in damage than the savings from waiting. Small problems compound quickly. For cosmetic or optional renovations, you have more flexibility. The bigger question is whether cash flow is the underlying issue. If it is, solving the cash flow problem may matter more than the timing of any individual repair.

This is one of the most common situations homeowners are navigating right now. You've built equity, but you can't touch it without taking on debt at elevated interest rates, or selling and moving out. A sale-leaseback through Sell2Rent lets you unlock that equity without moving. You sell the home at market value, receive your equity, and continue living there as a renter. Maintenance, property taxes, and homeowners insurance become the investor's responsibility. Estimate your equity here.

A home equity loan or HELOC adds a monthly debt payment on top of your existing mortgage. You're still responsible for all maintenance, taxes, and insurance. A sale-leaseback eliminates the mortgage entirely and transfers the cost burden of homeownership to the investor. There's no new debt. The trade-off is that you no longer own the property, though you continue living in it under a lease. For homeowners who are cash-tight and not focused on building additional equity, the structural difference is meaningful. Learn how the process works.

No. That's the core of how a sale-leaseback works. You sell the home to an investor, and at closing you transition to a lease. You stay in the same home, on the same street, in the same neighborhood. Nothing about your daily life changes physically. The financial structure changes, because you're no longer a homeowner carrying the costs of ownership. You're a renter with cash in hand.

Sources: National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Housing Market Index, April 2025. Brookings Institution, "Recent Tariffs Threaten Residential Construction," October 2025. U.S. News & World Report, "Rising Repair Costs Homeowner Survey," June 2025. NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index, March and April 2025. CBS News, "Tariffs are pushing remodeling costs up," June 2025. Empower, "Why Home Repairs Could Cost More," November 2025. Ipsos Homeowner Survey, October 2025.

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Illustration of two men shaking hands in the front yard of a house, symbolizing the successful closing and final agreement of a sale leaseback transaction or investment partnership.