Housing starts jumped 15% in September to the highest level since April 2010, the Commerce Department said Wednesday.
Starts climbed to a rate of 658,000 units, from a revised rate of 572,000 in August.
The rate surpassed economists’ forecasts of a 590,000 rate, Bloomberg reported.
Building permits, an indicator of future construction, declined 5% to 594,000, a five-month low, Bloomberg said.
Single-family home starts, which account for about 85% of the total, gained 1.7% to a 425,000 rate.
Work on multifamily units, which is often more volatile, jumped 51.3% to a 233,000 annual rate.
Starts rose in all four national regions, led by an 18.1% increase in the West and a 15.7% gain in the South, Bloomberg reported.