UK construction output down 0.6%: planning bottlenecks and 2026 pipeline for project teams
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on The Construction Index
30 Second Briefing
UK construction output fell 0.6% in October 2025, with new work down 0.7% and repair & maintenance down 0.6%, while three‑month output to October slipped 0.3% as private housing R&M dropped 2.3%. New work over the three‑month period edged up 0.1%, but four of nine sectors contracted, signalling weak momentum in core building markets. Aecom buildings & places managing director Jo Streeten points to the government’s pledge to hire 350 planners and deploy AI‑driven digital review tools as critical to accelerating planning decisions and unlocking major programmes into 2026.
Technical Brief
- October’s 0.6% fall followed a 0.2% rise in September, indicating short-term volatility in workload.
- Four of nine ONS construction sectors contracted over the three‑month period, concentrating risk in specific markets.
- Private housing repair and maintenance was the largest drag, with a 2.3% three‑month decline.
- Aecom’s Jo Streeten links client hesitancy on major programmes directly to slow, unpredictable planning decisions.
- Government budget commitment to recruit 350 additional planners targets planning capacity rather than capital budgets.
- AI‑enabled digital tools are envisaged to automate planning submission reviews, reducing manual checking time and queries.
- Faster, more predictable planning approvals are seen as critical to converting pipeline schemes into 2026 site starts.
Our Take
Aecom’s role in the Leamside Line feasibility work in the North East, noted in our recent coverage, suggests that even as UK-wide construction output softens, rail and transport planning commissions are still flowing through to consultants rather than main contractors.
The commitment to hire 350 planners in the UK, set against a slight dip in output, signals that government is trying to front‑load capacity in local planning and approvals so that projects can move more quickly once fiscal and interest‑rate conditions improve.
Within our 230 Infrastructure stories, the UK appears frequently in pieces where weak short‑term output data contrasts with a heavy pipeline of transport and regeneration schemes, implying that firms like Aecom may see steadier workload in early‑stage design and advisory than in delivery over the next year.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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