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Industry Insight Report: Construction Q1-2026
The construction industry opened 2026 with a cautious but active market. Total U.S. construction spending was reported at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $2.19 trillion in January 2026, down slightly from December 2025 but still near historically elevated levels. The broader story is not a uniform slowdown, but a shift in where demand is strongest. Data centers, power infrastructure, healthcare, transportation, and utility-related projects are drawing attention, while some office and rate-sensitive residential work remains uneven.
For owners thinking about a future sale, buyers are looking beyond top-line revenue. They want backlog quality, labor stability, margin discipline, safety records, and management depth. In today’s market, a construction company that can show repeatable performance and reduced owner dependence is more likely to stand out.
Key Trends Shaping Construction in Q1 2026
Data Centers and Power Projects Lead Demand
AI infrastructure continues to reshape construction demand. AGC’s 2026 outlook noted that data centers and power projects are among the strongest expected growth areas for contractors this year, along with select public infrastructure work. This trend is especially relevant to electrical, mechanical, site preparation, utility, concrete, and specialty contractors that support large-scale facilities.
For construction business owners, this creates a valuation question: is your company tied to end markets that buyers believe will continue growing? Contractors with exposure to data centers, energy, grid upgrades, and essential infrastructure may receive stronger interest from strategic buyers and private equity groups seeking resilient demand.
Labor, Costs, and Financing Remain Pressure Points
Even where demand is present, execution is harder. Contractors continue to face skilled labor shortages, elevated materials uncertainty, and financing pressure. AGC reported that contractors are more cautious heading into 2026 due to concerns around the broader economy, recession risk, and material costs.
These issues matter directly in M&A. Buyers are asking whether a company has dependable crews, subcontractor depth, documented estimating practices, and the ability to protect margins when costs move. A strong backlog can help support valuation, but only when the buyer believes the work can be delivered profitably.
Texas Remains Active, but Buyers Are More Selective
Texas construction activity continues to benefit from population growth, infrastructure needs, industrial development, and energy-related investment. The state is also positioned to benefit from data center and power demand, although grid capacity, permitting, and labor access remain important constraints. For owners searching “sell construction business Texas” or “Construction business valuation Texas,” the takeaway is clear: location helps, but specialization and operational strength matter more.
A Construction business broker Austin owners work with should be looking closely at customer concentration, backlog quality, workforce transferability, and whether the company’s leadership can function without the owner in every daily decision.
M&A Outlook for Construction Businesses
Construction M&A remained active heading into 2026. Capstone Partners reported that construction M&A expanded for the third consecutive year in 2025, with data center and power infrastructure demand supporting the outlook for 2026. Buyers are pursuing scale, specialized capabilities, and exposure to long-term infrastructure themes.
At Lion Business Advisors, we are seeing that buyers are especially interested in construction businesses with clean financials, recurring or repeat customers, strong field leadership, and defensible margins. A construction business sale becomes more compelling when the seller can show that revenue is not dependent on one customer, one estimator, or the owner’s personal relationships.
Outlook for the Rest of 2026
The construction market is not moving evenly, but opportunity remains for well-positioned firms. Contractors tied to data centers, power, utilities, public infrastructure, and essential services may continue to see stronger buyer attention than companies exposed primarily to softer office or rate-sensitive work.
Owners considering a sale in the next one to three years should use this period to clean up financial reporting, document backlog, strengthen management, and evaluate how transferable the business would appear to a buyer.
Ready to understand what your construction business may be worth? Request a confidential business valuation from Lion Business Advisors.
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