Aging Infrastructure Creates Steady Renovation Demand
Markets dominated by housing stock built before 1990 produce remarkably consistent demand for replacement and upgrade services. Aging electrical panels, deteriorating plumbing, worn-out HVAC systems, and outdated roofing create a baseline of non-discretionary repair work that persists regardless of economic conditions. For service providers, these markets offer recession-resistant lead flow because the work cannot be deferred indefinitely.
The aging infrastructure advantage compounds over time. As more homes in a market cross critical age thresholds — 15 years for HVAC, 20 years for roofing, 25+ years for plumbing — the total addressable demand grows even without new construction. Lead buyers in mature housing markets should expect steady, predictable monthly volumes with less seasonal variation than weather-dependent markets.