Within the industry, firms classified as providing specialised construction activities are consistently the most affected across Great Britain. However, analysis shows that their numbers are proportional to their overall share within the construction sector.
This category includes companies providing a range of work, typically on a subcontract basis, from demolition and site preparation to electrical and plumbing installation, and finishing work like plastering, painting and glazing.
The Insolvency Service also publishes figures for Northern Ireland, but not with sector breakdowns.
Analysis by EY-Parthenon(4) on profit warnings issued by listed construction companies has shown particular vulnerabilities in the industry.
It revealed over half of companies in the FTSE household goods and home construction sector issued profit warnings in 2024.
Reflecting on all sectors in 2Q2025, it reported: ‘UK-listed companies issued 64 profit warnings in Q3 2025, slightly above Q2 (59) but well below last year’s peak (84). A steadier number of warnings suggests that many of 2025’s economic and geopolitical pressures are now priced into earnings forecasts, but risks continue to evolve.
‘The broader economic backdrop is still fragile, with restructuring activity increasing as firms face tighter liquidity and reduced flexibility. If this is a pause in profit warnings, it’s an uneasy one.’
According to the report, six profit warnings were issued by FTSE construction and materials companies in 3Q2025, bringing the sector total for 2025 to 14.
Residential market weakness, commercial uncertainty, budget constraints, and delays caused by new safety regulations were among the contributing challenges behind the sector’s warnings in 3Q2025.
A multitude of factors feed into company insolvency, though analysis of profit warning data by EY suggests the construction industry is particularly exposed to financial difficulty. This is in part due to the nature of contract cycles and the challenges of cash flow management that contractors and subcontractors are subject to.
Further data(5) released by The Insolvency Service showed that 302, or 26%, of self-employed or trader bankruptcies in the 12 months to July 2025 were in construction in England and Wales.
An effective way of mitigating the risks associated with fixed-price contracts when costs are so changeable is to use fluctuation clauses linked to work category and resource-specific inflation indices, such as those available in BCIS CapX.
Our Price Adjustment Formulae Indices (PAFI), covering more than 200 work activities across building, civil engineering, specialist engineering and highways maintenance, can also be used throughout the budgeting and procurement stages to plan cash flow more effectively.
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