New figures show the average small-medium UK construction manufacturer registered a 130% increase in sales revenue in Q1 2025 than Q4 2024, and a 42% rise year-on-year.

The findings – based on direct data from over 600 UK firms using Unleashed’s inventory management software – show pessimism among the business community may be unfounded, according to the report's authors.

Recent Q1 business confidence surveys show overall confidence turned negative for the first time since 2022 on the back of tax rises, inflation, weak growth and increased global uncertainty.

However the stellar sales performance in the building and construction industry – alongside a 2% uptick in profitability against Q4 – suggests international market turmoil has created a silver lining for UK businesses.

Joe Llewellyn, General Manager of ERP Small Business at The Access Group, the parent company of Unleashed, thinks the unusual business conditions of the first three months of the year had generally played out well for the country’s smaller producers, as had falling bank rates.

He explained: “Anecdotally, what we’re hearing from some of our customers is that Q1 brought welcome windfalls. Some tariff-affected international customers have turned to UK firms to do business, while others raced to order more before tariff pauses came off.

"That’s delivered a shot in the arm for some firms, but more importantly we’re hearing that steadily falling bank rates are starting to stimulate the economy, which obviously is very welcome to UK manufacturers who’ve posted a really strong start to the year.”

Unleashed’s data also showed profitability improving as manufacturers held off purchasing new stock, preferring to eat into inventory reserves where possible. Gross Margin Return on Inventory (GMROI) for the average SMB manufacturer did drop -45% YoY – but it improved QoQ to £2.99 return for every pound spent on buying stock.

Partly this was thanks to further falls in delivery lead times, down to 14 days on average. Faster delivery times allow businesses to reorder in smaller quantities, which is a more cost-efficient way to generate sales that improves margins. 

It is also possible that the higher profit margins seen in Q1 were caused by purchasing managers deferring their inventory replenishment spend in response to low GBP-USD exchange rates. In January the pound dipped to 1.22 USD, making international purchases more expensive for UK buyers of US-dollar denominated goods. By the end of March, however, the exchange rate had trended favourably and reached 1.34 at the end of April.

Construction sector

2024Q1

2024Q4

2025Q1

YoY % change

QoQ % change

Profitability / GMROI

£5.45

£2.93

£2.99

-45%

2%

Sales revenue

£434,218

£268,294

£616,879

42%

130%

Excess stock

£126,444

£85,127

£75,619

-40%

-11%

Purchase orders

193

174

150

-22%

-14%

Lead time (days)

15

16

14

-7%

-13%

Across all of the 12 manufacturing categories analysed, sales were up by 30% in Q1 2025 compared to Q4 2024 – and 13% year-on-year. Profitability also jumped by 10% in Q1 2025 with £4.03 generated for every pound spent on stock.