By Kris Hudson And Josh Mitchell 

The spring home-selling season is off to a strong start when judged against last year, with a double-digit sales increase this March and growing builder optimism offering the latest signs that the housing market is moving past a sluggish stretch.

Sales of newly built homes declined by 11.4% in March from their red-hot pace in February, which itself registered as the strongest month for sales in seven years, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 481,000, according to Commerce Department figures released Thursday.

However, the March tally represents a 19.4% increase from the sales pace of March 2014. Even more broadly, the 129,000 newly built homes sold in this year's first quarter represent a 21.7% gain from the same period of 2014.

"It's a normal spring pickup, and it's a stronger market than last year, " said John Burns, chief executive of housing research and consultancy firm John Burns Real Estate Consulting Inc. in Irvine, Calif., who predicts U.S. new-home sales for all of 2015 will amount to an 11% gain from 2014.

Overall, many multistate home builders have reported double-digit percentage gains in sales so far this year, including Meritage Homes Corp.'s announcement Thursday of a 30% gain during the first three months of the year compared with the year-earlier period.

PulteGroup Inc., among the top three U.S. builders by homes sold, on Thursday reported that its 5,139 sales orders in the third quarter marked a 6% increase from a year earlier.

Pulte CEO Richard Dugas Jr. said sales this year have gained momentum due to a combination of sustained, strong job growth, mortgage rates that have remained below 4% since November, slightly less expensive fees on mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration and nascent wage growth.

"Our expectation is that the strengthening of demand is sustainable and should drive new-home sales for all of 2015," Mr. Dugas said Thursday morning on a conference call with investors.

Other large, publicly traded builders reported heftier gains for this year's first three months. NVR Inc., parent of Ryan Homes, said Tuesday that its first-quarter sales increased by 18% from a year earlier to 3,926 homes. On Thursday, M/I Homes Inc. said its first-quarter sales increased by 13% to 1,108 homes. And D.R. Horton Inc. on Wednesday reported a 30% gain during the first quarter.

Several closely held builders and developers also say they're seeing gains. Lance Wright, a partner in Texas home builder CastleRock Communities LP, said sales increased by 20% in March from a year earlier to 179 in CastleRock's communities open for at least a year. Crescent Communities LLC, a Charlotte, N.C.-based developer with 15,000 lots across seven states, reported that home builders' demand for home lots is "definitely greater" than last year.

"Last year's spring selling was generally disappointing for home builders," said Todd Mansfield, Crescent's president and CEO. This year, "we've seen increases in lot pricing, and that is indicative of heightened demand and scarcity of inventory."

Many economists and analysts project a solid but more moderate gain for this year in comparison to a year ago, when sales were essentially flat.

Other reports suggest the broader housing market is picking up after a sluggish winter. Existing-home sales -- the bulk of the market -- rose 6.1% in March to the highest level in a year and a half, the National Association of Realtors said Wednesday.

To be sure, the new-home market has a long way to go before it reaches normal levels of production. The national sales pace in March amounts to just 66.3% of the market's average annual output since 2000. And the possibility remains that economic shocks, such as a rapid rise in interest rates, could stall sales momentum this year.

A sustained recovery in the new-home market could influence the broader economy, given that home construction typically accounts for 5% of U.S. gross domestic product but has languished at roughly 3.1% in recent quarters as the industry struggled through a slow, fitful recovery. Buyers were deterred in recent years by previously weak job growth, mounting student debt, tight mortgage-qualification standards and steep price increases in 2013 and 2014 as builders focused on constructing more expensive houses for better-heeled, creditworthy buyers.

The past year has brought improvements on many of those fronts. Many large builders have dramatically slowed their price increases as some now are building a greater volume of less-expensive houses for the slowly strengthening entry-level market. The median price of a newly built home declined in March for the fourth consecutive month to $277,400, according to the Commerce Department.

Doug Duncan, chief economist for Fannie Mae, said wage growth for young would-be home buyers finally has shown slight gains of late. "If that is sustained, I think you'll see more construction in the entry-level space, " he said Thursday.

New-home sales traditionally reflect about one-tenth of all home purchases, and Commerce's monthly estimates often are revised as more data becomes available. The March figure has a margin for error of plus or minus 18.6%.

Economists surveyed by the Wall Street Journal had predicted that March sales would fall to an annual rate of 520,000, but they fell much further from February's lofty tally. Still, Thursday's report showed sales in prior months were stronger than previously estimated, with Commerce on Thursday revising up its numbers for the past three months.

Write to Josh Mitchell at joshua.mitchell@wsj.com and Eric Morath at eric.morath@wsj.com

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