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Zombie Foreclosures Began ‘Ticking Up’ in Q3

ATTOM Data [1] has released its new third quarter market trends report highlighting the blight of zombie homes and the impact they are having on the economy. 

All in all, the report, which covers the third quarter of 2023, found that there were 1,277,612 vacant properties in the country. That figure represents 1.3%, or 1-in-79 homes, across the nation—the same as in the second quarter of this year. 

Further, the report revealed that 315,425 zombie properties are in the process of foreclosure, up 1.3% from the second quarter of 2023 and up 16.6% year-over-year. A growing number of homeowners have faced possible foreclosure since a nationwide moratorium on lenders pursuing delinquent homeowners, imposed after the Coronavirus pandemic hit in early 2020, was lifted in the middle of 2021. 

Among those homes, about 8,800 have been abandoned by the owners and qualify as a zombie foreclosure; this number is up from the prior quarter, or 0.3%, and up 13.9% from a year ago. 

The latest increase marks the sixth straight quarterly gain. However, it was one of the smallest of the recent increases and continued to leave zombie foreclosures representing just a tiny fraction of the nation’s total stock of 101.6 million residential properties. 

“Zombie foreclosures again are ticking up a tiny bit this quarter, tracking along with a small rise in overall foreclosure activity around the country. That’s to be expected, as a handful of homeowners who can’t catch up on overdue mortgage payments just walk away from their properties,” said Rob Barber [2], CEO for ATTOM. “But the big picture remains the same. Abandoned properties pose almost none of the blight threats they brought a decade ago when far more homeowners were throwing in the towel after the Great Recession of the late 2000s.” 

According to ATTOM, the lack of zombie foreclosures throughout most of the country continues to stand out as one of the most significant effects of the U.S. housing market boom that has more than doubled the national median home value since 2012. 

“With a few exceptions – most notably New York City and Miami – lower-end markets still have the highest portions of zombie homes. That reflects larger portions of households with limited financial resources to avoid foreclosure,” Barber said. “Those areas are likely at higher risk for issues related to zombie foreclosure if the overall housing market turns back downward.” 

Other high-level findings from the third quarter of 2023: 

Click here [3] to view the report in its entirety.