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Zombie Foreclosures Are Still Very Much a Thing

Just in time for the Halloween holiday, ATTOM Data [1], released its fourth-quarter 2023 Vacant Property and Zombie Foreclosure Report which showed that zombie foreclosures are very much still a thing in today’s market with 1,294,505 properties sitting vacant amid a serious inventory crunch. 

That figure represents 1.27% of all housing units. To put that number another way, there is one vacant home for every 78 homes across the nation—a number that is virtually the same as the third quarter of 2023. 

The number of vacant properties that have transitioned into zombie properties (or vacant homes in pre-foreclosure) stands at 2.78%, or 8,903 units. Non-owner occupied investment properties were found to total 23,638,105 of which 842,497 were vacant. 

Finally, ATTOM found that the national number of bank-owned properties totaled 14,989 of which 15.85% were vacant (or 2,376 units). 

The report also reveals that 320,765 residential properties in the U.S. are in the process of foreclosure in the fourth quarter of this year, up 1.7% from the third quarter of 2023 and up 12.8% from the fourth quarter of 2022. A growing number of homeowners have faced possible foreclosure following the nationwide moratorium on lenders pursuing delinquent homeowners was imposed after the Coronavirus pandemic hit in early 2020 and was lifted in the middle of 2021. 

“The ongoing strength of the U.S. housing market continues to benefit neighborhoods around the country in so many ways, with the near-total lack of zombie foreclosures standing out as one striking example,” said Rob Barber, CEO for ATTOM. “Rising equity flowing from rising home values has not only kept foreclosure cases from spiking since the moratorium was lifted. It also keeps giving delinquent homeowners a valuable resource they can use to either stave off eviction or sell their homes and move on. As a result, we continue to see none of the widespread abandonment that followed the housing market crash after the Great Recession of the late 2000s.” 

The nationwide median home value grew 11%during the Spring-Summer buying season this year, hitting a new record of $350,000. Those gains followed an 8% decline from mid-2022 into early 2023. The growth in values has helped keep homeowner wealth at historic highs, with 95% of mortgaged owners having at least some equity built up and about 50% owing less than half the estimated value of their properties. 

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

Click here [2] to see ATTOM’s report in its entirety.