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Zombie Properties Dip Below 3 Percent of all U.S. Foreclosures in Q4

Zombie Properties Dip Below 3 Percent of all U.S. Foreclosures in Q4

Residential News » Irvine Edition | By WPJ Staff | October 31, 2019 8:05 AM ET



According to ATTOM Data Solutions' Q4 2019 Vacant Property and Zombie Foreclosure Report, over 1.5 million (1,527,142) U.S. single family homes and condos, representing 1.5 percent of all homes, were vacant in the fourth quarter of 2019.

The report shows that during the fourth quarter of 2019, about 288,300 homes were in the process of foreclosure, with 8,535, or 2.96 percent sitting empty as "zombie" foreclosures. The percentage of zombie properties is down from 3.2 percent in Q3 2019 and 4.7 percent in Q3 2016, the last comparative foreclosure vacancy report.

"The fourth quarter of 2019 was a repeat of the third quarter when it came to properties abandoned by owners facing foreclosure: the scourge continued to fade. One of the most visible signs of the housing market crash during the Great Recession keeps receding into the past," said Todd Teta, chief product officer with ATTOM Data Solutions. "While pockets of zombie foreclosures remain, neighborhoods throughout the country are confronting fewer and fewer of the empty, decaying properties that were symbolic of the fallout from the housing market crash during the recession."

The report analyzes publicly recorded real estate data collected by ATTOM Data Solutions -- including foreclosure status and owner-occupancy status -- matched against quarterly updated vacancy data.

High-level report findings include:

  • A total of 8,535 properties facing possible foreclosure were vacated by their owners nationwide in the fourth quarter of 2019. Washington, D.C. continued to have the highest percentage of zombie foreclosures (10.5 percent). States where the zombie foreclosure rates were above the national rate of 2.9 percent included Kansas (7.9 percent), Oregon (7.9 percent), Montana (7.4 percent); Maine (6.7 percent) and New Mexico (5.8 percent). The lowest rates - all less than 1.2 percent - were in North Dakota, Arkansas, Idaho, Colorado and Delaware.
  • New York had the highest actual number of zombie properties (2,266), followed by Florida (1,461), Illinois (892), Ohio (823) and New Jersey (398). But those numbers were all lower than in Q3 2019.
  • Among metropolitan areas with at least 100,000 residential properties, Peoria, IL, continued to have the highest percent of vacant foreclosures (zombies) at 13.5 percent, followed by Wichita, KS (10.2 percent), Lexington, KY, (9.8 percent); Syracuse, NY (9.3 percent) and Honolulu, HI (8.6 percent).
  • Among zip codes with a population of 10,000 or more and least 1,000 vacant properties, the highest rates of zombie foreclosure properties remained concentrated in the Midwest. The zip codes with the top percentages included 48505 and 48504 zip codes in the Flint, MI metro area; 46407 and 60426 zip codes in the Chicago, IL metro area; 29928 zip code in the Hilton Head, SC metro area; and 46016 zip code in the Indianapolis, IN metro area.
  • The top zombie foreclosure rates in counties with at least 500 properties in foreclosure included Peoria County, IL (17.2 percent); Baltimore City/County, NY (11.5 percent); Broome County, NY (10.3 percent); Onondaga County, NY (9.7 percent) and Cuyahoga County, OH (9.4 percent).
  • The highest levels of vacant investor-owned homes were in Indiana (8.7 percent), Kansas (6.6 percent), Minnesota (6.0 percent), Ohio (5.9 percent) and Rhode Island (5.9 percent).
  • The highest overall vacancy rates for all residential properties were in Tennessee (2.7 percent); Kansas (2.7 percent); Indiana (2.6 percent); Oklahoma (2.5 percent) and Mississippi (2.5 percent). The lowest were in New Hampshire (0.4 percent); Vermont (0.4 percent); Delaware (0.5 percent); Idaho (0.6 percent) and North Dakota (0.7 percent).

 

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