Spring House Hunt

More Americans are losing their homes to foreclosure

Report ranks Massachusetts 34th in the country for filing in the first quarter of 2023, with a total of 1,314 .

Home-Foreclosures-Sign
While still below pre-pandemic levels, foreclosure activity has increased on an annual basis for 23 straight months. Adobe Stock

U.S. foreclosure filings jumped 22% in the first quarter compared with the same period a year ago, according to a report from real estate data analytics firm ATTOM.

While still below pre-pandemic levels, foreclosure activity has increased on an annual basis for 23 straight months. The uptrend reflects higher jobless rates, ongoing economic challenges, and backlogged foreclosures working through the pipeline after the lifting of government interventions to help struggling homeowners during the pandemic, said Rob Barber, chief executive officer of ATTOM.

“However, with many homeowners still having significant home equity, that may help in keeping increased levels of foreclosure activity at bay,” Barber said in a statement.

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The number of foreclosure filings has been climbing since the federal moratorium ended in mid-2021. During the pandemic, an estimated 2 million homeowners fell behind on their mortgages.

Major metropolitan cities with populations of more than 200,000 that had the most foreclosures starts last quarter included New York (4,674), Chicago (3,549), Los Angeles (2,210), Houston (2,120), and Philadelphia (1,985).

According to ATTOM: The “states with the highest foreclosure rates in March 2022 were Illinois (one in every 2,050 housing units with a foreclosure filing); Delaware (one in every 2,161 housing units); Nevada (one in every 2,178 housing units); Indiana (one in every 2,223 housing units); and New Jersey (one in every 2,299 housing units).”

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Massachusetts ranked 34th in the country, with a total of 1,314 filings.

MORE ON the housing market

Meanwhile, on a percentage basis, Michigan topped the list of states with a 41% increase in foreclosure filings from the previous quarter.

Major metro areas with the highest foreclosure rates in the January-March period included Fayetteville, N.C. (one in every 526 housing units); Cleveland (one in 582); Atlantic City, N.J. (one in 661); Columbia, S.C. (one in 671); and Bakersfield, Calif. (one in 688).

Barber pointed out that in January, 24 out of 30 metropolitan areas with the highest foreclosure rates had median household incomes below the nationwide median of about $71,000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau data. Unemployment rates exceeded 5% in nine of the top 30 metros, based on December 2022 federal data.

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