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Foreclosures surge 20% as Americans struggle to pay mortgages – and fears of 2008-style crash soar

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There is a worrying new trend foreshadowing a housing market crash.

Foreclosures — when a bank or lender takes back a home after missed mortgage payments — are once again on the rise in the US.

New data from ATTOM shows more homeowners falling behind on their mortgages amid job losses and soaring living costs. 

In October alone, there were 36,766 foreclosure filings — the first step in the process, when a lender warns a borrower they’re in default. That’s up three percent from September and 19 percent from a year ago.

‘Foreclosure activity continued its steady upward trend in October — the eighth straight month of year-over-year increases,’ said ATTOM CEO Rob Barber.

The rise is stirring uncomfortable memories of 2008, when a wave of foreclosures triggered the worst housing crash in modern US history.

Back then, millions of Americans had adjustable-rate subprime mortgages that borrowers could not afford to pay.  The fallout wiped out trillions in household wealth and pushed major banks to the brink, tipping the global economy into recession.

Today’s homeowners have safer loans, but experts warn that high borrowing costs, soaring insurance premiums, and dwindling savings could again push struggling families into default.

A dramatic increase in foreclosure filings is the latest bad news for the US housing market 

The new data shows how quickly warning letters are turning into lost homes, painting a grim picture of families slipping from late payments to full foreclosure. 

ATTOM’s report found lenders formally started foreclosure proceedings on 25,129 homes in October — up six percent from last month and 20 percent from 2024.

Another 3,872 homes were fully repossessed, a two percent monthly rise and a 32 percent jump year-over-year.   

States with the worst foreclosure rates were Florida (one in every 1,829 housing units with a foreclosure filing), South Carolina (one in every 1,982), Illinois (one in every 2,570), Delaware (on in every 2,710), and Nevada (one in ever 2,747). 

Among metro areas with populations of a million or more, Tampa posted the highest foreclosure rate at one in every 1,373 housing units. 

Following Tampa were Jacksonville (one in every 1,576 housing units), Orlando (one in every 1,703), Riverside (one in every 1,983), and Cleveland (one in every 2,114). 

On the flip side, some major metro areas did see drops in foreclosure filings in October, including Milwaukee, Indianapolis, Louisville, Washington DC, and Detroit — which is currently topping the luxury housing market ranking

‘Foreclosures are harmful on both an individual and broader economic level. For homeowners, the process often results in the loss of their property, financial instability, and emotional distress,’ Barber told Daily Mail.

Foreclosure can sometimes lead to homes being left vacant (Pictured: An abandoned house on Route 66 in Oklahoma)

Foreclosure can sometimes lead to homes being left vacant (Pictured: An abandoned house on Route 66 in Oklahoma)

Foreclosure is when a bank or lender takes back a home because the owner hasn’t made the required mortgage payments

Foreclosure is when a bank or lender takes back a home because the owner hasn’t made the required mortgage payments

Rob Barber, CEO at ATTOM

Rob Barber, CEO at ATTOM

Barber added: ‘A sustained rise in foreclosures can signal deeper economic trouble, as homeowners’ ability to repay loans is closely tied to factors like employment, wages, and interest rates. 

‘Ultimately, they can reflect larger issues within the housing and financial systems, creating ripple effects across the economy.’

Florida has hit especially hard over the last year, with residents grappling with soaring insurance costs and homeowners association fees

Homeowners in the Sunshine State are facing an onslaught of higher costs and a growing condo crisis, which worsened after the state was ravaged by Hurricane Milton in October 2024. Rising costs are particularly tough for the senior population in the state. 

‘A huge percentage of Florida’s residents are retired on fixed incomes, and such [HOA] increases are completely unaffordable,’ real estate investor Jameson Tyler Drew told Realtor.com.

‘This has led to a fire sale of condos as elderly residents look for places to live, all while losing their equity.’

Hannah Jones, senior economic research analyst at Realtor.com added: ‘Foreclosure rates in Florida may be relatively high due to some combination of surging insurance premiums, climbing HOA fees, and falling buyer demand.

‘Additionally, many homeowners who were protected by pandemic-era forbearance or relief programs are now facing resumed payments they can’t afford in light of rising HOA and insurance costs.’

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