From the Realtors:
Zombie Foreclosures Are Rising—These Midwest Metros Are Hardest Hit
Lurking behind a for sale sign could be a home sitting empty. Not because the homeowners already moved out but because the property is vacant due to foreclosure.
Nearly 1.4 million homes were vacant at the beginning of the year, according to ATTOM, a provider of property data and real estate analytics.
ATTOM released its first-quarter 2026 Vacant Property and Zombie Foreclosure Report, which found that out of the nation’s nearly 104.8 million residential properties, at least 230,401 were in the process of foreclosure (at the time of its report).
Out of those properties, at least 7,540 were considered “zombies”—meaning their owners had abandoned them before the end of the foreclosure proceedings.
The silver lining is that the zombie rate of 3.27% in the first quarter of 2026 is down slightly from 3.34% during the same time in 2025.
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ATTOM’s data found of the 27 metropolitan areas studied—meaning those that had at least 100,000 total residential properties and 50 or more properties in the foreclosure process that are vacant—the highest zombie rates were in Cleveland (9.9%); Baltimore (9.3%); St. Louis, MO (8.6%); Akron, OH (7.4%); and Indianapolis, IN (6.5%).
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Overall, the states with the highest overall home vacancy rates were Oklahoma (2.4%), Kansas (2.4%), Alabama (2.2%), Missouri (2.1%), and West Virginia (2.1%).
