ATTOM released its fourth-quarter 2025 Vacant Property and Zombie Foreclosure Report showing that 1.32 percent of residential properties in the U.S., about 1.4 million homes, were vacant. That was down slightly from a 1.33 percent national vacancy rate in the third quarter as the country continues to experience high demand for houses.
The report analyzes publicly recorded real estate data collected by ATTOM — including foreclosure status, equity and owner-occupancy status — matched against monthly updated vacancy data.
The analysis shows that 228,943 residential properties nationwide were in the process of foreclosure during the fourth quarter. Of those, 3.25 percent, or about 7,448 homes, were “zombie” properties, meaning they had been abandoned by their owner prior to the conclusion of the foreclosure proceedings. That was down from a 3.38 percent zombie rate in the third quarter.
“These continuously low vacancy rates that the nation has held steady at around 1.4 percent for nearly four years, show that record high prices haven’t dampened the demand for homes,” ATTOM CEO Rob Barber said in a release. “It’s a good sign for local housing markets that even as we’ve seen foreclosure filings increase, the rate of homes in foreclosure that are abandoned is going down.”
The number of zombie properties rose quarter-over-quarter in 21 states and the District of Columbia, but by small margins and as few as a single additional zombie property in some states, according to ATTOM.
Among states with at least 50 zombie properties, the biggest quarter-over-quarter increases in zombie properties came in Oregon (up 37.8 percent to 51 zombie properties in the fourth quarter); Nevada (up 31.1 percent to 59); Georgia (up 15.6 percent to 74); Ohio (up 9 percent to 606); and Arizona (up 6.3 percent to 68).
Those with the largest quarter-over-quarter drops in zombie properties were Oklahoma (down 23 percent to 57); Indiana (down 12.7 percent to 219); California (down 12.3 percent to 272); Michigan (down 11.3 percent to 63); and Iowa (down 9.3 percent to 107).
The states with the highest overall home vacancy rates in the fourth quarter were Oklahoma (2.4 percent); Kansas (2.3 percent); Alabama (2.2 percent); Missouri (2.1 percent); and West Virginia (2.1 percent).
The lowest overall vacancy rates were in New Hampshire (0.3 percent); Vermont (0.4 percent); New Jersey (0.5 percent); Idaho (0.5 percent); and Connecticut (0.5 percent).
Zombie property rates were below the national rate of 3.25 percent in 56 percent (75) of the 134 metropolitan statistical areas in ATTOM’s analysis with at least 100,000 properties and 100 properties in the foreclosure process.
Of those metro areas, the ones with the highest rates of pre-foreclosure homes that had been abandoned, or become “zombies,” in the fourth quarter were Cedar Rapids, Iowa (14.3 percent of pre-foreclosure homes abandoned); Peoria, Ill. (11.9 percent); Wichita, Kan. (11.8 percent); Cleveland (10.8 percent); and Youngstown, Ohio (10.5 percent).
Four of the largest metro areas had no zombie properties in the fourth quarter: Grand Rapids, Mich.; Nashville, Tenn.; Raleigh, N.C.; and Wilmington, N.C. The next lowest zombie rates were in Atlantic City, N.J. (0.2 percent); Provo, Utah (0.3 percent); Trenton, N.J. (0.3 percent); New Haven, Conn. (0.6 percent); and Oxnard, Calif. (0.7 percent).
Homes owned by institutional investors were slightly more likely than typical homes to be vacant in the fourth quarter, according to ATTOM. Of the 880,347 investor-owned properties nationwide, 3.5 percent were unoccupied compared to the overall national rate of 3.3 percent.
The states with the highest vacancy rates for investor-owned homes were Indiana (7.1 percent); Illinois (6.1 percent); Alabama (5.9 percent); Oklahoma (5.9 percent); and Kansas (5.8 percent).
The lowest vacancy rates for investor-owned properties were in New Hampshire (0.8 percent); Vermont (1 percent); Idaho (1.3 percent); Utah (1.5 percent); and North Dakota (1.5 percent).