• Sign Up
  • Log In
Hudson Advantage Realty
(704) 659-5056info@hudsonadvantage.com
  • Home
  • Search
    • Local Properties
    • Featured Properties
  • Buyers
    • The Carolina Coast: Your Guide To Your Next Home
    • Buyers Resource Library
    • Property Videos
    • First Time Home Buyer's Guide
    • Mortgage Pre-Approval
    • Sign Up To Be a VIP Buyer
    • Mortgage Calculator
    • Cash Savings Guarantee
    • Our Buy Back Guarantee
    • Buyer Cancellation Guarantee
    • Get Access to the MLS
    • Free List of Luxury Homes
    • Fall 2023 Homebuyer Guide
    • Free List of Foreclosures
    • Free List of Home for First Time Buyers
    • Free List of Zero Down Homes
    • Free List of Homes With Acreage
    • Free List of Homes With Pools
    • Free List of Fixer Uppers
    • Free List of This Months Best Buys
    • Free List of Upcoming Open Houses
    • Charlotte Metro Investment Properties
  • Sellers
    • Sellers Resource Library
    • Home Valuation
    • Fall 2023 Home Seller Guide
    • Home Matchmaker Service
    • Find Out Home Prices in Your Area
    • Our Sold in 60 Days Guarantee
    • First Steps to Selling
    • Our Seller Team Approach
    • Seller Cancellation Guarantee
    • How Long Will It Take To Sell?
    • Our Citywide Buyers Agent Network
    • The Hudson Advantage for Sellers
    • Our Home Seller Satisfaction Guarantees
    • Agent Priority Checklist
  • More
    • About
    • Join Our Team
    • Our Team
    • Market Update Video Series
    • Refer A friend
    • Why Is This Info Free?
    • Get VIP Insider Access
    • Testimonials
  • Communities
    • Lake Norman
    • Cornelius
    • Mooresville
    • Statesville
    • Concord
    • Charlotte
    • Huntersville
    • Denver
    • Lincolnton
    • Mount Holly
    • Myrtle Beach
    • North Myrtle Beach
    • Calabash
    • Leland
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • (704) 659-5056
  • info@hudsonadvantage.com
    Copy Email

Company

  • Home
  • About
  • Testimonials
  • Join Our Team
  • Contact

Services

  • Buying
  • Selling
  • Home Valuation
  • Mortgage Calculator

Explore

  • Property Search
  • Featured Properties
  • Communities
Hudson Advantage Realty - Footer Logo
  • Update 1.0
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Accessibility
  • Fair Housing
© 2026 Hudson Advantage Realty. All rights reserved.
Website built by CloseHack.
Canopy MLS

​Listings courtesy of Canopy MLS as distributed by MLS GRID. Based on information submitted to the MLS GRID as of 2026-01-07 14:15:45. All data is obtained from various sources and may not have been verified by broker or MLS GRID. Supplied Open House Information is subject to change without notice. All information should be independently reviewed and verified for accuracy. Properties may or may not be listed by the office/agent presenting the information. Some IDX listings have been excluded from this website.

Why a Wave of Foreclosures Is Not on the Way

Published 11/08/2022 | Posted by Steve Hudson

With forbearance plans coming to an end, many are concerned the housing market will experience a wave of foreclosures similar to what happened after the housing bubble 15 years ago. Here are a few reasons why that won’t happen.


There are fewer homeowners in trouble this time

After the last housing crash, about 9.3 million households lost their homes to a foreclosure, short sale, or because they simply gave it back to the bank.

As stay-at-home orders were issued early last year, the fear was the pandemic would impact the housing industry in a similar way. Many projected up to 30% of all mortgage holders would enter the forbearance program. In reality, only 8.5% actually did, and that number is now down to 2.2%.

As of last Friday, the total number of mortgages still in forbearance stood at  1,221,000. That’s far fewer than the 9.3 million households that lost their homes just over a decade ago.


Most of the mortgages in forbearance have enough equity to sell their homes

Due to rapidly rising home prices over the last two years, of the 1.22 million homeowners currently in forbearance, 93% have at least 10% equity in their homes. This 10% equity is important because it enables homeowners to sell their homes and pay the related expenses instead of facing the hit on their credit that a foreclosure or short sale would create.

The remaining 7% might not have the option to sell, but if the entire 7% of those 1.22 million homes went into foreclosure, that would total about 85,400 mortgages. To give that number context, here are the annual foreclosure numbers for the three years leading up to the pandemic:

  • 2017: 314,220
  • 2018: 279,040
  • 2019: 277,520

The probable number of foreclosures coming out of the forbearance program is nowhere near the number of foreclosures that impacted the housing crash 15 years ago. It’s actually less than one-third of any of the three years prior to the pandemic.


The current market can absorb listings coming to the market

When foreclosures hit the market back in 2008, there was an oversupply of houses for sale. It’s exactly the opposite today. In 2008, there was over a nine-month supply of listings on the market. Today, that number is less than a three-month supply. Here’s a graph showing the difference between the two markets.


Bottom Line

The data indicates why Ivy Zelman, founder of the major housing market analytical firm Zelman and Associates, was on point when she stated:

“The likelihood of us having a foreclosure crisis again is about zero percent.”

Related Articles

Keep reading other bits of knowledge from our team.