Housing & Real Estate · May 2026
Washington's foreclosure wake-up call
Filings are rising sharply statewide, here's what the data says, and what homeowners can do.
For years, Washington homeowners enjoyed a kind of insulation from national housing stress. High demand, tight inventory, and pandemic-era protections kept foreclosure numbers calm. That insulation is wearing thin.
What the numbers show
Nationally, 118,727 properties recorded a foreclosure filing in Q1 2026, up 26% from a year prior. Bank repossessions surged 45% year-over-year in the same period. Washington was flagged specifically as one of a handful of states where repossessions more than doubled annually, alongside Colorado, Alabama, Oregon, and Florida.
Washington's own trajectory reflects this: Q1 2025 saw 1,147 new filings, a 38% year-over-year jump, and the trend has accelerated since. This is happening against a backdrop of a still-pricey market: the state's median home price sits near $646,000, nearly twice the national average.
Why now?
Three forces have converged. First, pandemic-era forbearance and moratoriums are long over. The average foreclosure now takes 577 days to complete, down 14% from last year, as courts and servicers clear the backlog. Second, elevated mortgage rates and rising insurance, property tax, and HOA costs are squeezing household budgets. Third, inflation has eroded purchasing power, and for many homeowners, one unexpected expense is enough to tip the balance.
"The continued rise, particularly in starts and bank repossessions, points to building pressure in parts of the market." — Rob Barber, CEO, ATTOM
Washington's safety net
Washington's Foreclosure Fairness Program (FFP) is one of the country's more robust homeowner protections. Since 2012, more than 78,000 state residents have remained in their homes through its counseling and mediation services. In 2024 alone, the state's Homeownership Resource Center served 12,000 homeowners in distress.
In 2025, the legislature strengthened the program through SB 5686, expanding mediation access to HOA and condo owners, and establishing a new $80 fee on residential mortgage originations expected to generate ~$7 million annually for the program.
What to watch
This is not 2008. Strong equity positions, tighter underwriting, and robust state protections mean widespread collapse is unlikely. But the trend line is real and has been building for more than a year. With 181 foreclosed properties currently listed for sale in Washington, the pipeline is growing. Markets outside the Seattle metro corridor, where price buffers are thinner, are the most exposed.
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