American Housing via TriCounty Homes
America’s housing market is flashing warning signs—this time not from reckless borrowers, but from a system that has slowly but surely turned the American dream into a financial trap.
New data has revealed foreclosures having risen sharply in 2025, with hundreds of thousands of families now facing the loss of their homes as economic pressure mounts nationwide.
According to newly released figures from ATTOM, a California-based company providing property data services, more than 367,000 US properties entered some stage of foreclosure last year. That represents a 14% uptick compared to the year before—a trend experts say could accelerate further in 2026 if current economic conditions persist or worsen.
Foreclosure, something that made headlines in and around the 2008 crash, appears to be returning to everyday neighborhoods. Banks are again reclaiming single-family homes—this time not because of speculative excesses—but because ordinary Americans continued to be squeezed from every direction imaginable.
High interest rates, steady inflation, rising cost-of-living, and stagnant wages make for a toxic brew that’s seeing people have to leave their homes.
Economist Michael Szanto warned that the situation could deteriorate rapidly if the labor market softens. Job growth in 2025 was the weakest outside a recession in more than two decades, leaving households with little margin for error when monthly bills pile up.
When foreclosures rise, the damage spreads beyond the families that are directly affected. Bank-owned homes are dumped onto the housing market at vastly discounted prices, pulling down property values and eroding equity for entire communities through no fault of their own.
The surge in foreclosures is not an isolated housing issue. It’s a symptom of deeper financial strain. Homeowners who fall behind on mortgages are often already struggling with credit card balances, car loans, and basic living costs that have soared under years of inflation and gross mismanagement under Joe Biden.
The tragic result is an affordability crisis that hits hardest where it hurts most—namely food, transportation, healthcare. In the event that working class families, barely already making it, are forced to choose between groceries, prescription drugs, and mortgage payments, the broader economy inevitably feels the impact.
Florida’s real estate market emerged as the epicenter of foreclosure activity in 2025, with one filing for roughly every 230 homes. The state’s housing stress has been compounded by skyrocketing insurance costs and steep condo assessments following safety crackdowns after the Surfside disaster.
Florida is far from alone, however. Delaware, South Carolina, Illinois, and Nevada also posted alarmingly high foreclosure rates, showing that financial pressure is spreading across regions throughout the country.
Metro-level data reveals a picture that’s even more grim. Cities like Lakeland, Florida; Columbia, South Carolina; and Cleveland, Ohio recorded some of the highest foreclosure concentrations in the country, highlighting the undeniable fact that both Sun Belt boomtowns and America’s legacy industrial cities are under strain.
Major urban markets are no longer insulated either. Jacksonville, Las Vegas, Chicago, and Orlando all saw elevated foreclosure rates, suggesting that size and economic diversity, alone, no longer guarantee stability in a distorted housing market.
Industry insiders, however, insist this is merely a “normalization” after years of artificially low foreclosure levels. Rob Barber described the trend as a return to historical averages.
What today’s data obscures is a larger structural failure. Institutional investors and Wall Street funds have spent years buying up single-family homes, driving up prices, squeezing supply, and turning housing into a speculative asset rather than a place for families to live.
This is where President Donald Trump has drawn a welcome line. Trump, last week, pledged to end institutional investment in single-family homes—aiming to return ownership to working and middle-class American families instead of multinational, ‘too big to fail’ hedge funds and foreign capital.
Just as—or perhaps more—importantly, Trump has called for capping credit card interest rates at 10%, a move that would immediately relieve pressure on households drowning in compounding debt. For millions of Americans, that policy alone could mean the difference between staying afloat and falling behind.
Unlike the globalist consensus that views debt as a permanent condition and housing as a financial instrument, Trump’s approach is rooted in restoring economic fairness. It rightly elevates families, workers, and homeowners over banks, speculators, and corporate landlords.
The post Housing Market Concerns? 367,000 Homes Hit Foreclosure in 2025- Insiders Claim this is Normalization after Years of Artificially Low Foreclosure Rates appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.










