State Foreclosure Market Overview

Pennsylvania Foreclosure Market

Pennsylvania is not the highest-rate foreclosure state in the 2026 data, but it is still worth profiling because of meaningful REO activity, large urban markets, judicial foreclosure mechanics, and a sharp Pittsburgh foreclosure-start signal. The opportunity is more about deal type and market selection than statewide rate pressure alone.

April 2026 Rate Rank: No. 19 Q1 2026 Rate Rank: No. 20 Top 5 April REO State Data Reviewed: June 4, 2026
Latest Monthly Rate
1 in 3,558

Pennsylvania housing units had a foreclosure filing in April 2026, according to ATTOM’s state-rate table.

April Filings
1,632

Pennsylvania properties had a foreclosure filing in April 2026, placing the state No. 19 by rate.

April REOs
346

ATTOM listed Pennsylvania among the top five states for completed foreclosures in April 2026.

Process Type
Court

Pennsylvania is a judicial foreclosure state where lawsuits, judgments, and sheriff sales drive the process.

Why Pennsylvania Matters for Foreclosure Investors

Pennsylvania’s foreclosure-rate ranking is moderate compared with states such as Indiana, South Carolina, Florida, Illinois, and New Jersey. ATTOM ranked Pennsylvania No. 19 by April 2026 foreclosure rate and No. 20 by Q1 2026 foreclosure rate. That means the state should not be described as one of the highest-rate foreclosure markets nationally.

The investor case is different. Pennsylvania stands out because it had 346 completed foreclosures in April 2026, placing it among the five states with the highest REO totals. REO volume matters because it can create lender-owned opportunities after the courthouse-sale stage, where investors may have more conventional closing mechanics, more title visibility, and less auction uncertainty than a sheriff sale.

Pittsburgh also deserves attention. ATTOM reported that Pittsburgh foreclosure starts increased from 82 in April 2025 to 215 in April 2026 among major metros with at least 100 foreclosure starts. That makes Pittsburgh a pipeline market to monitor, even though Pennsylvania’s statewide rate rank is not in the top tier.

Investor takeaway: Pennsylvania is worth researching because of REO activity, Pittsburgh foreclosure-start growth, and large-market deal flow. The page belongs in the “Additional States to Monitor” group because the opportunity is specific, not because Pennsylvania has the highest statewide foreclosure rate.

Current Pennsylvania Foreclosure Data

Metric Most Recent Data Point Investor Interpretation Source
Latest monthly state foreclosure rate April 2026: Pennsylvania ranked No. 19 nationally, with one foreclosure filing for every 3,558 housing units. ATTOM reported 1,632 filings across 5,806,452 housing units. Pennsylvania’s rate is moderate compared with the highest-rate states. Investors should use it as a deal-flow screen, not as a statewide distress claim. ATTOM April 2026 foreclosure rates by state
County-level distress pockets ATTOM identified Delaware, Jefferson, Philadelphia, and Allegheny among the Pennsylvania counties contributing to the state’s April 2026 foreclosure-rate position. The county list points investors toward both large urban counties and smaller-market pockets. Each should be researched separately because pricing, taxes, title, and liquidity vary widely. ATTOM state and county rate table
Latest quarterly state foreclosure rate Q1 2026: Pennsylvania ranked No. 20 nationally, with 4,244 properties receiving filings. The Q1 rate was one filing for every 1,368 housing units. The quarterly rank reinforces that Pennsylvania is a moderate-rate state, but still large enough to produce investable pockets in the right counties and metros. ATTOM Q1 2026 foreclosure report
Quarterly trend Pennsylvania Q1 2026 foreclosure filings were down 2.79% from Q4 2025 but up 19.92% from Q1 2025. The annual increase supports monitoring, while the quarterly decline argues against overstating the state as a broad foreclosure surge market. ATTOM Q1 2026 state table
Completed foreclosure / REO signal April 2026: ATTOM reported that Pennsylvania had 346 completed foreclosures, placing it behind Texas, California, and Florida and ahead of Illinois. This is Pennsylvania’s strongest current signal. REO volume may create lender-owned research opportunities even when the statewide foreclosure-rate rank is moderate. ATTOM April 2026 foreclosure market report
Pittsburgh foreclosure-start signal April 2026: ATTOM reported that Pittsburgh foreclosure starts increased from 82 in April 2025 to 215 in April 2026 among major metros with at least 100 starts. Pittsburgh should be monitored as a pipeline market. Rising starts can eventually affect pre-foreclosure outreach, sheriff-sale inventory, and REO opportunities. ATTOM April 2026 foreclosure market report
National foreclosure backdrop April 2026: ATTOM reported 42,430 U.S. properties with foreclosure filings, down 8% from March but up 18% from April 2025. The national rate was one filing for every 3,388 housing units. Pennsylvania’s April rate was slightly less concentrated than the national rate, but its REO and Pittsburgh-start signals still make it worth monitoring. ATTOM April 2026 U.S. foreclosure market report
Mortgage delinquency backdrop MBA reported that the Q1 2026 delinquency rate for one-to-four-unit residential mortgage loans increased to 4.44%, up 18 basis points from Q4 2025 and 40 basis points from one year earlier. Rising delinquencies can support future pipeline formation, but delinquencies do not immediately become Pennsylvania sheriff-sale or REO inventory. Mortgage Bankers Association Q1 2026 delinquency release
Home-price and equity context FHFA/FRED’s all-transactions Pennsylvania House Price Index was 722.56 in Q1 2026, up from 686.25 in Q1 2025, an increase of roughly 5.3%. Positive price movement can support resale exits and homeowner equity, but investors should not assume appreciation will offset poor repair estimates, weak location, or high carrying costs. FHFA Pennsylvania HPI via FRED

Data reviewed June 4, 2026. ATTOM’s April 2026 monthly foreclosure report was the latest monthly state-rate source available at the time of review.

Markets to Research First

Pittsburgh and Allegheny County

Pittsburgh is the clearest Pennsylvania metro signal because ATTOM reported a sharp year-over-year increase in April 2026 foreclosure starts. Investors should screen Allegheny County through court filings, sheriff-sale lists, tax records, neighborhood-level rent demand, older housing stock, and resale depth by submarket.

Philadelphia and Philadelphia County

Philadelphia appeared in ATTOM’s April 2026 county list and remains important because of scale, density, investor activity, and recurring distressed-property flow. Investors need to pay close attention to title, tax balances, utilities, licenses, occupancy, code violations, and block-level resale demand.

Delaware County and Southeast Pennsylvania

Delaware County also appeared in ATTOM’s April 2026 county list. It can offer proximity to Philadelphia and suburban demand, but acquisition cost, school district, taxes, municipal requirements, and end-buyer affordability should be evaluated carefully.

Jefferson County and Smaller Markets

Jefferson County appeared in the April 2026 county-rate table, but smaller counties need a different underwriting model. Investors should verify local buyer depth, rental demand, appraisal support, contractor availability, and whether the exit timeline is realistic.

Foreclosure Investing Strategies in Pennsylvania

Pre-Foreclosure Outreach

Pennsylvania’s judicial process and pre-foreclosure notice framework can create a visible pipeline before sheriff sale. Investors may identify equity-based purchases, short-sale possibilities, or seller-focused solutions before the property reaches auction.

Sheriff-Sale Bidding

Sheriff sales can offer deal flow, but they require strict attention to county sale terms, deposits, taxes, title exceptions, occupancy, and post-sale procedures. A winning bid does not eliminate the need for title and possession planning.

REO and Lender-Owned Deals

Pennsylvania’s April 2026 REO count is the strongest reason to monitor the state. REO deals may offer more conventional closing conditions than sheriff-sale purchases, though banks may still price aggressively in higher-demand areas.

Pittsburgh Pipeline Monitoring

Pittsburgh’s foreclosure-start increase makes it a market to watch before filings become completed foreclosures. Investors should monitor starts, scheduled sales, cancellations, and eventual REO conversion.

Philadelphia Rowhome and Rental Plays

Philadelphia can produce investor opportunities, but the diligence burden is high. Block-by-block pricing, rental licensing, utilities, lead paint, permits, code violations, tenants, and property taxes can determine whether a deal is workable.

Small-County Value Screens

Smaller Pennsylvania counties may show rate pressure or lower entry prices, but lower basis does not always mean better returns. Investors should verify buyer depth, employment base, repair labor, and exit liquidity before committing capital.

How Foreclosure Works in Pennsylvania

This is a high-level investor overview, not legal advice. Pennsylvania mortgage foreclosure is generally judicial. Investors should verify each property through the court docket, sheriff-sale office, county recorder, tax records, municipal records, title search, and local sale terms.

Pre-foreclosure notice and assistance options

For many owner-occupied residential mortgage cases, Pennsylvania foreclosure activity is preceded by Act 91 or Act 6 notice requirements. PHFA describes HEMAP as a loan program that may temporarily stop foreclosure activity when eligible homeowners apply through the required process.

Mortgage foreclosure complaint

Pennsylvania mortgage companies generally must file a lawsuit to start the foreclosure process. Lancaster County’s court guidance describes this lawsuit as a mortgage foreclosure action and notes that the mortgage company cannot ask the sheriff to sell the home unless it has a court judgment.

Judgment and writ process

After judgment, the lender can move toward execution and sheriff sale. Pennsylvania’s mortgage foreclosure rules are contained in the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure, including the mortgage foreclosure action rules and execution rules for real property.

Sheriff sale and county-specific terms

Sale mechanics vary by county. Philadelphia, Delaware County, Allegheny County, and other counties publish their own sale procedures, terms, schedules, payment rules, postponement details, and post-sale requirements.

Deed, distribution, occupancy, and possession

After sale, investors still need to account for deed timing, distribution schedules, exceptions, title issues, taxes, and possession. Philadelphia Sheriff guidance states that if the property is occupied, the new owner must start a judicial ejectment procedure to remove the occupant.

Investor Risks to Underwrite

Pennsylvania’s main foreclosure-investor risk is not that the state lacks opportunity. It is that the opportunity can look different depending on whether the property is in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, a suburban county, or a smaller rural market. REO, sheriff sale, pre-foreclosure, and tax-related opportunities each require different due diligence.

Pennsylvania Risk Checklist

  • Confirm whether the property is a mortgage foreclosure, tax sale, judgment execution, or another sale type.
  • Review the court docket, judgment, writ, sheriff-sale notice, sale terms, postponement history, and payment requirements.
  • Search county recorder, tax, utility, municipal, and code-enforcement records before bidding.
  • Verify whether the property is occupied and whether ejectment may be required after the deed is issued.
  • Use conservative repair reserves for older housing stock, rowhomes, basements, roofs, electrical systems, plumbing, and environmental risks.
  • Check rental licensing, lead paint, permits, inspections, and code issues in Philadelphia and other regulated municipalities.
  • Model exit liquidity carefully in smaller counties where low prices may be paired with thin buyer demand.

How to Research Pennsylvania Foreclosure Deals

1. Start With REO and Pittsburgh Signals

Because Pennsylvania’s strongest April 2026 data points are REO activity and Pittsburgh foreclosure starts, investors should monitor both lender-owned listings and early-stage foreclosure filings. The rate rank alone does not capture the full opportunity.

2. Pull the Court and Sheriff-Sale File

Review the mortgage foreclosure complaint, judgment, writ, sale date, sale terms, payment requirements, postponements, and deed procedures. Pennsylvania’s county-level sale mechanics make local verification essential.

3. Verify Taxes, Title, Municipal Claims, and Occupancy

Do not rely on the bid amount alone. Check unpaid taxes, water and sewer balances, municipal liens, code violations, tenant status, utility shutoffs, vacant-property issues, and whether possession will require additional court action.

4. Match the Exit Strategy to the Submarket

Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Delaware County, Allegheny County, and rural counties require different exit assumptions. Compare ARV, rent, days on market, buyer demand, renovation scope, licensing, taxes, insurance, and carrying costs before bidding.

Research Pennsylvania Before You Bid

Pennsylvania is a market where REO activity, sheriff-sale procedure, court records, title work, taxes, occupancy, repairs, and local exit demand matter more than the statewide foreclosure-rate ranking alone.

Pennsylvania Foreclosure Market FAQ

Is Pennsylvania a high-rate foreclosure state in 2026?

No. Pennsylvania ranked No. 19 by April 2026 foreclosure rate and No. 20 by Q1 2026 foreclosure rate, according to ATTOM. It is better described as a moderate-rate state with meaningful REO activity and specific metro-level signals.

Why is Pennsylvania still worth monitoring?

Pennsylvania is worth monitoring because ATTOM listed it among the top five states for completed foreclosures in April 2026, with 346 REOs. REO activity can create lender-owned deal flow even when the statewide foreclosure-rate rank is moderate.

Why is Pittsburgh important for foreclosure investors?

Pittsburgh showed one of the largest year-over-year increases in foreclosure starts among major metros in April 2026, rising from 82 starts in April 2025 to 215 starts in April 2026. That makes it a pipeline market for pre-foreclosure, sheriff-sale, and possible future REO research.

Is Pennsylvania a judicial foreclosure state?

Yes. Pennsylvania mortgage foreclosure generally requires a court action, judgment, and sheriff sale process. Investors should review court dockets, sheriff-sale terms, county records, title records, taxes, and occupancy before bidding or buying.

Are Pennsylvania sheriff-sale properties easy to buy?

Not necessarily. Sheriff-sale rules vary by county, and buyers may face title issues, tax balances, municipal claims, occupancy problems, limited inspection access, and strict payment requirements. Local procedure matters as much as the opening bid.

Are REO properties safer than sheriff-sale properties in Pennsylvania?

REO properties may reduce some sheriff-sale uncertainty because the lender has already taken title, but they are not automatically safe or profitable. Investors still need to verify condition, title, taxes, utilities, municipal issues, pricing, and exit demand.

Which Pennsylvania counties should investors research first?

ATTOM’s April 2026 state-rate table identified Delaware, Jefferson, Philadelphia, and Allegheny. Investors should also monitor Pittsburgh and Allegheny County because of the foreclosure-start signal, plus Philadelphia because of scale and recurring distressed-property flow.


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