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South Florida ranks fifth for foreclosures at end of 2015

A June 2011 photo of the downtown Miami skyline (Credit: Marc Averette) and a foreclosure sign
A June 2011 photo of the downtown Miami skyline (Credit: Marc Averette) and a foreclosure sign

South Florida was still the country’s fifth biggest foreclosure hot spot by the end of 2015, even though the region has seen a large decrease in filings for more than a year.

The owners of one out of every 51 houses in South Florida filed for foreclosure during 2015, according to a new report from analytics company RealtyTrac. That breaks down to a total of 48,830 properties, or just less than 2 percent of all the homes in Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties.

The region suffered a huge wave of housing foreclosure during the real estate crisis several years ago, and at its worst in 2009, had 172,894 homes in some stage of foreclosure.

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Those filings have since dipped dramatically, but South Florida still remains one of the country’s biggest offenders. Only four metropolitan areas posted higher foreclosure rates during 2015: Atlantic City, New Jersey with 3.43 percent, Trenton, New Jersey with 2.14 percent, Tampa with 2.03 percent and Jacksonville with 2.02 percent.

“South Florida real estate has seen a strong turnaround from our … bottom,” Mike Pappas, CEO and president of Keyes Company, wrote in the report. “Many properties have surpassed the peak valuation of 2005. Due to our judicial system we still have a remnant of foreclosures and short sales working through the system.”

Florida as a whole had 159,773 foreclosure filings during 2015, which equates to about 1.77 percent of its houses.

The national rate fared much better during 2015: 0.82 percent of U.S. homes had foreclosure filings at the end of last year, or one in every 122 houses. — Sean Stewart-Muniz

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