Florida has 12,403 active pre-foreclosure properties right now. Pennsylvania has 16. Both are large states. The difference is not population or housing prices. It's their laws.
Every state follows one of two foreclosure processes: judicial or non-judicial. That single legal distinction determines how long a property sits in pre-foreclosure status, which directly controls how many opportunities exist at any given time.
A pre-foreclosure property is a home where the owner has fallen behind on mortgage payments and the lender has filed a public notice, but the property has not yet gone to auction. The owner still holds the title.
In non-judicial states, the lender files a Notice of Default (NOD). In judicial states, a lis pendens is filed instead. Both are public records, which means anyone can find them.
For investors, this is the most valuable stage of the foreclosure timeline. You can negotiate directly with the homeowner, inspect the property, and arrange financing. None of that is possible at a courthouse auction.
Judicial foreclosure requires the lender to go through the court. The process takes 12 to 24 months. States like Florida, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey use this process.
Non-judicial foreclosure lets the lender bypass the courts entirely. The property can go to auction in as little as 21 to 120 days. Texas, Georgia, Arizona, and Virginia are non-judicial states.
In a judicial state, properties enter pre-foreclosure and stay there for months while the court process plays out. The pipeline fills up. In a non-judicial state, properties enter and exit within weeks. Even in a state with millions of homes, the active inventory at any given moment can be surprisingly small.
This data comes from DealMachine's live parcel database, pulled May 15, 2026. The "Double Distress" column tracks properties that are both in pre-foreclosure and behind on property taxes.
| Rank | State | Pre-Foreclosure Count | Foreclosure Law Type | Double Distress |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Florida | 12,403 | Judicial | 562 |
| 2 | California | 8,478 | Non-Judicial (extended notice) | 456 |
| 3 | Illinois | 7,210 | Judicial | 135 |
| 4 | New York | 4,644 | Judicial | 54 |
| 5 | New Jersey | 3,911 | Judicial | N/A |
| 6 | South Carolina | 2,446 | Judicial | 28 |
| 7 | Colorado | 2,331 | Non-Judicial | 143 |
| 8 | Texas | 2,227 | Non-Judicial | 378 |
| 9 | North Carolina | 1,665 | Non-Judicial | N/A |
| 10 | Kentucky | 1,325 | Judicial | N/A |
| 11 | Nevada | 998 | Non-Judicial | N/A |
| 12 | Michigan | 329 | Non-Judicial | N/A |
| 13 | Virginia | 320 | Non-Judicial | N/A |
| 14 | Missouri | 270 | Non-Judicial | N/A |
| 15 | Washington | 189 | Non-Judicial | N/A |
For contrast: Georgia (112), Arizona (50), Ohio (28), Pennsylvania (16), and Indiana (8). These are large states with fast non-judicial processes and almost no active inventory at any given time.
Judicial states dominate. Florida, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey together account for 28,168 properties, more than 60% of total tracked national inventory. Compare Florida (judicial, 12,403) to Georgia (non-judicial, 112). That is a 110-to-1 difference between two large southeastern states, explained almost entirely by foreclosure law type.
Texas is the exception. It has 2,227 properties despite one of the fastest foreclosure timelines in the country. Population scale (30 million+ residents) keeps the count above 2,000 even though properties move through the system quickly. But Florida, with a smaller population, still has nearly six times more inventory. Population sets the floor. The law sets the ceiling.
Double distress is the highest-value signal. Florida has 562 properties that are both in pre-foreclosure and tax delinquent. California has 456. Texas has 378. These homeowners face two financial pressures at the same time, making them the most motivated sellers in the dataset. In DealMachine, you can stack the pre-foreclosure and tax-delinquent filters to isolate exactly these leads.
The data in this post comes directly from DealMachine's property database. You can access the same data yourself in about five minutes.
Log into DealMachine, open the lead search, and apply the pre-foreclosure filter. Search at the state, county, or ZIP level. Stack the tax-delinquent filter for double-distress leads. Then use skip tracing to find the homeowner data and start your outreach through direct mail, phone, or both.
Always check your state's solicitation laws before making contact. The NOD and lis pendens are public records, so outreach is legal. Approach every conversation as someone offering a solution.
Start your first pre-foreclosure lead list in DealMachine and reach distressed sellers before the bank does.