Mortgages 30–89 days delinquent
The 30-89 mortgage delinquency rate is a measure of early stage delinquencies and can be an early indicator of the mortgage market's overall health. It captures borrowers that have missed one or two payments.
These interactive charts show the percentage of mortgages 30–89 days delinquent in the U.S. based on a 5 percent sample of residential mortgages since January 2008.
On this page, you can:
Figure 1A
View mortgage delinquency rate trends
This interactive chart lets you view the 30–89 day mortgage delinquency rate for a specific state, metro area, non-metro area, or county and compare it to the national average.
Filter by location to display trends
Percentage of mortgages 30–89 days delinquent:
national average versus national average, January 2008–March 2024
Source: National Mortgage Database
Date published: October 2024
Downloads: CSV files with data by state (42 KB), metro and non-metro areas (252 KB), or county (378 KB).
Note: Locations with insufficient data are not provided. Mortgage delinquencies may be underreported during public emergencies. Learn more about the data.
Figure 1B
Map mortgage delinquency rates by month
This interactive map lets you focus on the 30–89 day mortgage delinquency rate for states, metro and non-metro areas, and counties at a particular point in time since 2008. See how it compares to the surrounding area and the national average.
Percentage of mortgages 30–89 days delinquent:
state view for March 2024
Source: National Mortgage Database
Date published: October 2024
Downloads: CSV files with data by state (42 KB), metro and non-metro areas (252 KB), or county (378 KB).
Note: Mortgage delinquencies may be underreported during public emergencies. Learn more about the data.