April 4, 2026

Best Foreclosure Websites to Find Deals in 2026

Foreclosure properties offer some of the deepest discounts in real estate, but finding them before the competition requires the right tools. The best foreclosure websites in 2026 range from free county portals to paid data platforms that aggregate distressed property listings across markets.

This guide covers free foreclosure listing sites, paid data tools, auction platforms, and how to combine them for a complete foreclosure deal pipeline.

Foreclosure Website Comparison

WebsitePriceForeclosure StageData QualityCoverageBest For
County CourthouseFreeAll stagesPrimary sourcePer countyLocal research
HUD HomeStoreFreeREO (government)HighNationwideHUD-owned homes
Auction.comFree to browseAuction + REOHighNationwideOnline auctions
Foreclosure.com$39-$50/moAll stagesModerateNationwidePre-foreclosure lists
RealtyTrac$49/moAll stagesModerate-HighNationwideData + analysis
PropStream$99/moPre-foreclosureHighNationwideList building
Zillow ForeclosuresFreeREO + auctionModerateNationwideQuick browsing
HomePath (Fannie Mae)FreeREO (Fannie Mae)HighNationwideFannie Mae REO

Free Foreclosure Websites

1. County Courthouse / Clerk Portal

The primary source for foreclosure data. County clerks record notices of default, lis pendens filings, and auction schedules. Many counties publish these online. In Texas, foreclosure postings must be filed at the county clerk's office at least 21 days before the first Tuesday auction date.

Strengths: Free, primary source, most current data, captures all stages.

Limitations: Interface varies by county. No aggregation across counties. Manual search required.

2. HUD HomeStore (hudhomestore.gov)

Official listing site for HUD-owned properties (FHA foreclosures). These are properties where the borrower defaulted on an FHA-insured mortgage. HUD HomeStore posts properties as they become available, with a bidding process through registered brokers.

Strengths: Direct government listings, verified data, nationwide coverage.

Limitations: Only FHA foreclosures. Requires a registered agent to bid. Properties often need significant repairs.

3. HomePath (Fannie Mae) and HomeSteps (Freddie Mac)

Fannie Mae's HomePath.com lists properties owned by Fannie Mae after foreclosure. Similar to HUD HomeStore but for Fannie Mae-insured mortgages. HomeSteps (Freddie Mac) is the equivalent for Freddie Mac properties.

4. Zillow Foreclosure Listings

Zillow's foreclosure filter shows bank-owned (REO) properties and some auction listings. Convenient for quick browsing but not as comprehensive as dedicated foreclosure platforms.

5. Auction.com

The largest online real estate auction platform. Lists both foreclosure auctions and bank-owned properties. You can browse for free; bidding requires registration and earnest money deposit.

Paid Foreclosure Data Tools

6. PropStream ($99/mo)

PropStream's foreclosure filter identifies pre-foreclosure properties (notice of default filed but not yet auctioned). Stack it with other distress indicators (vacant, tax delinquent, absentee) for targeted lists. The most useful tool for pre-foreclosure outreach — contacting homeowners before the auction.

Best for: Building targeted pre-foreclosure mailing lists. Combine with skip tracing for direct outreach.

7. Foreclosure.com ($39-$50/mo)

Aggregates foreclosure listings from county records and bank REO inventories. Covers all stages: pre-foreclosure, auction, and bank-owned. Good for nationwide foreclosure browsing at a moderate price.

8. RealtyTrac ($49/mo)

Combines foreclosure listings with market analytics. Includes foreclosure heat maps, trend data, and property details. Useful for market research alongside deal finding.

After Finding Foreclosures: The Disposition Side

Finding a foreclosure deal is acquisition. Getting it under contract and selling it to an end buyer is disposition. Foreclosure websites help with the first part. For the second part, you need tools that find active investors near the property, analyze the deal to price it correctly, and market it professionally.

A common foreclosure wholesaling stack: PropStream ($99/mo) for finding pre-foreclosure leads + Deal Run ($99/mo) for analyzing deals and finding buyers = $198/mo total.

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