What the State Database Shows
California tracks residential foreclosure sales through a reporting system established under Civil Code Section 2924m, which requires trustees to submit sale details to the state Attorney General’s office. The searchable state portal maintained by the California Department of Justice includes record-level fields such as property addresses, trustee-sale dates, winning bidders, and finalization dates. This dataset serves as the primary public record for monitoring how many homes reach the auction stage in any given month. The database, which feeds into the state’s broader Open Justice platform, allows researchers and the public to isolate sales by date range and geography. For February 2026, the volume of properties with scheduled or completed trustee sales approached the 1,000 mark, a figure that stands out against months of relatively lower activity in prior years. The data does not capture every distressed property in California, since many foreclosure proceedings settle or are modified before reaching auction, but it does represent the sharpest edge of the state’s housing distress. What makes this dataset distinct from national aggregators is its granularity. Each entry includes the name of the trustee conducting the sale and whether an eligible bidder, such as a tenant, nonprofit, or community land trust, participated under the 2924m framework. That level of detail matters because it reveals not just how many homes are being lost but who is buying them on the other side of the transaction. When institutional investors dominate the winning-bidder column, it raises different policy questions than when owner-occupants or mission-driven organizations acquire the properties.A National Trend Reaches California
California’s February numbers did not emerge in isolation. ATTOM’s February 2026 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report, published on March 12, 2026, documented a gradual nationwide increase in foreclosure activity continuing into early 2026. The increase has been steady rather than sudden, which distinguishes the current cycle from the sharp spike that defined the 2008–2012 crisis. But steady does not mean harmless. A slow climb in foreclosures, compounded month after month, erodes household wealth and neighborhood stability just as effectively over time. Nationally, Indiana, South Carolina, and Florida led the country in the highest reported rates of foreclosure filings during February, according to the same ATTOM report. States with the greatest number of bank-repossessed properties, known as REOs, ranged from 39 to 36 in February. California, despite its larger housing stock and higher home values, did not top those per-capita rankings, but the raw count of properties heading to auction tells a different story about scale. When nearly 1,000 homes in a single state face trustee sales in one month, the aggregate dollar value and the number of displaced residents can dwarf what smaller states experience even at higher rates.Why the Conventional Read May Be Wrong
Much of the national commentary around foreclosure data treats the gradual rise as a return to pre-pandemic norms rather than a sign of deepening trouble. That framing deserves scrutiny, at least in California. The state’s housing market operates under conditions that amplify even modest foreclosure increases. Home prices remain far above national medians, meaning each foreclosed property represents a larger financial loss for the borrower and a bigger disruption to the surrounding market. Insurance costs have surged in wildfire-prone regions, adding a fixed expense that did not exist at this scale five years ago. And unlike states where foreclosure is a judicial process that can stretch for years, California’s non-judicial trustee-sale system moves relatively quickly from default to auction. The combination of those factors means that comparing California’s foreclosure trajectory to national averages obscures more than it clarifies. A homeowner in the San Bernardino foothills facing a sharply higher insurance premium and an adjustable-rate mortgage reset is in a fundamentally different position than a borrower in Indiana dealing with a job loss. Both may end up in the same ATTOM dataset, but the policy responses they need are not interchangeable. In California, speed and price volatility magnify the damage when a loan tips into default.What 2924m Data Reveals About Buyers
California Civil Code Section 2924m was designed to give certain buyers, including tenants, prospective owner-occupants, and affordable housing nonprofits, a priority window to bid on foreclosed properties before institutional investors could step in. The Attorney General’s foreclosure dataset, accessible through a dedicated data download interface, tracks whether those eligible bidders actually win at auction, providing a real-time test of whether the law is working as intended. The data fields in the database, which include winning-bidder type and finalization dates, offer a way to measure whether community-oriented buyers are competing effectively against cash-rich investors. If the February entries show that the vast majority of winning bids went to entities outside the eligible-bidder categories, it would suggest the 2924m framework needs strengthening. If eligible bidders are winning a meaningful share, the law may be modestly rebalancing who ends up owning foreclosed homes, even if it cannot prevent every loss. Because the system records both scheduled and completed sales, it can also highlight where eligible bidders are dropping out. A pattern in which tenants or nonprofits register initial interest but are consistently outbid at the final sale price would indicate that the statutory priority window is not enough to overcome pricing and financing disadvantages. Conversely, clusters of successful nonprofit purchases could point to local ecosystems (such as community land trusts and municipal housing departments) that are using the law more aggressively.Implications for Policy and Practice

Paul Anderson is a finance writer and editor at The Financial Wire. He has spent seven years writing about investment strategies and the global economy for digital publications across the US and UK. His work focuses on making sense of economic policy, cost-of-living issues, and the stories that affect everyday Americans.


