KEY POINTS
  • As of Tuesday, roughly 3.6 million homeowners remain in pandemic-related forbearance plans. That's 6.8% of all active mortgages, representing $751 billion in unpaid principal.
  •  The government and private sector forbearance programs, initiated at the start of the pandemic, allow borrowers to delay their monthly payments for at least three months and for up to a year.

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Homes in the North Park neighborhood of San Diego, California.

The number of mortgages in active pandemic-related bailout plans rose by 21,000 in the past week after declining for six straight weeks, according to Black Knight, a mortgage technology and analytics firm. 

The increase was not across all mortgage types but among bank-held and private-labeled security loans (28,000), and, to a lesser extent, among FHA/VA loans (2,000). Those increases were offset by a decline of 9,000 Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans in forbearance.

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