Hillsborough County, FL Foreclosures (2026)

Explore foreclosure properties with the highest estimated available equity in Hillsborough County, FL. Rankings are based on county appraisal values and recorded lien information.

Best auction deals in Hillsborough County, FL (upcoming auction)
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Address
Auction Date
Available Equity
Prop Type
#
Address
Available Equity
Prop Type
1
06/18/2026
0.22
SINGLE FAMILY R
1
0.22
SINGLE FAMILY R
2
06/18/2026
0.05
SINGLE FAMILY R
2
0.05
SINGLE FAMILY R
3
06/18/2026
-0.35
SINGLE FAMILY R
3
-0.35
SINGLE FAMILY R

For full foreclosure listing in Hillsborough County, FL and information visit foreclosure listing page

Hillsborough County, FL House Price Index

Hillsborough County, FL Labor Market Condition

Hillsborough County Housing Market Condition

Strong Market

Strong Market: Hillsborough County’s housing picture is being driven by steady population growth, an expanding housing supply, and rising home values. Over the past year the county added about 33,000 people (a 2.2% gain) and roughly 12,500 housing units (about a 2.0% increase), which reflects both ongoing in-migration and continued homebuilding activity that is keeping pace with statewide growth and modestly ahead of the national pace.

Home price trends and FHFA

Home prices have moved up noticeably. The county’s median home value rose roughly 11.5% to about $371,500 year over year, a gain slightly larger than both the statewide and national median increases. At the same time, the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s local index shows more modest appreciation of 1.66% over its 12‑month reporting period, while the state-level FHFA figure was slightly negative. Those two measures capture different slices of the market, so you see a strong Census-based jump in median values alongside a smaller, FHFA-measured increase in prices.


Vacancy and ownership

Vacancy and tenure patterns point to a market with steady owner demand. The housing vacancy rate ticked down to 7.5% from 7.8%, and the share of owner‑occupied homes rose to 61.5% while renter-occupied share edged lower to 38.5%. These small shifts suggest more units are being absorbed by owners than renters over the last year, even as new construction expands the overall supply.


Labor market conditions

Labor market conditions are supportive but mixed: the county unemployment rate was 4.6% in April 2026, a touch below the state’s 4.8% for the same month and a bit above the most recent national rate of 4.3% (national data are from May 2026). Stable employment at these levels helps sustain housing demand, though wage and job growth details would be needed to assess affordability trends more fully.


Population and housing growth

Overall, Hillsborough’s market combines rising population, more housing stock, and pronounced median-value gains, while FHFA’s local index shows only modest price appreciation—an important nuance for anyone watching valuation measures.


What this means
HomeownersRising median values mean more home equity for many owners but consider FHFA’s smaller measured gain when evaluating price momentum.
BuyersExpect higher asking prices than a year ago and competition in desirable neighborhoods, though more new listings are coming online.
RentersRents are rising, so renters should budget for higher monthly costs and watch for new rental supply that may ease pressure.
Market ParticipantsTrack both median-value reports and FHFA trends to understand different signals about price momentum and where demand is concentrated.

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