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ATTOM's Q3 2025 data shows something we have not seen since 2008.
National home flipping ROI fell to 23.1%, the lowest level in 17 years.
Gross profits are down materially year over year.
Yet flipping activity remains elevated in several states.
That combination matters.
For more than a decade, flippers acted as shock absorbers in the housing system.
They could overpay slightly, miss a timeline, absorb a cost overrun, and still exit cleanly.
At sub 25% margins, that buffer is gone.
What follows is predictable:
• Fewer investors willing to step in early
• Thinner pricing on resale
• More stalled or failed rehabs
• Exits that do not fail loudly, they fail slowly
This is how risk migrates through a system.
First it leaves the investor.
Then it sits on the property.
Eventually it lands with lenders, agents, and homeowners who did not expect to be holding it.
The takeaway is not that flipping is dead.
It is that the safety net underneath the market is thinning, and when buffers disappear, small misses turn into structural problems.