In stark contrast to the FHA, the VA currently has no effective loss mitigation option for the vast majority of struggling Veterans. But wait what about VASP?
The VA Servicing Purchase program (VASP) provided a lifeline to ~35,000 struggling Veterans. I detailed why this program would be so effective in a piece in early April (read it here
Will the reckoning for VA mortgages look anything like FHA?
The moratorium on VA foreclosures expired in December and there was a sharp uptick in VA foreclosure starts in January
)
Somewhat ironically though, literally the day after I published the piece, the programs cancellation was announced with May 1st marking the end of the VAs approval of VASP applications.
So while VASP was very effective for those Veterans that got in, for those Veterans that did not, the vast majority of them basically have no loss mitigation option at present. More on that at the end of the piece.
First a look at the June numbers for VA loans.
The VA portfolio saw a modest uptick in delinquency rate in June; rising from 3.97% to 4.18%. The serious delinquency rate held close to constant falling from 1.84% to 1.83%. These are over the 3.66 million VA loans in GNMA_II pools which is nearly all of the portfolio.
The delinquency rates inside the VA portfolio share some broad characteristics with the FHAs, specifically that the rate on modifications and reperforms is significantly higher than the rest of the portfolio and the delinquency rate on modifications performed post June 2022 when interest rates started to spike is similarly awful.
The key difference being that the VA portfolio has far fewer of these modifications totaling only about 33,000 currently in GNMA_II pools vs. about 123,000 of these modifications in the FHA portfolio.
When you zoom in on the vast vast majority of the VA portfolio, the delinquency trends have been steadily, though pretty slowly, rising since the post Covid lows and are above the pre-pandemic rates for the portfolio as a whole and for each cohort save the rates refi, which makes sense when you consider how many of those folks refinanced during the pandemic. Something to keep eye on, but not particularly alarming in and of itself.
The real story in the VA data over the past few months has been the uptick in foreclosures and loss mitigation pool removals for VASP.
VA Foreclosures
The chart below shows pool removals for foreclosure with claim. In 2019 through the pandemic start these ranged from 400-500 a month pretty regularly. Then they became essentially non-existent for a while due to Covid moratoriums, started to rise again as those moratoriums expired and then crashed again in 2024 as the VA issued another moratorium to give time for VASP to be implemented. Once that final moratorium expired at the beginning of this year a pent up supply of foreclosures actually started making their way to auction.
These pool removals very likely reflect actual foreclosures, not just foreclosure starts. (which have also spiked this year in much greater volume, some of which will go all the way to foreclosure, some of which wont) This chart right now doesnt so much reflect stress in the portfolio vs. pent up FCs that were prevented from going to auction due to VA policy (or pseudo policy since the moratorium was more a heavy suggestion not to do it) Many of these foreclosures will be for properties of borrowers who have not been responsive to their servicers over the past few years. They were always going to happen, they just couldnt really for the past few years, and now they can so they are. Expect these FC pool removals to remain at an elevated level for a while yet.
VASP
The biggest story being told in the VA data is VASP. The VA Servicing Purchase program was a VA program to purchase seriously delinquent loans from the holder after which the VA would modify the loan to a 2.5% interest rate to reduce the payment and cover any arrears, hold it on their book, and service it themselves (through a contractor). This program started in October of last year, ramped up in earnest in the beginning of the year and was abruptly shut down by the VA (new political appointee leadership) in April with an end date of May 1 for the VA to approve applications for the program.
VASP removals show up as pool removals due to loss mitigation. The servicer removes them from the pool as close as possible to transferring the loan to the VA. These lump in with non-VASP loan modifications (e.g. when rates were super low in 2021, loan modifications were a viable way to provide payment relief for struggling borrowers) but it is safe to say that with rates where they are and the very low rate that most VA loans carry, nearly all of the removals since last October or so have been VASP related.
Even though the VA stopped approving VASP applications on May 1st, there were still 3419 loss mit pool removals in June (albeit down from 6017 in May). The pool removals will usually lag the approval date as the holder/servicers of the loan will wait to remove them from the pool until right before the VA pays them and there is a couple month lag of that from VA approval.
Additionally, some of the VASP approvals were subject to the loan completing a 3 month trial payment plan. For those loans that complete the plans, the pool removals should continue for the next couple months. Perhaps a few thousand more VASPs to be removed from pools before the servicer impact of that program is over.
How Many loans did the VA purchase through VASP?
There have been ~34,000 loss mit pool removals on VA loans since last September though a few of them may have been for traditional modifications and with a few thousand likely yet to hit, something around 35,000 loans looks to be the number when it is all said and done.
This gels with the 33,000 that NPR reported in a story last month that they seem to have sourced from a FOIA request to the VA (read it here https://www.npr.org/2025/06/19/nx-s1-5400980/va-loans-veterans-mortgage-relief-republicans)
How many VA loans have been left behind?
As of June there were still 43162 VA loans that are 6 months or more delinquent (with another 23500 between 3 and 5 months delinquent). Aside from maybe a few thousand still in VASP trial payment plans, nearly all of these loans have no effective loss mitigation option now that VASP is gone. There is legislation that has passed the house (in committee in the Senate) , HR 1815, that would create a partial clam program for VA loans that would provide some option to at least cure the arrears on these 43162 loans. If the VA implements something akin to the FHAโs payment supplemental partial claim with the new authority there is even the possibility it can offer some payment relief for these Veterans.
I dont have connections in the halls of Congress but given that it passed the house with bipartisan support (albeit if a little reluctantly since the democrats in the Veterans committee seemingly felt they had no choice with the Trump administration abruptly killing VASP) it seems likely HR 1815, or something very close to it, will pass the Senate and become law.
Until that happens however, FC proceedings will likely motor along on these loans and starts will continue along for borrowers falling into serious delinquency since there are effectively no loss mitigation options for most struggling Veteran borrowers given the rate environment.
Thanks,
John