Daily News Lesson

SHOW ALL

Feb. 9, 2026, 6:11 p.m.

How ‘zombie mortgages’ are coming back to haunt homeowners years later

NOTE: If you are short on time, watch the video and complete this See, Think, Wonder activity: What did you notice? What did the story make you think about? What would you want to learn more about?

SUMMARY

They’re called “zombie mortgages” — debts that homeowners thought were forgiven long ago, only to learn that they still exist and could cost them their homes. Economics correspondent Paul Solman and producer Diane Lincoln Estes report on these back-from-the-dead debts, in partnership with the documentary news group Retro Report.

View the transcript of the story.

News alternative: Check out recent segments from the NewsHour, and choose the story you’re most interested in watching. You can make a Google doc copy of discussion questions that work for any of the stories here.

Key terms

second mortgage — a loan taken out by the homeowner using their house as collateral (item of value) while they still have another loan secured by their house

lien — a right to keep possession of property belonging to another person until a debt owed by that person is discharged

retroactive interest — interest calculated on the full balance from the original purchase date, not just the portion that hasn't been paid, often at high rates

foreclosure — process that permits the bank to sell a person's home to pay back their debt if the homeowner is unable to make their mortgage payments

WARM-UP QUESTIONS

  1. Who are the homeowners interviewed for the story, and what are their backgrounds?
  2. When was the last financial crisis that centered around subprime mortgages?
  3. What is a zombie mortgage?
  4. Why was the work of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which required debt collectors to send periodic statements to homeowners, essentially shut down last February?
  5. How does retroactive interest affect struggling homeowners?

ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS

  • Do you think protections against zombie mortgages should exist for homeowners? Why or why not?

Credit: PBS News Hour screenshot

  • What do you think prospective homebuyers should know about mortgages and foreclosures before purchasing a home?

Media literacy: The News Hour report doesn't include the reasons why the homeowners interviewed took out a second mortgage. Do you think this is a relevant question? Why or why not?

WHAT STUDENTS CAN DO

Watch Retro Report's story below on the 2008 financial crisis and check out the accompanying lessons (you will have to login — it's free!): Lesson Plan: Accountability and the Great Recession: A Financial Crisis Inquiry and Lesson Plan: the 2008 Financial Crisis.

Sign up to receive our weekly newsletter with Daily News Lessons and community events.

To provide feedback on News Hour Classroom's resources, including this lesson, click here.

Recent Daily News Lessons

springsteeen-1024x576

Daily News Lesson

Bruce Springsteen on 'critical patriotism' and the power of protest music

Learn more about "the Boss's" efforts to simultaneously express his devotion to the United States and hold its leaders accountable

Illustration shows Claude app icon

Daily News Lesson

Anthropic disables new AI model after White House security directive

Learn about the current challenges facing the U.S. government’s broad use of powerful yet largely unregulated AI models

Image 6-23-26 at 2.42 PM

Daily News Lesson

Plagued by algae and peeling paint, reflecting pool set to undergo more repairs

Learn about the controversy surrounding repairs to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool ahead of America's 250th anniversary

Dedication ceremony for the opening of the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago

Daily News Lesson

How the Obama Presidential Center offers a new vision for presidential legacies

With his new Presidential Center in Chicago, Barack Obama is hoping to display a "vibrant, living celebration of community."

SUPPORTED BY VIEWERS LIKE YOU. ADDITIONAL SUPPORT PROVIDED BY:

PBS News Hour Classroom

Copyright © 2025 News Hour Production LLC. All Rights Reserved

Illustrations by Annamaria Ward