The number is real: producing loan officers in the United States have declined roughly 46% from their 2021 peak, dropping from approximately 330,000 to about 178,000. But the headline most people run with, that “half of all loan officers quit,” is telling a different story than the data supports.
The distinction matters because it changes what you should do about it. If half of all loan officers disappeared, the remaining ones should be drowning in opportunity. They are not. Understanding why requires separating producing loan officers from licensed ones, and separating the refi boom from the purchase market that replaced it.

Producing vs. Licensed: Two Very Different Numbers
The NMLS tracks both licensed and producing loan officers. The licensed count includes everyone who holds an active NMLS ID, whether or not they funded a single loan in the past year. The producing count tracks originators who actually closed at least one transaction.
The licensed count has remained relatively flat. It even grew slightly in 2025. People kept their licenses active even as production dried up, either because they were working in related roles (processing, underwriting, management) or because they planned to return when volume recovered.
The producing count, on the other hand, dropped sharply. And the reason is not mysterious: the 2021 market was a once-in-a-generation refi boom ($4.4 trillion in originations), and a large number of the loan officers “producing” during that period were originators who only existed because of refi volume. When rates climbed and refi evaporated, their production went to zero. They did not quit the industry. The market they were built for ceased to exist.
The Remaining 178,000 Are Fighting for Less Volume
Here is the part most commentary skips: the 178,000 producing loan officers who remain are competing for roughly 25% to 30% of 2021’s total origination volume. Fewer originators sounds like less competition until you realize that the pie shrank faster than the headcount.
Purchase originations have been suppressed by low inventory, high rates, and the locked-in effect (60% of outstanding mortgages carry rates below 4%, removing those borrowers from the move-up market). The loan officers still producing are working harder for fewer deals, not coasting on a thinner field.
What This Means for Your Pipeline
If you are one of the 178,000 still producing, the strategic implication is straightforward: the volume is not coming back to 2021 levels through rates alone, and the competition for purchase business is intense because every remaining originator is fighting for the same pool.
The loan officers growing in this market share three characteristics. First, they have a system for mining their existing database instead of buying new leads. Second, they maintain active referral networks through consistent communication, not occasional check-ins. Third, they use automation to stay present with past clients without it consuming their entire day.

The Opportunity Inside the Decline
There is a real opportunity here, just not the one the headline implies. The 46% decline means a large number of past clients are now orphaned. Their original loan officer is no longer producing, which means nobody is monitoring their database, nobody is reaching out when their credit profile changes, and nobody is there when they start shopping for their next mortgage.
If you have 500 contacts in your database and some percentage of them were originally served by loan officers who have since left, those contacts are functionally unassigned. A credit monitoring system that watches for activity across your full database, including contacts who came through referrals or past partnerships, captures that orphaned opportunity automatically.
BNTouch’s Credit Check Alerts monitor your entire database for credit profile changes. When a signal fires on a contact whose original loan officer is no longer active, you are the one who gets the alert and makes the call.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many loan officers are actively producing in 2026?
Approximately 177,912 loan officers are actively producing (closed at least one transaction), according to NMLS data. This represents a 46% decline from the approximately 330,000 producing during the 2021 peak.
Did loan officers quit, or did the market change?
Both, but the market change is the primary driver. The 2021 refi boom ($4.4 trillion in originations) supported a large number of originators whose production depended on refinance volume. When rates climbed and refi disappeared, their production went to zero. Many kept their licenses active but stopped originating.
Is there less competition for mortgage business in 2026?
Not proportionally. While the number of producing originators dropped 46%, total origination volume dropped to roughly 25% to 30% of 2021 levels. Fewer originators are competing for an even smaller pie, which means competition per deal is as intense or more intense than during the boom.
What are orphaned mortgage clients?
Orphaned clients are borrowers whose original loan officer is no longer actively producing. These clients are not being monitored, contacted, or served by any originator, which means they are likely to shop independently or respond to the first competitor who reaches them when they need a new mortgage.
The 46% decline left millions of borrowers without a loan officer watching their back. Capture that orphaned pipeline with BNTouch’s Credit Check Alerts, free for 90 days starting July 1. Start here.



