Foreclosure Prevention

Sell to Avoid Foreclosure in Florida

How to sell before foreclosure in Florida. Understand the timeline, your rights, and how a fast cash sale protects your credit.

How Does Foreclosure Work in Florida?

Florida uses judicial foreclosure (FL Statute 702). Timeline: Day 1 - missed payment. Day 90 - lender sends default notice. Day 120 - lender files lis pendens (foreclosure lawsuit). Day 120-300 - court proceedings. Day 300-365+ - foreclosure sale. Total: typically 180-365 days, giving you time to act if you move quickly.

Can You Sell While in Foreclosure?

Yes. You can sell at any point before the foreclosure sale date. Even after the lis pendens is filed, you retain ownership and can sell. The key is acting before the court issues a final judgment. Sale proceeds go to pay off the mortgage first, with remaining funds going to you.

Why Cash Sale During Foreclosure?

Time is the enemy. Cash closes in 7-14 days - well within any foreclosure timeline. Traditional sales take 60-90+ days which may not fit your window. Cash buyers also purchase regardless of condition and handle all closing logistics, reducing your stress during an already difficult time.

Credit Impact: Selling vs Foreclosure?

Foreclosure stays on your credit for 7 years, drops your score 100-160 points, and forces a 3-7 year wait before qualifying for a new mortgage. Selling before foreclosure shows as a regular sale - minimal credit impact. Even a short sale is significantly less damaging than foreclosure.

What If You Owe More Than the House Is Worth?

If your mortgage exceeds property value: (1) Short sale - sell for less with lender approval, lender forgives the difference (60-120 days for approval). (2) Negotiate with lender to accept less than full balance. Important: Florida lenders can pursue deficiency judgments for the remaining balance, so always negotiate a deficiency waiver as part of any short sale.

Get an Emergency Cash Offer

FAQ

180-365 days from first missed payment in Florida judicial foreclosure. Act early for maximum options.

Yes. Lis pendens is a notice of pending litigation, not ownership transfer. Sell anytime before the foreclosure sale.

If sale covers mortgage: no. If short sale: lender may pursue deficiency judgment - negotiate a waiver.

MG
Mark Gabrielli
Founder, OneCashOffer

Mark has facilitated hundreds of property transactions across Florida.

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