The court case is already filed. The sheriff's sale date exists somewhere on a docket. That doesn't mean you're out of options, it means the timeline is real and every week matters. I buy houses before the auction, pay off the mortgage at closing, and stop the process.
The certified mail starts. Then the missed calls from the lender. Then the auction date on a piece of paper that doesn't feel real. By the time most sellers call me, they've been sitting with this for weeks and the clock is loud.
Here's the part most people don't know:
Foreclosure is a lawsuit, not a seizure. Your lender files a complaint in court alleging you've defaulted on the mortgage note. The court then oversees a process that ends, if nothing intervenes, with a sheriff's sale at which the property is auctioned to the highest bidder. In New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Maryland, every residential foreclosure goes through the courts. That judicial structure is what gives you time to act, because courts move slowly and lenders are required to follow procedural rules at each step.
What's at stake is the equity in the house. If you've owned the property for any length of time, or if the loan balance has declined, there may be meaningful equity sitting in that house right now, equity that evaporates the moment a third-party bidder wins the auction. The lender's attorneys add their fees to your balance every month the case is open. The longer you wait, the smaller your net proceeds at closing. And once the sheriff's deed is delivered, 10 days after the sale in NJ, immediately in PA, shortly after ratification in MD, the house is gone.
Servicers are required to offer you loss mitigation options. Most homeowners in foreclosure spend months submitting paperwork, getting lost in the process, and receiving vague letters about "pending review." Modifications take time your timeline may not have, and approval is not guaranteed. Meanwhile the sale date moves closer.
Wholesalers take a contract on your house and then try to assign it to someone else. That assignment process has no guaranteed closing date, and if the end buyer walks, so does the deal. With a sheriff's sale on the calendar, you cannot afford a failed contract. You need a buyer who closes with their own funds.
A traditional listing needs 30 days of showings, a buyer who needs a mortgage, a lender who needs an appraisal, and an underwriter who takes three weeks. That sequence doesn't fit inside a 30-day window before a sheriff's sale, and most retail buyers won't touch a house with a pending auction anyway.
I buy with cash, not loans, so there's no appraisal, no financing contingency, and no underwriter who can slow things down. When a homeowner calls me about a foreclosure situation, the first thing I do is figure out the actual timeline, not the general timeline, but your specific sale date, your payoff amount, and how much title work the property will need. Then I give you a number the same day.
New Jersey is a judicial foreclosure state governed by the New Jersey Fair Foreclosure Act (N.J.S.A. 2A:50-56). The process begins with a Notice of Intention to Foreclose, sent by certified mail at least 30 days before the lender can file, and moves through the NJ Superior Court, Chancery Division. Uncontested cases are processed by the Office of Foreclosure in Trenton. Essex County, Hudson County, and Bergen County courts carry significant dockets, which regularly extends timelines past 18 months. After Final Judgment is entered, the County Sheriff schedules the auction; you have the right to two statutory adjournments of 30 days each. After the sale, there is a 10-day post-sale window during which the deed has not yet been delivered, technically a redemption period, rarely used. If you haven't reached the Final Judgment stage, you almost certainly have time to sell.
The Community Wealth Preservation Program (signed January 2024) introduced new bidding procedures that prioritize owner-occupants and municipalities as "Preferred Purchasers" at sheriff's sales, which has extended some post-judgment timelines further. Call me before the auction.
Pennsylvania is a judicial foreclosure state. Before a lender can file suit, they must issue an Act 6 Notice (41 P.S. § 403) giving you 30 days to cure the default. If your mortgage qualifies under the state assistance program, you'll also receive an Act 91 Notice triggering your right to apply to the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency's HEMAP loan program. The formal foreclosure complaint is filed in the Court of Common Pleas in the county where the property sits. After a judgment is entered, the lender prepares a foreclosure package for the county Sheriff, who schedules the sale with at least 21 days of published notice. Pennsylvania provides no post-sale redemption period for mortgage foreclosures, once the sheriff's deed is acknowledged, that's final. You can reinstate the loan up to one hour before the auction, up to three times per year, but that requires paying all arrears, fees, and attorney costs in full. If you can't raise that amount, a cash sale before the sale date is your path.
Maryland's foreclosure process runs through the Circuit Court and moves faster than NJ or PA under normal conditions, often 6 to 12 months from first default to sale. The lender files an Order to Docket, which initiates the court action. Before that, they must send a Notice of Intent to Foreclose at least 45 days prior. Maryland law entitles you to request mediation through the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH), which can add weeks to the timeline. If no agreement is reached in mediation, the sale can be scheduled as soon as 15 days later. Prince George's County and Baltimore City Circuit Courts have historically carried faster dockets than some rural counties. After the sale, the lender files a Report of Sale within 30 days; the court clerk issues notice of ratification. You have 30 days from that notice to file exceptions, but in practice, once the sale occurs, the window is narrow. The time to act is before the sale date is set, not after.
Three fields on the form. Or a text. Address is enough to start. I'll pull the court docket and tax records myself.
I call you back, review the foreclosure timeline with you, and give you a real cash number, not a range, not a "let me get back to you."
We sign at a licensed title company. Proceeds pay off your mortgage. You leave with whatever equity remains. The sheriff's sale gets cancelled.
Yes. Filing the complaint starts the clock, it does not end your options. In NJ, PA, and MD, you can sell a house at any point before the sheriff's sale actually takes place. I need enough time to open title and get a payoff figure from your lender, which typically takes one to two weeks. The earlier you call, the cleaner the process.
In most cases, yes. If the house has enough equity to cover the payoff amount, we close, the proceeds pay off the mortgage at the settlement table, and the lender discontinues the foreclosure action. If the payoff exceeds the house's value, that's a short sale situation, I can still work through that, but it takes more time and lender cooperation.
After a sheriff's sale in New Jersey, the former homeowner has 10 days to file a formal objection. During that window, the winning bidder hasn't yet received the sheriff's deed. If you can redeem the property by paying the full judgment amount within those 10 days, you can technically reclaim it, but that rarely happens in practice. The real window is before the sale, not after.
Pennsylvania law allows a homeowner to reinstate a mortgage up to one hour before the sheriff's sale begins, up to three times per calendar year. That protection requires you to pay all missed payments, late fees, and attorney costs in full at the courthouse. A cash sale is the cleaner alternative if you can't raise that amount.
If the title is reasonably clean, I can close in seven to fourteen days. The constraint is usually the title search and getting a payoff letter from your servicer, servicers in foreclosure sometimes take a week or two to respond. I've closed foreclosure buyouts in under three weeks in NJ, PA, and MD. Call me as soon as you know the sale date.
Three things. Name, phone, address. That's the start.