Your Options at Every Stage .Including One Most People Donโ€™t Know About

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If youโ€™re reading this, chances are youโ€™re dealing with something stressful. Maybe youโ€™ve missed a payment or two. Maybe you received a letter from your lender that made your stomach drop. Maybe youโ€™re just Googling worst-case scenarios at 2 a.m., hoping the answer is โ€œyou still have time.โ€

Hereโ€™s the truth: in most cases, you have more time and more options than you think. But those options narrow the longer you wait. So letโ€™s walk through exactly what happens during foreclosure, when each option becomes available (or closes), and what you can do right now โ€” no matter what stage youโ€™re in.

And yes, weโ€™ll cover the option most homeowners donโ€™t even know exists: selling your house, cashing out your equity, and staying in your home as a renter. (Hereโ€™s how it works.)

First, Some Context: Foreclosures Are Rising in 2026

This isnโ€™t a scare tactic, itโ€™s data. According to ATTOMโ€™s January 2026 Foreclosure Market Report, foreclosure filings have risen year over year for eleven consecutive months. Foreclosure starts are up 26% compared to last year, and completed foreclosures have increased nearly 59%. The states hit hardest? Delaware, Nevada, Florida, South Carolina, and Maryland. And the major metros seeing the most foreclosure starts include New York, Chicago, Houston, Miami, and Los Angeles. (See the full state-by-state breakdown.)

Multiple factors are driving this trend: inflation, elevated interest rates, and rising insurance costs are squeezing families across the country. If youโ€™re falling behind, youโ€™re not alone. The important thing isnโ€™t how you got here, itโ€™s what you do next.

The Foreclosure Timeline: Where Are You Right Now?

Understanding where you are in the process is the first step to understanding your options. Hereโ€™s a simplified timeline of how foreclosure works in most states.

Click your stage to see exactly what options are available to you right now

Details
Stage Missed Payments Days 1 โ€“ 120
Status ๐ŸŸข Options wide open
What's happening Federal law generally prevents lenders from starting formal proceedings until you're at least 120 days behind. Your lender will reach out to discuss the situation. This is your golden window โ€” the moment with the most flexibility and the most choices.
Your options
  • Loan Modification
  • Forbearance
  • Repayment Plan
  • Sale-Leaseback โ˜… Stay Home
  • Traditional Sale
Urgency
Low โ€” act now to keep every option available
Details
Stage Notice of Default / Lis Pendens Day 120+ ยท Formal filing
Status ๐ŸŸก Clock is ticking
What's happening The formal foreclosure process has begun. Depending on your state, you typically have 30โ€“90 days to cure the default โ€” pay what you owe โ€” or find an alternative before the next stage begins.
Your options
  • Loan Modification
  • Repayment Plan
  • Sale-Leaseback โ˜… Stay Home
  • Short Sale
  • Deed-in-Lieu
Urgency
Medium-High โ€” explore options within 30 days
Details
Stage Auction Scheduled Sale date set ยท Varies by state
Status ๐ŸŸ  Fewer options โ€” act fast
What's happening A sale date has been set. In some states you can still cure the default up until the auction; in others the window narrows significantly. Time is now measured in days, not months.
Your options
  • Sale-Leaseback โ˜… Closes in 15 days
  • Cash Sale
  • Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
Urgency
Critical โ€” contact Sell2Rent immediately
Details
Stage Auction / Sale Completed Property sold at auction
Status ๐Ÿ”ด Very difficult to reverse
What's happening Once the property has been sold at auction, your ability to reclaim it depends entirely on your state's redemption laws. Some states offer a redemption period (ranging from a few weeks to a year); others do not. If the sale is complete and your state has no redemption rights, it is likely too late.
Your options
  • State Redemption Period (if applicable)
  • Consult a Real Estate Attorney
Urgency
Severe โ€” check state redemption rights immediately

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So When Is It Actually Too Late?

The honest answer: itโ€™s too late once the auction is completed and your stateโ€™s redemption period (if any) has expired. Before that point, you almost always have options.

The earlier you act, the more choices you have. But even at Stage 3, solutions like a sale-leaseback can close in as few as 15 days, fast enough to beat an auction date.

Your Options at Every Stage: Ranked by What You Keep

โœฆ Best for: Stages 1โ€“2 ยท Temporary hardship

If your financial hardship is temporary, your lender may agree to change your loan terms โ€” lowering the interest rate, extending the repayment period, or adding missed payments to the back of the loan. This lets you keep your home and reset the clock without a sale or credit hit.

Contact your lender directly, or work with a HUD-approved housing counselor (free service) who can negotiate on your behalf.

  • โœ” Keep your home
  • โœ” No credit penalty
  • โš  Lender approval required
โœฆ Best for: Stage 1 ยท Short-term recovery

Forbearance temporarily pauses or reduces your payments while you recover from a financial setback โ€” job loss, medical emergency, or unexpected expense. It doesn't erase what you owe, but it buys you time without damaging your credit as severely as a foreclosure.

After the forbearance period ends, you'll work with your lender on a repayment plan or modification to bring the account current.

  • โœ” Keep your home
  • โœ” Buys time
  • โš  Debt still owed after period ends
โœฆ Best for: Stages 1โ€“2 ยท Hardship is over

If you're past the hardship and your income has stabilized, your lender may allow you to spread the past-due amount over several months on top of your regular payment. You pay slightly more each month until you're caught up โ€” a structured path back to good standing.

This works best when the financial setback was temporary and your current income can support the higher payment.

  • โœ” Keep your home
  • โœ” Avoid foreclosure record
  • โš  Higher monthly payment required
โœฆ Best for: Stages 1โ€“3 ยท Homeowners with equity

This is the option most homeowners don't know about. With a sale-leaseback, you sell your home to an investor, cash out your equity, and immediately sign a lease to stay in the same house as a renter.

No moving trucks. No packing boxes. No saying goodbye to your neighborhood, your kids' school, or your daily routine. You access your equity, clear your debts, and keep living in the home you love.

Sell2Rent's investor network closes in as few as 15 days, investors compete for your property so you get multiple offers, and no repairs are needed โ€” you sell as-is with no agent commissions.

  • โœ” Stay in your home
  • โœ” Cash out equity at closing
  • โœ” Closes in as few as 15 days
  • โœ” No repairs ยท No commissions
  • โœ” Multiple competing offers
See how it works โ†’
โœฆ Best for: Stages 2โ€“3 ยท Underwater on mortgage

If you owe more than your home is worth, your lender may agree to accept less than the full balance as payment in full. This avoids a formal foreclosure on your credit record, but the process typically takes several months and requires lender approval at every step.

You will lose your home in a short sale โ€” but it is less damaging to your credit than a completed foreclosure, which can stay on your report for seven years.

  • โœ” Better for credit than foreclosure
  • โš  You must vacate the property
  • โš  Process can take months
  • โš  Lender approval required
โœฆ Best for: Stages 2โ€“3 ยท Willing to voluntarily transfer

You voluntarily transfer the title of your home to your lender in exchange for being released from your mortgage obligation. This avoids the full formal foreclosure process, which is less damaging to your credit and can be faster.

However, lenders don't always accept a deed in lieu โ€” they may require you to first attempt a short sale โ€” and you still lose your home. There may also be tax implications on any forgiven debt.

  • โœ” Avoids formal foreclosure
  • โœ” Faster than a traditional foreclosure
  • โš  You must vacate the property
  • โš  Not always accepted by lenders
โœฆ Best for: Stages 2โ€“3 ยท Last-resort emergency halt

Filing Chapter 13 triggers an automatic stay, which immediately halts the foreclosure process. This gives you time to reorganize your debts under a court-approved repayment plan, typically spanning 3โ€“5 years.

It is a serious legal step with significant long-term credit implications. Bankruptcy stays on your credit report for up to 7 years and affects your ability to borrow. Consult a licensed bankruptcy attorney before considering this option.

  • โœ” Immediately halts foreclosure
  • โœ” Can allow you to keep your home
  • โš  Serious long-term credit impact
  • โš  Requires attorney ยท Complex process
  • โš  3โ€“5 year repayment plan required

Why Acting Early Matters More Than Anything

Weโ€™re not here to pressure you. But hereโ€™s what we see in the data: homeowners who act in Stage 1 or early Stage 2 have the most options, the most equity to protect, and the best outcomes. Waiting doesnโ€™t make the problem smaller โ€” it makes the options smaller.

Consider this:

The earlier you explore your options, the more of your equity, your credit, and your home you get to keep.

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Free ยท No Obligation

Thinking about your options?

Get a free assessment of your home's equity. A real person will review your situation within 24 hours.

Steps You Can Take Right Now

No matter what stage youโ€™re in, there are practical things you can do today.

  1. Call your lender. Ask about loss mitigation options. Lenders often prefer to work with you rather than go through a costly foreclosure.
  2. Contact a HUD-approved housing counselor. They provide free, independent advice and can help you negotiate with your lender. Find a counselor near you at HUD.gov.
  3. Understand your stateโ€™s timeline. Foreclosure processes and redemption rights vary significantly by state. This state-by-state guide from Nolo is a helpful starting point.
  4. Get a valuation on your home. Understanding what your home is worth helps you weigh all your options. Try Sell2Rentโ€™s free home equity calculator to see how much equity you could access.
  5. Donโ€™t ignore the mail. Every notice you receive contains deadlines. Missing those deadlines is what actually closes your options.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sell my house after a foreclosure notice?

Yes. In most states, you can sell your home at any point before the auction is completed. A sale-leaseback with Sell2Rent can close in as few as 15 days, which may be fast enough to stop the process.

Will a sale-leaseback affect my credit?

A sale-leaseback is a standard home sale โ€” not a default, short sale, or bankruptcy. It does not carry the same credit penalties as a foreclosure, which can stay on your credit report for seven years.

Can I sell my house if Iโ€™m behind on payments?

Yes. As long as you have equity in your home, you can sell. If you owe more than the home is worth, you would need to explore a short sale with your lender. But if you have equity, a sale-leaseback lets you access that equity, pay off your mortgage, and stay home. Check your equity with our free calculator.

How fast can Sell2Rent close?

Sell2Rentโ€™s investor network can provide competitive cash offers and close in as few as 15 days. You choose the offer that works best for you. See the full process here.

What if Iโ€™m not sure whether a sale-leaseback is right for me?

Thatโ€™s completely normal. Thereโ€™s no obligation when you request a free assessment from Sell2Rent. A real person will review your situation and help you understand your options. No pressure, just clarity. Read reviews from families whoโ€™ve been in your shoes.

Where can I learn more about how a sale-leaseback works?

We have a complete guide that walks you through the process step by step: What Is a Sale-Leaseback? You can also check out our FAQ page for quick answers to the most common questions.

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Sell2Rent Sale-Leaseback

Feeling the pressure?
You have more options than you think.

Foreclosure doesn't have to mean losing your home. With a Sell2Rent sale-leaseback, you can sell your house, cash out your equity, and stay as a renter โ€” in the same home, in the same neighborhood.

  • No repairs needed
  • No agent commissions
  • No moving trucks
  • Closes in as few as 15 days

Takes 2 minutes ยท Zero obligation ยท 100% confidential

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โญ Trusted by 500+ familiesย  |ย  BBB A+ Ratedย  |ย  Google 4.5โ˜… Reviewsย  |ย  Read homeowner stories

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Illustration of two men shaking hands in the front yard of a house, symbolizing the successful closing and final agreement of a sale leaseback transaction or investment partnership.