Every day I visit home owners who have Notice of Defaults recorded on their property, and they say, “I want to save my house. I don’t want to consider a short sale.”
If you have received a Notice of Default on your property, you should immediately begin to learn about the options you have. First, you need to be aware that the average time from Notice of Default to the time the bank issues a date for a Trustee Sale is 90 days. So if you want to begin work on a loan modification, you need to start right away. Be sure that you choose a reputable, ethical professional to help you with your loan modification and make sure they understand the timeframe of the banks.
If you do not receive an acceptable loan modification, then that is time to consider a short sale as your next option. If you do decide to list your home as a Short Sale, your real estate professional should be able to get the date of your Trustee Sale postponed. In the meantime, you will receive offers on your house, choose the most qualified buyer, and send in all appropriate paperwork to the bank to get the Short Sale process started.
And 60-90 days later, if the Short Sale is done knowledgeably, your home should be sold and you should never owe any more money on it.
No, you haven’t “saved” your home in the sense that you can still live in it. But you have “saved” your credit; now you will have about a 200 point deficit on your credit for 2 years, while if the house were sold at a Trustee’s Sale, you would lose about 400-500 points for 10 years.
Short Sales are a viable option, and please don’t walk away from your house without considering one. Call me, Marilyn Dashe, at Century 21 Sea Coast in Encinitas, 760-803-4304, if you’d like some more information about a Short Sale as an option.