⏰ Foreclosure timeline
The Florida Foreclosure Timeline
If you’ve fallen behind on your mortgage, the scariest part is the uncertainty — how long until I lose the house? The good news: Florida foreclosure follows a fairly predictable path through the court system, and at almost every step you still have options.
Florida is a judicial foreclosure state — meaning the lender has to take you to court, not just handle it through paperwork. After about 120 days of missed payments (federal rules usually block a formal filing before then), the lender files a lawsuit and records a lis pendens — a Latin term meaning “suit pending,” a public notice recorded with the county that a lawsuit is now attached to your home. You’ll then be served a summons and have 20 days to file a response with the court. If you don’t respond — or you respond and lose — the judge enters a final judgment and sets a foreclosure sale, which in Florida is a public auction (usually held online through the county clerk). The winning bidder eventually receives a certificate of title (the document that officially transfers ownership), and there’s a short window after the sale to file objections. All told, the process usually runs 8 to 14 months — and longer if you contest it — but never assume you have more time than your court paperwork says.
At every stage you have choices: reinstate (catch up the past-due amount to bring the loan current), ask for a loan modification (changed loan terms), pursue a short sale (selling for less than you owe, with your lender’s approval), or sell before the auction. In Florida you can generally reinstate or sell any time before the sale happens. One more thing to know: Florida allows lenders to seek a deficiency judgment in some cases — a court order making you pay the leftover balance if the home sells for less than you owe — which is another reason selling before the auction, while you control the price, can be smart. That last option is where a cash buyer helps: with no bank or loan approval to wait on, a cash sale can often close before the sale date — see our guide to selling to avoid foreclosure. The single most important thing is don’t wait — and talk to a HUD-approved housing counselor (a free, government-approved advisor) or a Florida foreclosure attorney about your specific loan. Not sure of your best move? Take the quick quiz below.
The four stages
How Florida foreclosure unfolds
Judicial foreclosure goes through court on a fairly predictable path — and at almost every stage you still have options, including selling before the auction.
60-second quiz
What’s the best way to sell your house?
There are two main ways to sell: list it with a real-estate agent (put it on the open market for the highest price, but with fees, prep, and waiting) or sell it as-is — exactly as it stands, no repairs — to a cash buyer (fast and certain, but usually for less). Answer five quick questions and we’ll tell you which likely fits you — and why. No email required, and it’s honest: sometimes listing wins.
This is general guidance, not a formal appraisal or legal advice — every home and situation is different.
Good to know
Frequently asked questions
How long does foreclosure take in Florida?
Because Florida foreclosure goes through court, it typically runs about 8 to 14 months from the lawsuit being filed to the auction — and longer if you contest it or the courts are backed up. That's usually more time than people expect, but the exact dates come from your court paperwork, so rely on those.
Can I stop foreclosure once it starts?
Often yes — by reinstating (paying what's past due), negotiating a loan modification, doing a short sale, or selling the home before the auction. In Florida you can generally reinstate or sell any time before the sale, but your options shrink as the case moves along, so acting early matters most.
Can I sell my house before the foreclosure auction?
Yes, and if you have equity it's often the smartest move — it protects that equity and keeps a completed foreclosure off your credit. A cash sale can close in as little as a week, often fast enough to beat the auction date set by the court.
Where we work
Selling in one of these cities?
Get your cash offer
Request your free cash offer
Tell us about your property and the best number to reach you. We’ll call you back with a fair, no-obligation cash offer — no pressure, no spam. Prefer to talk now? Call 321-386-2387.
Where we work
Proudly serving Brevard County, FL & nearby
- Melbourne
- Palm Bay
- Titusville
- Viera
- Rockledge
- Cocoa
- Merritt Island
- West Melbourne
- Cocoa Beach
- Satellite Beach
- Melbourne Beach
- Indialantic
- Cape Canaveral
- Suntree