In Part 1 of “How to Stop Foreclosure,” we discussed several top techniques for keeping your home, including payment plans, refinancing, renting it out, and selling it. Now, we’re going to discuss some other methods you can use to keep the bank at bay.
5. Do a short sale. A short sale is what happens when you sell your house for less than the amount you owe on the mortgage. This type of sale is becoming more and more common as foreclosures rise. However, it requires the approval of your bank to do it. Some homeowners try to sell their homes at full price, then ask the bank to do a short sale if they get an interested buyer offering something less. This isn’t the preferred method of doing a short sale. Instead, you should get approval for a short sale first, then put the house on the market at full price, knowing you can sell it for less. You could also put the house on the market at a reduced price and advertise it as such, so potential buyers think they’re getting a bargain.
6. Offer your bank a deed in lieu of foreclosure. Among the various methods of how to stop foreclosure, this is the least desirable, but still better than losing the house outright. It should be used as a last resort, since it damages your credit (but not as much as if you lost the house through a foreclosure sale). This method is essentially a voluntary repossession of your home. You give the deed and keys back to the bank in exchange for them writing off your loan. This allows you to walk away without owing any money, and get a fresh financial start.
7. Hire a foreclosure specialist. While it will probably cost you several hundred dollars, the efforts of a foreclosure specialist can be well worth it. A specialist can often negotiate loan workouts with your bank where you can’t. This is because a specialist knows all the legal terminology involved in real estate transactions, and also knows what banks want. A specialist can speak to banks in their own language to get you the loan workout you need to stay in your home, or to at least put off foreclosure long enough for you to make alternate living arrangements.
If you need to learn how to stop foreclosure, it’s better to start educating yourself right away. The longer you wait to do something, the less likely the bank is to work with you. Banks want to save money and do things that will benefit their bottom lines. If the bank has already started proceedings against you, then they’ve already spent money on taking back your home. If you get to them before they spend this money, then your chances of keeping your home become much higher. So, if you’re facing foreclosure, NOW is the time to do something about it!
This is the fourth installment in our foreclosure series. Be sure to check back for updates…
If you’re looking for information on how to stop foreclosure, you’re not alone. In the month of October 2008 alone, over 300,000 foreclosures were filed in the United States. Each month, the number of foreclosures only continues to rise as unemployment skyrockets and prices on consumer goods go higher and higher.
If you’re behind on mortgage payments and see no way of catching up, you’re probably starting to wonder, “How does foreclosure work?” Tens of thousands of people just like you are looking up information on the foreclosure process every day, in fact. With thousands of people across the country losing their homes each day, this is a hot topic. You don’t have to go searching all over the web to find this information, however. You’re about to find out all about the foreclosure process, right here.
Interest in foreclosure prevention is at an all-time high. That’s because the rate of foreclosures in the United States is higher than it’s been in decades. The easy credit of five years ago led hundreds of thousands of people to get into home loans they really couldn’t afford. These were adjustable rate loans, and when the rates went up, many of those borrowers found they could no longer make payments. Faced with foreclosure, many of them are now desperately trying to find ways to keep their homes. You may be one of them.