Early mortgage-default stage after notice but before completed foreclosure, when borrowers may still cure, modify, sell, or surrender the property.
Pre-foreclosure is the period after a borrower has defaulted on a mortgage but before the lender has completed foreclosure.
Pre-foreclosure matters because it is usually the last stage where the borrower still has several ways to avoid a completed foreclosure. The property has become a distressed asset, but the title and outcome are often still negotiable.
The lender sends a notice of default or similar notice and gives the borrower a window to cure the delinquency or pursue a workout.
| Pre-foreclosure option | Main objective | Common limitation |
| — | — | — |
| Reinstatement | Bring the loan current after default or acceleration | Requires enough cash to cure arrears |
| Mortgage Forbearance | Create short-term payment relief while hardship stabilizes | Missed amounts still need a later repayment solution |
| Loan Modification | Keep the home with changed terms | Lender must approve and income still has to support payments |
| Short Sale | Sell the home before foreclosure sale | Requires buyer, lender approval, and time |
| Deed-in-Lieu of Foreclosure | Transfer title directly to lender | Usually not available if liens or title issues complicate the property |
If none of those paths succeeds, the file usually advances into Foreclosure.
A homeowner misses several mortgage payments after a job loss. The lender records a notice of default and gives the homeowner time to submit hardship documents. During that window, the homeowner can still try reinstatement, Mortgage Forbearance, modification, a short sale, or another approved workout before the home reaches sale.
It is the warning and workout stage before the lender completes the enforcement process.
Some borrowers cure the default, refinance, or complete a modification in time.
Foreclosure: The completed enforcement path if the default is not resolved.
Notice of Default: Formal notice that usually starts the borrower-response clock.
Acceleration Clause: Contract term that can turn missed installments into a demand for the full unpaid balance.
Mortgage Forbearance: A temporary workout used when hardship may be reversible.
Loan Modification: A common effort to avoid foreclosure by changing the loan terms.
Short Sale: Sale of the property before foreclosure is completed.
Distress Sale: Broader category of urgent asset sale under financial pressure.
Deed-in-Lieu of Foreclosure: A voluntary property transfer to the lender.