Foreclosure Processes And Sale Rights
Judicial and non-judicial foreclosure paths, sale rights, redemption rights, and trustee-sale terms.
Foreclosure Processes And Sale Rights groups related mortgage and real-estate finance terms inside Mortgage Distress. Judicial and non-judicial foreclosure paths, sale rights, redemption rights, and trustee-sale terms.
Use this subsection when the question is primarily about financing mechanics, collateral value, property-backed risk, or investment return rather than general real-estate practice.
In this section
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Foreclosure Processes and Sale Methods
Foreclosure process terms used to distinguish judicial, non-judicial, trustee-sale, and tax-foreclosure paths.
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Foreclosure
Legal enforcement process that lets a mortgage lender recover a defaulted home loan by taking and selling the collateral property.
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Judicial Foreclosure
Foreclosure path that requires court supervision before the lender can complete the sale of a defaulted mortgaged property.
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Non-Judicial Foreclosure
Foreclosure path that lets a lender or trustee sell mortgaged property without a full court case when the loan documents permit it.
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Tax Foreclosure: Process of Enforcing a Lien Against Property for Nonpayment of Delinquent Property Taxes
Tax foreclosure is the legal process by which a taxing authority enforces a lien against property for the nonpayment of delinquent property taxes. This ensures the government recovers owed taxes, superior to other liens.
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Trustee Sale
Public foreclosure sale conducted by a trustee under a deed of trust after required default and notice steps have been completed.
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Redemption Rights, Power of Sale, and Credit Bids
Mortgage-distress terms covering lender credit bids, power-of-sale rights, and borrower redemption periods.
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Credit Bid: Definition and Explanation
A credit bid is when a secured creditor bids up to the amount of their debt in a bankruptcy auction. This allows the creditor to purchase the asset without paying cash to the debtor.
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Power of Sale
Mortgage or deed-of-trust clause that lets a lender or trustee sell collateral after default without a full judicial foreclosure case.
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Redemption Period
Time window in which a borrower or former owner may still reclaim foreclosed property by paying the required amount under applicable law.
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Right of Redemption
Borrower right to reclaim mortgaged property by paying the required amount before foreclosure sale and, in some places, for a limited time after sale.