Foreclosure path that requires court supervision before the lender can complete the sale of a defaulted mortgaged property.
Judicial foreclosure is a foreclosure process that requires the lender to use the court system before the mortgaged property can be sold or title can be transferred.
Judicial foreclosure matters because court supervision usually makes the process slower, more formal, and more expensive, but it can also provide more procedural protection for the borrower.
The lender files a foreclosure complaint, the borrower has a chance to respond, and the court determines whether foreclosure can proceed. If the lender wins, the court authorizes the sale and the distribution of proceeds.
| Feature | Judicial foreclosure | Non-judicial foreclosure |
| — | — | — |
| Court case required | Yes | Usually no |
| Speed | Slower | Faster |
| Documentation burden | Higher | Lower if power-of-sale requirements are satisfied |
| Borrower litigation opportunity | Broader | Usually narrower and more procedural |
A state requires mortgage lenders to obtain a court judgment before selling defaulted residential property. After notices and failed workout efforts, the lender sues, proves default, receives judgment, and then completes the foreclosure sale under court supervision.
Court involvement often adds time, but the borrower still needs a real defense or a real workout path to change the outcome.
The economic problem is still loan default. Judicial only describes the enforcement route.
Foreclosure: The broader enforcement concept.
Non-Judicial Foreclosure: The faster alternative in power-of-sale systems.
Judgment: Central because the court authorizes the lender’s remedy.
Deficiency Judgment: Often evaluated after sale if the collateral does not cover the debt.
Lis Pendens: Common recorded notice when the foreclosure dispute is proceeding through court.
Pre-Foreclosure: The borrower-response stage before the case becomes a completed foreclosure.