GUIDE 13 – Foreclosure Process Overview (State-Level Basics)

Orienting yourself without pretending to be a lawyer

Foreclosure processes vary widely by state (judicial vs. non-judicial, timelines, notices). This is a general orientation only.

1. Judicial vs. non-judicial (big-picture)

  • In judicial foreclosure states, the lender usually must:
    • File a lawsuit in court
    • Serve you with a summons and complaint
    • Get a judgment before a sale can occur
  • In non-judicial foreclosure states, the process often:
    • Uses notices and trustee sales
    • May not involve a full court case unless you challenge something

Know which type your state is, so you know whether:

  • The fight happens mainly in court, or
  • The fight happens around notices and sales, with court as a place to challenge.

2. Very rough stages (judicial style)

Typical (but simplified) judicial path:

  1. Pre-foreclosure
    • Late payments, default letters, sometimes pre-foreclosure notices.
  2. Case filing
    • Lender files complaint; you are supposed to be served.
  3. Response stage
    • You may have a deadline to answer or respond (often by filing an Answer or motion).
  4. Motion / discovery phase
    • Motions for summary judgment, motions to dismiss, discovery requests, etc.
  5. Order of reference / referee (in some states)
    • Court may appoint a referee to compute the amount due.
  6. Judgment & sale
    • Final judgment of foreclosure, then scheduling and notice of sale.

You do not need to memorize this—you just need to know roughly where you are.


3. Questions to ask: “Where am I right now?”

Ask yourself (or an attorney/legal aid):

  • Has a case already been filed, or are we still in “threat letter” stage?
  • Have I been served with a summons/complaint (even if I found out late)?
  • Has the court entered a judgment already?
  • Is a sale date scheduled? If so, when?
  • Is there any appeal pending?

These answers change what’s possible and what’s urgent.


4. Finding state-specific info (without getting lost)

Look for:

  • Official court websites that explain foreclosure steps in your state
  • State Attorney General or housing agency guides
  • Legal aid or nonprofit resources that describe your state’s process in plain language

When you read:

  • Keep a pen handy and write:
    • “This is where I am now.”
    • “This is what seems to have already happened.”
    • “This is what might come next.”

5. How this fits with your other tools

Use this overview together with:

  • Your Timeline Worksheet (Guide 5)
  • Your Document Folder (Guide 6)
  • Pattern guides (Service, Assignments, Timelines, Behavior)

The goal is not to become an expert. It’s to stop feeling like you’re in a dark tunnel with no map.

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