Foreclosure isn't an event β it's a process. And that process takes an average of 762 days from start to finish. That's over two years where you have options, leverage, and time to protect your equity. The problem is that most homeowners don't know what those options are, so they freeze. Freezing is the most expensive choice you can make.
This guide ranks every foreclosure alternative by the one metric that matters most: how much of your equity you keep. Whether you want to stay in your home or exit with cash in hand, there's a path that doesn't end in a sheriff's sale. Already behind on payments? See the month-by-month timeline β
What Foreclosure Actually Costs You
Before we get to alternatives, understand what you're avoiding. Foreclosure doesn't just take your house β it damages your financial life for years.
Here's what makes this painful: the average American homeowner has $299,000 in equity right now. Foreclosure means walking away from all of it. If you sell before the auction β even on an accelerated timeline β you keep that equity minus selling costs. The math isn't close.
Foreclosure Damage Calculator
How Much Could You Lose?
Keep Your Home or Exit With Equity?
Every foreclosure alternative falls into one of two categories. Your choice depends on whether your financial hardship is temporary or permanent.
Retention Options
Exit Options
All 8 Alternatives Compared
Ranked by how much equity you preserve. Based on a home worth $350,000 with $220,000 owed ($130,000 in equity).
| Rank | Alternative | Equity Preserved | Timeline | Credit Impact | Keep Home? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Loan Modification | 30-90 days | Minimal | β Yes | |
| 2 | Forbearance | Days-weeks | Minimal | β Yes | |
| 3 | Repayment Plan | Days-weeks | Minimal | β Yes | |
| 4 | Partial Claim (FHA) | 30-60 days | Minimal | β Yes | |
| 5 | Pre-Foreclosure Sale β | 21-45 days | Moderate | β No | |
| 6 | Chapter 13 Bankruptcy | 3-5 years | Severe | βΈοΈ Possibly | |
| 7 | Short Sale | 60-120 days | Significant | β No | |
| 8 | Deed in Lieu | 30-90 days | Significant | β No |
Key insight: If you can't keep your home and you have equity, a pre-foreclosure sale is the best exit. Short sales and deeds in lieu only make sense when you owe more than your home is worth β and in this market, with average equity at $299K, most homeowners have substantial equity to protect.
Retention Options Explained
Permanently Lower Your Payment
A loan modification permanently changes your mortgage terms. Your servicer may reduce your interest rate, extend your loan term (to 40 years), defer a portion of principal, or combine all three. The goal is to get your payment below 31% of gross income.
How to get one: Contact your loan servicer and request a "loss mitigation application." You'll need to document your hardship (job loss, medical bills, divorce, etc.) and show you can afford the modified payment. FHA borrowers follow the HUD waterfall process (Mortgagee Letters 2025-12 and 2025-21). Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac borrowers may qualify for the Flex Modification program.
Important: You're limited to one modification every 24 months. Don't wait until you've missed 6+ payments β the earlier you apply, the more options you have.
Pause Payments Temporarily
Forbearance reduces or pauses your payments for a set period (typically 3-12 months) while you recover from a temporary hardship. This is the fastest option to implement β many servicers can approve forbearance over the phone in one call.
The catch: You still owe the missed payments. When forbearance ends, you'll need to resume payments plus address the arrears through a repayment plan, modification, or deferral. Natural disaster forbearance (hurricanes, wildfires) may offer more generous terms.
Catch Up Gradually
If you've missed a few payments but can now afford more than your regular amount, your servicer may agree to spread the arrears over 6-12 months of higher payments. For example, if you missed 3 payments of $2,200 ($6,600 total), you'd pay roughly $2,750/month for a year until caught up.
Best for homeowners who had a temporary income disruption that's now resolved. Can't afford payments long-term? Compare selling vs. renting β
Interest-Free Government Loan
If you have an FHA-insured mortgage, HUD may file a "partial claim" β essentially an interest-free second lien that covers your missed payments. You don't pay this back until you sell, refinance, or reach the end of your loan term. It's one of the most generous options available, but it's only for FHA borrowers.
Exit Options Explained
Sell at Full Market Value Before Auction
If you can't keep your home β whether because the hardship is permanent, you've already relocated, or you simply want a fresh start β selling before the foreclosure sale is the single best way to protect your equity.
Here's why: at a foreclosure auction, the opening bid is typically just what's owed (mortgage + arrears + legal fees). You keep nothing. But if you sell beforehand, the title company pays off your mortgage and arrears from the proceeds, and you keep everything that's left.
On a $350,000 home with $220,000 owed, that's $100,000+ in your pocket instead of $0. A novation partnership closes in 21-45 days at 92-98% market value β fast enough to beat almost any foreclosure timeline. Your back payments, late fees, and selling costs all come out of proceeds. Every fee is visible before you sign β
Credit benefit: A pre-foreclosure sale shows as "paid/settled" on your credit report, not "foreclosure." The waiting period for a new mortgage is typically 2-4 years instead of 3-7. See what your home could net β
Court-Ordered Restructuring
Filing Chapter 13 triggers an "automatic stay" that immediately halts foreclosure proceedings. You then enter a 3-5 year court-supervised repayment plan. This can work if you have stable income and want to keep your home, but it's a serious commitment with lasting credit consequences.
When it makes sense: You have income to support a repayment plan, you want to keep the house, and other options (modification, forbearance) have been denied. Bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 7-10 years. Consult a bankruptcy attorney β this is not a DIY option.
Sell for Less Than You Owe
In a short sale, your lender agrees to let you sell for less than the mortgage balance and forgives the difference. This only applies when you're "underwater" β you owe more than your home is worth. In today's market with record-high equity, most homeowners don't need a short sale.
If you do have equity, a short sale doesn't make sense. You'd be giving away your equity. Sell at market value instead and keep the difference. 4 ways to sell quickly β
Hand the Keys to Your Lender
You voluntarily transfer ownership of the property to your lender. In exchange, they cancel your mortgage debt and don't pursue a deficiency judgment. This avoids the public auction process but still means you walk away with nothing.
Only consider this when: you have zero or negative equity, can't find a buyer (even for a short sale), and want to avoid having "foreclosure" specifically on your credit report. In almost all other situations, selling or modifying is a better outcome.
Frequently Asked
Eight main alternatives: loan modification, forbearance, repayment plan, partial claim (FHA), pre-foreclosure sale, short sale, deed in lieu, and Chapter 13 bankruptcy. The best choice depends on whether you want to keep or exit your home and how much equity you have.
Yes β and it's often the best exit option. Selling preserves your equity, reduces credit damage, and lets you buy a home again sooner. A partnership sale closes in 21-45 days at 92-98% market value, fast enough to beat most foreclosure timelines.
Foreclosure drops your score 100-160+ points and stays on your credit report for 7 years. Waiting periods for new mortgages: conventional 7 years, FHA 3 years, VA 2 years. A pre-foreclosure sale has less impact and shorter waiting periods.
A permanent change to your mortgage terms β reduced rate, extended term, or deferred principal β to make payments affordable. Contact your servicer to apply. Document your hardship and show you can afford the modified payment.
Yes β less credit damage, shorter waiting periods for new financing, and potential deficiency protection. But short sales only apply when you owe more than your home is worth. If you have equity, a regular sale is always the better option. Compare all selling options β
Foreclosure filing data references ATTOM's Year-End 2025 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report (367,460 properties, +14% YoY). Average timeline of 762 days references ATTOM quarterly data. Credit impact ranges reference CFPB and FICO published guidance. FHA loss mitigation waterfall references HUD Mortgagee Letters 2025-12 and 2025-21. The 94% income-loss statistic references the Urban Institute citing National Bureau of Economic Research data. State-specific foreclosure processes vary significantly β always consult your loan servicer and a HUD-approved housing counselor (800-569-4287) for guidance specific to your situation.