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Facing Foreclosure in Florida: What Homeowners Need to Know

Receiving a foreclosure notice in Florida does not mean the process is over before it has started. Florida requires every residential mortgage foreclosure to proceed through the courts, and that requirement creates a defined window of time and a structured set of rights that every homeowner facing this situation should understand. Acting early and understanding what the law provides can change the outcome significantly.

How Florida's Foreclosure Process Works

Florida is a judicial foreclosure state. Under Chapter 702 of the Florida Statutes, a lender cannot simply seize or sell a property because a borrower has fallen behind on payments. The lender must file a lawsuit, serve the homeowner with a complaint, and obtain a court judgment before any foreclosure sale can take place. That process involves multiple steps and hearings, and Florida courts set case management standards that frequently extend the timeline to a year or longer from the date the complaint is filed.

What Florida Law Requires Lenders to Prove

Under Florida Statute 702.015, a lender must affirmatively allege in the complaint that it is the holder of the original promissory note secured by the mortgage, or set out the specific factual basis by which it has the right to enforce the note. This standing requirement matters. In the years following the 2008 financial crisis, improper note transfers and incomplete documentation led courts to dismiss foreclosure actions where lenders could not adequately demonstrate who actually held the right to foreclose. Homeowners are entitled to demand that proof.

Options Available Before and During a Foreclosure

Florida homeowners facing foreclosure are not limited to defending in court. Several alternatives exist, and the right option depends on the homeowner's financial situation and goals. A loan modification restructures the mortgage terms permanently to make payments more manageable. A short sale allows the homeowner to sell the property for less than is owed on the mortgage with the lender's approval, satisfying the debt without a foreclosure on the public record. A deed in lieu of foreclosure involves voluntarily transferring the title to the lender in exchange for the lender releasing the mortgage obligation. Chapter 13 bankruptcy can also halt a pending foreclosure through an automatic stay and allow a homeowner to cure arrears over time. Each path has different consequences and eligibility requirements, and the value of getting advice early is that all of these options remain open.

The Deficiency Judgment Question

After a foreclosure sale, the amount the property brings at auction may be less than what the borrower owed. That gap is called a deficiency. Florida Statute 702.06 gives courts discretion over whether to enter a deficiency judgment, and for owner-occupied residential property, limits any deficiency to the difference between the final judgment amount and the fair market value of the property on the date of the sale. Understanding this exposure is part of evaluating every option, including whether settling on a loan modification or short sale is more favorable than allowing the foreclosure to proceed to judgment.

Why the First Steps Taken Matter Most

The earlier a homeowner engages with the foreclosure process, the more options remain available. Once a final judgment is entered and a sale date is set, the window for most alternatives closes rapidly. Borell Law has represented homeowners in Florida real estate and mortgage disputes for more than 36 years, across a full range of circumstances from contested foreclosure defenses to negotiated resolutions. The right course depends on the specific facts of the loan, the property, and the homeowner's larger financial picture, and that analysis is most useful when it happens early.

This is general information, not legal advice. Every case is unique; consult your Florida attorney first.

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