If you’re facing foreclosure in Virginia, you’re not alone — and you have more options than you might think. This guide walks you through the Virginia foreclosure process, your legal rights, and the fastest ways to protect your credit and your equity.
How Foreclosure Works in Virginia
Virginia is a non-judicial foreclosure state, which means the lender doesn’t need to go to court to foreclose on your home. The process moves fast — typically 60 to 90 days from the Notice of Default to the auction.
Here’s the general timeline:
- Missed payments (Day 1–90): After 1–3 missed mortgage payments, your lender sends late notices and attempts to contact you. During this period, you can usually reinstate the loan by catching up on payments plus late fees.
- Notice of Default / Breach Letter (Day 30–90): The lender sends a formal breach letter giving you 30 days to cure the default. This is your most important window to act.
- Acceleration and Trustee Assignment (Day 60–120): If you don’t cure the default, the lender accelerates the loan (demands full payoff) and assigns a trustee to handle the foreclosure sale.
- Notice of Sale (14–28 days before auction): Virginia law requires the trustee to advertise the sale in a local newspaper for at least two consecutive weeks and post notice at the courthouse.
- Foreclosure Auction: The property is sold to the highest bidder at a public auction, usually held at the local courthouse. If no one bids above the minimum, the lender takes the property.
Your Legal Rights During Foreclosure in Virginia
Even in a non-judicial foreclosure state, you have rights:
- Right to Cure: You can reinstate the loan by paying all past-due amounts plus fees before the sale date.
- Right to Payoff: You can pay the full loan balance at any time before the sale.
- Right to Mediation: Some Virginia jurisdictions offer foreclosure mediation programs.
- Military Protections (SCRA): Active-duty service members have additional protections under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, including the right to delay foreclosure proceedings.
- Right to Surplus Funds: If the foreclosure sale brings more than what you owe, you’re entitled to the surplus.
Option 1: Sell Your House for Cash Before the Auction
This is often the fastest and most practical option, especially if you’re within 30–60 days of the auction date.
A cash buyer like Solutions Home Buyers can close in as little as 7 days. Here’s how it works:
- You contact us and provide basic property information
- We make a fair cash offer within 24 hours
- We coordinate with your lender to get a payoff amount
- At closing, the mortgage is paid off from the sale proceeds
- Any remaining equity is yours to keep
The key advantage: the foreclosure stops the moment the sale closes. Your credit takes a hit from the missed payments, but a voluntary sale is far less damaging than a foreclosure on your record.
Option 2: Short Sale
If you owe more than the house is worth, a short sale may be an option. In a short sale, the lender agrees to accept less than the full mortgage balance.
Short sales take longer than cash sales — typically 2–4 months — because the lender must approve the sale price. But they’re still much better for your credit than a foreclosure.
Option 3: Reinstatement — Catch Up on Payments
If you have the funds to catch up on missed payments, penalties, and fees, you can reinstate the loan and stop the foreclosure. This is only practical if your financial hardship was temporary — a medical emergency, job loss that’s been resolved, etc.
Option 4: Deed in Lieu of Foreclosure
With a deed in lieu, you voluntarily transfer ownership of the property to the lender in exchange for being released from the mortgage. This avoids the public auction and can be less damaging to your credit than foreclosure.
However, the lender has to agree, and they may not if there are other liens on the property.
How a Cash Sale Affects Your Credit vs. Foreclosure
Here’s the credit impact comparison:
- Foreclosure: Drops your credit score 100–160 points and stays on your report for 7 years. You may not qualify for a new mortgage for 3–7 years.
- Short sale: Drops your score 50–100 points and stays on your report for 7 years, but lenders are more forgiving — you may qualify for a new mortgage in 2–4 years.
- Voluntary cash sale (before foreclosure): The missed payments will show, but the sale itself is not a negative event. You can potentially qualify for a new mortgage much sooner.
Don’t Wait — Time Is Your Most Valuable Asset
The single biggest mistake homeowners make when facing foreclosure is waiting too long to act. Every week you wait, your options narrow. If you’re within 60 days of an auction date, call us today at 757-744-3252.
We’ve helped hundreds of Hampton Roads homeowners avoid foreclosure since 2003. The conversation is free, confidential, and carries zero obligation.