Start Here: What You Need to Know
A short sale is when your lender agrees to let you sell your Florida home for less than you owe on the mortgage. It's the right tool when you're underwater and need out before foreclosure.
It is not automatic — the bank has to approve it — but with a complete hardship package and a clean offer lined up, it can move. We help Northeast Florida homeowners assemble exactly what the bank needs to see.
Quick facts at a glance
- Better than foreclosure?
- Usually — lighter credit damage, and you leave on a planned date.
- Do I pay fees?
- Typically the lender covers sale costs from the proceeds. We charge nothing.
- How long?
- The bank's review runs weeks to a couple of months; a cash offer speeds it up.
- Deficiency risk?
- A well-negotiated approval often waives it — get it in writing.
- Two mortgages?
- Both lienholders must agree; a second loan complicates approval.
- Who approves it?
- Your lender's loss-mitigation department, based on a real written offer.
Short Sale vs. Foreclosure: Why It Matters
Both mean you leave the home, but the outcomes are very different. A foreclosure is a forced court action that stays on your credit for seven years and can block a new mortgage for years. A completed short sale is a negotiated sale; many people recover their credit faster, qualify for a new loan sooner, and leave on a planned date instead of being removed by the court.
| Short Sale | Foreclosure | |
|---|---|---|
| Credit impact | Lighter; recover sooner | Severe; ~7 years |
| New-mortgage wait | Often shorter | Longer |
| You pick the move-out date | Yes | No — court does |
| Deficiency | Often waived | Possible |
What the Lender Needs to Approve It
Banks approve short sales when they net more than foreclosing would. You'll typically provide:
- A hardship letter explaining why you can't pay.
- Recent pay stubs and bank statements.
- Tax returns and a financial worksheet.
- Most importantly, a real, written purchase offer.
The Florida deficiency question
In Florida a lender can sometimes pursue the deficiency — the gap between what you owed and what the home sold for. A well-negotiated approval often waives it; confirm that term in writing, ideally with an attorney.
How We Help With Your Short Sale
- We review your situation and give you an honest read on whether a short sale or a straight sale fits better.
- If short sale is the path, we make a written offer you can submit to your lender.
- We stay patient through the bank's review — our offer doesn't expire like a financed buyer's loan lock.
- When the bank approves, we close at a Florida title company and you avoid the foreclosure on your record.
Pros
- Far less credit damage than foreclosure
- You leave on a planned date
- Deficiency often waived in the approval
- No commissions or fees to you
Cons / Trade-offs
- The bank controls the timeline and must approve
- It takes longer than a straight sale
- Requires a full hardship package
- Not guaranteed — the lender can decline
Underwater and behind?
Let's see whether a short sale or a straight sale protects you best — free, no obligation.
Review My Options Call 904-606-9163Life After a Short Sale
Credit recovery
A short sale dings your credit, but many people recover within a couple of years if other accounts stay current, and lenders generally impose a shorter waiting period before you can buy again than after a foreclosure.
The deficiency and taxes
Confirm in writing that the lender waives the deficiency. Separately, forgiven mortgage debt can sometimes be treated as taxable income, though exclusions exist — a CPA can tell you where you stand.
Hidden Things About Short Sales
- Start before the auction is set. A short sale takes weeks to approve; if an auction date is looming, you may be out of runway.
- A second mortgage can sink it. Both lienholders must agree, so flag a HELOC or second loan early.
- Get the deficiency waiver in writing. 'Release the lien' is not the same as 'won't pursue you for the shortfall.'
- The cash offer is your leverage. Banks act faster on a clean, non-contingent offer than a financed buyer who might fall through.
- There may be tax considerations. Forgiven debt can count as income; exclusions exist. Ask a CPA.
Chris Moore
"A short sale is a paperwork game with the bank, and the thing that wins it is a real, reliable offer in hand. I'll tell you honestly whether you even need one — sometimes there's enough equity to just sell."
"We're local and we're not a call center. We'll tell you honestly what your options are — including the ones that don't involve selling to us — because the right move is whatever actually protects you."
Frequently Asked Questions
Will a short sale hurt my credit?
Yes, but typically less than a foreclosure, and many people recover and qualify for a new mortgage sooner.
Do I pay anything in a short sale?
Usually the lender covers the standard sale costs out of the proceeds. We charge no commissions or fees.
How long does a Florida short sale take?
The bank's review can take a few weeks to a few months; a solid offer in hand speeds it up.
Can I do a short sale with two mortgages?
Often yes, but both lenders must agree, which can complicate approval.
What if the bank says no?
We look at other options together — selling before the auction, or strategies to stop the foreclosure.