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Foreclosure Investing For Dummies
About this book
Make foreclosure investing work for you with this practical and easy-to-understand guide
Looking to kick start your own property management career? Check out Foreclosure Investing For Dummies, which will get you started buying foreclosed properties to turn into your own income property!
In this book, you'll learn to navigate the complexities of home auctions, deal with emotional former homeowners, and how to handle renovations. You'll also get a heads-up on the foreclosure laws in all 50 states so you don't accidentally run afoul of any complicated regulations.
Foreclosure Investing For Dummies shows you how to:
- Locate properties for sale and identify associated opportunities and risks
- Buy properties below market value at auction, from lending institutions, and from government agencies
- Fix up, renovate, and sell or lease your new property for a profit
This hands-on guide can help anyone make foreclosure investing work. So, grab a copy of Foreclosure Investing For Dummies, roll up your sleeves, and get going!
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Information
Prepping Yourself for Foreclosure Success
Wrapping Your Brain around Foreclosure Investing





Investigating the Foreclosure Process from Start to Finish
- The homeowners stop making mortgage payments.
- After about 15 to 30 days, the lender sends a payment reminder.
- If the homeowners donât respond, the lender continues to send notices and may start to call the homeowners.
- If the homeowners still donât contact the lender, the lender turns the matter over to its collection department, which specializes in hassling homeowners.
- After about three missed monthly payments, the lender transfers the matter to outside counsel, which is normally handled regionally. The attorney sends an official notice, warning that foreclosure proceedings are about to begin.
- The homeowners donât reply or present a solution that the lender deems to be unsatisfactory. At this point, the homeowners can usually stop the foreclosure by negotiating a suitable solution with the lender.
- The attorney begins the foreclosure process by posting a foreclosure notice in the countyâs legal newspaper or in the local newspaper. The homeowners can still reinstate the mortgage at this point by catching up on the payments and paying any additional late fees and penalties, which occurs quite often. See Chapter 8 for details on how to track foreclosure notices. (The county legal newspaper serves the public and provides the legal community an automated system, but itâs not free.)
- Foreclosure paperwork for the property arrives at the civil division of the sheriffâs office, which is assigned the task of handling the sale. The trustee or attorney handling the foreclosure sets the opening bid and typically advertises it in the foreclosure notice. The opening bid is the balance of the mortgage plus penalties, unpaid interest, attorney fees, and other costs that the lender has incurred during the process.
- The sheriff or a deputy may visit the house before the sale to post a foreclosure notice and inspect the property, because redemption rights sometimes change if the homeowners abandon the property. (Some states have a redemption period after the sale, during which time the homeowners can buy back the property by paying the full amount of the loan along with taxes, interest, and penalties. This period can last up to a year.)
- The day before the auction, the lender may adjust the opening bid up or down but may not artificially inflate it. Frequently, lenders reduce the opening bid to make the property more appealing to investors and to rid themselves of it.
- The property goes on the auction block for sale to the highest bidder or is turned over to a trustee to liquidate the property and pay the lender.
- An investor purchases the property at auction or from the trustee or the lender buys the property. If nobody bids higher than the opening bid which the foreclosing lender submits, control is handed over to the lender, who can take possession of the property following any redemption period, as explained next.
- In some states, the high bidder (or lender, if nobody bids more than the opening bid) takes immediate possession of the property. In states with a redemption period, the new âownerâ must wait until the expiration of the redemption period and a final court hearing with the homeowners before they can do anything with the property. If the lender takes possession of the property, the lender transfers the property to its Real Estate Owned (REO) department which prepares it for sale.
- The previous owners move out or are evicted, and the new owner takes possession of the property.
Picking Your Point of Entry
- Presale: Before the property is auctioned or transferred to the trustee
- Sale (or auction): When the sheriff or the court auctions the property or after control of the property is placed in the hands of the trustee
- Postsale: After the lender repossesses the property, when you can purchase the property from the lender or from its REO broker
Scooping other investors during the pre-auction stage
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part 1: Prepping Yourself for Foreclosure Success
- Part 2: Laying the Groundwork for Maximized Profit and Minimized Risk
- Part 3: Creating WinâWin Situations in Pre-Foreclosure (Before Auction)
- Part 4: Finding and Buying Foreclosure and Bankruptcy Properties
- Part 5: Cashing Out Your Profit ⌠After the Sale
- Part 6: The Part of Tens
- Appendix: Foreclosure Rules and Regulations for the 50 States
- Index
- About the Authors
- Connect with Dummies
- End User License Agreement

