Falling behind on your mortgage is stressful, and a foreclosure notice can make it feel like the decision has already been made for you. It has not. In Virginia Beach you keep the right to sell your home right up until the trustee sale actually happens. For a lot of homeowners, selling is the cleanest way out, because it pays off the lender, stops the auction, and lets you move on without a completed foreclosure following you for years.
The timeline matters more than most people realize. Once you understand how long you actually have, and how fast a cash sale can close, the situation usually looks less hopeless than that first notice makes it feel.
You can sell any time before the trustee sale
Virginia is a non-judicial foreclosure state, which means most foreclosures here move through a trustee rather than a courtroom. That part can feel fast and impersonal. The important thing to know is that the lender does not own your home during the process. You do, until the moment the trustee sale is completed.
That means you can list and sell, or sell directly to a cash buyer, at any point before that sale date. When the home sells, the proceeds pay off your loan balance, the late payments, and any fees, and the foreclosure is called off. If there is money left after the payoff, it goes to you.
What the Virginia Beach foreclosure timeline looks like
The exact timeline depends on your lender and your loan, but the general shape is consistent:
- You miss payments. Federal rules generally require your servicer to wait until you are at least 120 days behind before starting the legal foreclosure process. That early stretch is the best time to act, because you have the most options.
- You receive a notice of sale. For an owner-occupied home in Virginia, the lender usually must give you a notice of sale at least 60 days before the trustee sale.
- The sale is advertised. Virginia law requires the sale to be advertised in a local newspaper before it can happen.
- The trustee sale occurs. This is the auction. Once it is complete, the window to sell on your own terms is closed.
The takeaway is simple. You almost always have weeks, and often months, of runway. The earlier you start, the more room you have to choose how this ends instead of having it chosen for you.
Why a cash sale can beat the clock
A traditional sale that depends on a buyer getting a mortgage usually takes 30 to 60 days to close, and the deal can still fall apart if the buyer's financing is denied. When a foreclosure date is looming, that uncertainty is a real risk.
A cash sale removes the lender from the buyer's side of the table. There is no loan to approve, no appraisal contingency that can sink the deal, and no waiting on an underwriter. A licensed cash buyer who already knows Virginia Beach values can deliver a written, no-obligation offer in about 48 hours and close in roughly 10 to 14 days. For more on exactly how that process works, see our guide on how a cash home sale works in Virginia.
Speed is the whole point here. The faster and more certain the closing, the more likely you are to complete the sale and pay off the lender before the trustee sale ever takes place.
What you do not have to deal with
When you sell to a licensed cash brokerage during foreclosure, you skip the parts that take time and money you may not have right now:
- No repairs, cleaning, or staging. You sell the home exactly as it sits.
- No agent commissions and no closing-cost fees charged to you.
- No showings or open houses while you are trying to sort things out.
- No buyer's mortgage that can fall through at the last minute.
A licensed Virginia title company still handles the closing the same way it would for any home sale, with a real title search, lien checks, and your funds handled through a regulated closing. That protects you, not just the buyer.
How NetWorth Realty handles a foreclosure sale
NetWorth Realty of Virginia Beach is a licensed Virginia brokerage led by Principal Broker Matt Beck, VA License #0225274455. We buy homes directly across Hampton Roads, including homes that are behind on payments or already in the foreclosure process.
When you reach out, we look at your loan payoff, your timeline, and the home, then give you a straight answer about whether a cash sale makes sense for your situation. If it does, we move quickly. If a different path would serve you better, we will tell you that too. You can verify our license any time through Virginia's public DPOR lookup.
If you are weighing a cash sale against listing with an agent, our Virginia Beach cash home buyer page walks through what to expect locally.
The worst thing you can do with a foreclosure notice is wait and hope it goes away. The best thing you can do is understand your real timeline and your real options, then choose. If selling is the right move, we can help you do it fast.