Vancouver WA Foreclosures

Vancouver has a ton of great homes on the market. Check out the recent list of foreclosures.

Single Family Homes

Condos

What exactly is a Foreclosure?
Simply, foreclosure is the process by which a homeowner’s rights to a property are forfeited because of failure to pay the mortgage. If the owner cannot pay off the outstanding debt or sell it via short sale, the property then goes to a foreclosure auction. If the property does not sell at auction, it becomes the property of the lending institution.
5 Stages of a Foreclosure:
Stage 1: Missed payments
Foreclosure is a lengthy process, with specifics varying from state to state, but it all starts when a borrower fails to make timely mortgage payments. This is usually due to hardships such as unemployment, divorce, death or medical challenges. Other times, a borrower may decide to stop paying the mortgage intentionally because the property may be short, in which the home value does not exceed the mortgage or because he’s tired of managing the property. For whatever reason, he can’t or won’t meet the terms of his loan.
Stage 2: Public notice
After three to six months of missed payments, the lender records a public notice with the County Recorder’s Office, indicating the borrower has defaulted on his mortgage. In some states, this is called a Notice of Default in others, it’s a lis pendens which is Latin for “suit pending.” Depending on state law, the lender might be required to post the notice on the front door of the property. This official notice is intended to make the borrower aware he is in danger of losing all rights to the property and may be evicted from the premises.
Stage 3: Pre-foreclosure
After receiving Notice of Default from the lender, the borrower enters a grace period known as "pre-foreclosure" During this time – anywhere from 30-120 days, depending on location – the borrower can work out an arrangement with the lender via a short sale or pay the outstanding amount owed. If the borrower pays off the default during this phase, foreclosure ends and the borrower avoids home eviction and sale. If the default is not paid off, foreclosure continues.
Stage 4: Auction
If the default is not remedied by the prescribed deadline, the lender or its representative sets a date for the home to be sold at an auction (sometimes referred to as a Trustee Sale). The Notice of Trustee Sale is recorded with the County Recorder's Office with notifications delivered to the borrower, posted on the property and printed in the newspaper. Auctions can be held on the steps of the county courthouse, in the trustee’s office, at a convention center across the country, and even at the property in foreclosure.
In many states, the borrower has the "right of redemption"(he can come up with the outstanding cash and stop the foreclosure process) up to the moment the home will be auctioned off.
At the auction, the home is sold to the highest bidder for cash payment. Because the pool of buyers who can afford to pay cash on the spot for a house is limited, many lenders make an agreement with the borrower (called a “deed in lieu of foreclosure”) to take the property back. Or, the bank buys it back at the auction.
Stage 5: Post-Foreclosure
If a third party does not purchase the property at the foreclosure auction, the lender takes ownership of it and it becomes what is known as a Bank Owned or REO.
Bank-owned properties are sold in one of two ways. Most often, they are listed with an agent for sale on the open market. Also, some lenders prefer to sell their bank-owned properties at a liquidation auction, often held in auction houses or at convention centers.

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