Iowa State Foreclosure Laws
Iowa Foreclosure Laws
- Judicial Foreclosure Available:
Yes
- Non-Judicial Foreclosure
Available:
No
- Right of Redemption:
No
- Deficiency Judgments allowed:
No
- Special Comments:
None
Judicial Foreclosure
The judicial foreclosure process is one in which the lender must file a complaint against the borrower and obtain a decree of sale from a court having jurisdiction in the county where the property is located before foreclosure proceedings can begin. Generally, if the court finds the borrower in default, they will give them a set period of time to pay the delinquent amount, plus costs. If the borrower does not pay within the set period of time, the court will then order the property to be sold.
Notice of the sale must be posted in at least three public places of the county, one of which shall be at the county courthouse. In addition, there shall be two weekly publications of such notice in some newspaper printed in the county, with the first publication being at least four weeks before the date of sale, and the second at a later time before the date of sale. If the borrower is in actual occupation and possession of the property, the notice must be served on them at least twenty days prior to the date of the sale. The sale must be at public auction, between 9:00 am and 4:00 pm and the time must be stated clearly in the notice of sale. The sheriff shall receive and give a receipt for a sealed written bid submitted prior to the public auction. The sheriff may require all sealed written bids to be accompanied by payment of any fees required to be paid at the public auction by the purchaser, to be returned if the person submitting the sealed written bid is not the purchaser. The sheriff must keep all written bids sealed until the commencement of the public auction, at which time the sheriff will open and announce the written bids as though made in person.
Additionally, the borrower is required to sign a "disclosure of notice and cancellation", which states, among other things, that they are voluntarily giving up their rights to reclaim or occupy the property. The borrower and lender must also file a jointly executed document with the county recorders office stating that they have chosen to proceed with the foreclosure using the voluntary foreclosure procedures.
State Law information provided by Foreclosurelaw.org
What can you do
Our foreclosure specialists understand what your Mortgage Company requires to avoid foreclosure or stop foreclosure. We understand what it takes to get a mortgage workout approved.
We will use one of these strategies or perhaps a combination of workout plans to develop your personalized strategy to stop foreclosure:
- Reinstatement Plan
- Repayment Plan
- Loan Modification/Loan restructuring
- Loan Refinance
- Loan Forbearance
- Partial Claim
- Pre-Foreclosure Sale
- Short Sale
- Deed-in-Lieu of Foreclosure
We call ourselves Specialists because we
SPECIALIZE in helping people get out of foreclosure.
Our Name, American Foreclosure Specialists, is the name that you can trust.
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