Kentucky State Foreclosure Laws
Kentucky Foreclosure Laws
- Judicial Foreclosure Available:
Yes
- Non-Judicial Foreclosure
Available:
No
- Right of Redemption:
Yes
- Deficiency Judgments allowed:
Yes, but with restrictions
- Special Comments:
None
Judicial Foreclosure
Generally, in judicial foreclosure, a court decrees the amount of the borrowers debt and gives him or her a short time to pay. If the borrower fails to pay within that time, the clerk of the court then advertises the property for sale. At some point prior to the scheduled date of foreclosure, an appraisal of the property must be made. If the foreclosure sale price is less than two-thirds of the appraised value, the borrower has a period of one year (12 months) from the date of the sale to redeem the property by paying the amount for which the property was sold, plus interest.
It is possible to obtain a deficiency judgment against the borrower for the difference between the amount the borrower owed on the original loan and the foreclosure sale price, but only if the borrower was personally served with the lawsuit, or failed to answer.
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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