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Florida Foreclosure Law Summary

Quick Facts
- Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
- Non-Judicial Foreclosure Available:
No
- Primary Security Instruments: Mortgage
- Timeline: Typically 180 days
- Right of Redemption: Yes
- Deficiency Judgments Allowed: Yes
In Florida, all mortgages are foreclosed in equity. In
a mortgage foreclosure action, the court severs, for separate
trial, all counterclaims against the foreclosing lender.
The foreclosure claim shall, if tried, be tried to the
court without a jury.
The court order of foreclosure will specify how the foreclosure
must take place, and the foreclosure must take place on
those terms. Whenever a legal advertisement, publication,
or notice relating to a foreclosure proceeding is required
to be placed in a newspaper, it is the responsibility
of the lender or their representative to place such advertisement,
publication, or notice.
Equitable Right of Redemption ends at the foreclosure
sale (or at another time specified by the courts, but
this rarely happens). There is a period of time after
the sale that "the court reviews the sale to ensure
a fair price has been paid." Basically, this period
of time allows parties to object to the sale on the basis
that proper procedures were not followed or collusion
existed between the bidders, for example. This period
is usually 10 days, after which the Certificate of Sale
is filed and title passes, if the sale is confirmed. If
the sale is not confirmed, another sale is ordered. (Reference
F.S. Chapter 702)
The lender may sue to obtain a deficiency judgment in
Florida.
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