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Nebraska 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: No
In Nebraska, lenders may foreclose on a mortgage in default
by using the judicial foreclosure process.
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.
In Nebraska, the court may order the entire property
to be sold, or just some part of it. The order of sale
may be delayed for up to nine (9) months after the judgment
if the borrower files a written request for a delay with
the clerk of the court within twenty (20) days after the
judgment is rendered. Otherwise, the order commanding
the sale of the mortgaged property will be given twenty
(20) days after the judgment.
The borrower has the right to cure the default at any
time while the suit is still pending by paying the delinquent
amount owed on the mortgage, as well as any interest and
costs that have accrued. However, the court may still
enter a decree of foreclosure and sale, which may be enforced
if the buyer goes into default on the mortgage again in
the future.
The sheriff must give public notice of the time
and place of the sale by:
1) posting the notice on the courthouse door; 2) posting
the notice in at least five other public places in the
county where the property is located; and 3) by advertising
the property for sale once a week for a period of four
(4) weeks in a newspaper published in the county where
the property is located.
The court must confirm the sale after it takes place
and once this is occurs, the borrower has no right of
redemption.
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