Facing Foreclosure in Philadelphia, PA?
Foreclosure does not have to be the end of the story. FairOffer connects you with cash buyers who can close before the auction date, helping you protect your credit, keep your equity, and move forward with a clean slate.
What This Means for Philadelphia Homeowners
Philadelphia sellers benefit from one of the most active cash investor markets on the East Coast. The city's affordable entry prices relative to New York and Washington DC, combined with strong rental demand from universities (Penn, Temple, Drexel) and healthcare systems (Jefferson, Penn Medicine), create a deep pool of investors seeking properties at every price point. If your rowhouse needs a new roof, has lead paint issues, or has been sitting vacant with code violations, cash investors on FairOffer buy exactly these properties and handle the renovation and compliance process after closing.
Philadelphia's real estate market is one of the most hyper-local in America — values can shift dramatically from one block to the next, making it impossible for broad market statistics to capture your property's true worth. The city's aging rowhouse stock, much of it built before 1920, presents challenges that deter financed buyers: lead paint, aging plumbing, knob-and-tube wiring, and structural issues in attached homes. Philadelphia's 4.278% combined transfer tax (city + state) is among the highest in the nation, adding thousands to every transaction. Add the city's complicated tax lien and abatement system, and many sellers find the traditional sale process overwhelmingly complex.
How FairOffer Helps With Foreclosure
Receiving a foreclosure notice is alarming, but it is not a dead end. Between the notice and the auction, there is a window of opportunity where you can sell your home, pay off the mortgage, and keep whatever equity remains. This is called a pre-foreclosure sale, and it is almost always a better outcome than letting the bank take the property.
In a foreclosure, the bank sells your home at auction, often for well below market value. Any equity you have built over years of payments can be lost, and your credit score takes a severe hit that lasts seven years. A voluntary sale through FairOffer allows you to sell at a competitive market price, protect your credit from the worst damage, and maintain control over the process.
FairOffer is uniquely suited for pre-foreclosure situations because speed matters. Our investors can close in as few as five business days, well within most foreclosure timelines. When you submit your property, multiple verified investors compete for it, which means you are not settling for a single lowball offer from an opportunistic buyer. Competition protects your equity.
Many homeowners facing foreclosure feel paralyzed by shame or fear, but taking action is empowering. Selling proactively is a smart financial decision that preserves your ability to buy again in the future. It turns a crisis into a controlled transition, and FairOffer makes the process as fast and simple as possible so you can start rebuilding immediately.
Why Sellers Choose FairOffer
A simpler path forward when you need it most
Close Before the Auction Date
FairOffer investors can close in five to fourteen days. Even with a looming auction date, there is often enough time to complete a sale.
Protect Your Credit
A voluntary sale causes far less credit damage than a foreclosure. You may be able to buy again in two to three years instead of seven.
Keep Your Equity
In a foreclosure auction, your equity often evaporates. Selling at a competitive price through FairOffer means you walk away with cash in hand.
Competing Offers Protect Your Interests
Multiple investors bidding on your property ensures you get a fair price, unlike a single distress buyer trying to take advantage of your situation.
Avoid the Public Record of Foreclosure
A foreclosure is a public record that can affect future employment, rentals, and security clearances. A voluntary sale avoids this stigma entirely.
Three Simple Steps
From submission to cash in hand, the process is straightforward
Submit Your Property Immediately
Time is your most valuable asset in pre-foreclosure. Enter your property details now, even if you are still exploring options. It takes two minutes and costs nothing.
Receive Urgent Cash Offers
Investors experienced with pre-foreclosure purchases will submit competing offers within 24 hours. Many can close in under two weeks.
Close Before the Auction and Move Forward
Accept the best offer, close before your auction date, pay off the mortgage, and keep the remaining equity. Your credit is protected and you have cash to start fresh.
The Facts Speak for Themselves
We Help Foreclosure Sellers Across All of Philadelphia
Our investor network covers every zip code in Philadelphia. Whether your home is in Kensington, Frankford, or anywhere else in the metro area, verified local cash buyers are ready to make competing offers — regardless of condition, situation, or neighborhood.
Practical Advice if You’re Facing Foreclosure
Things worth knowing before you make any decisions about your home.
Know your state's foreclosure timeline
Every state sets different deadlines between a missed payment and the foreclosure sale. In some states you have as little as 90 days; in others, over a year. Look up your state's specific timeline so you understand how much runway you actually have.
Contact a HUD-approved housing counselor — it's free
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funds free foreclosure counseling nationwide. A counselor can review your options, talk through loan modification or forbearance possibilities, and help you understand what a sale would net. Find one at hud.gov.
Do not ignore lender notices
Every certified letter from your lender has a response deadline. Missing these windows can close off options you still have — including the right to cure the default. Open and read every piece of mail from your servicer.
Selling may stop the clock faster than you think
If your home has equity — meaning it's worth more than you owe — a cash sale can pay off the mortgage, stop the foreclosure process, and leave you with proceeds. Most cash sales close in 7 to 21 days, which is often fast enough to get ahead of the auction date.
Watch out for foreclosure rescue scams
Anyone who asks you to sign the deed over to them, pay upfront fees for "foreclosure prevention" services, or promises to save your home with no documentation is almost certainly a scammer. Legitimate help — from HUD counselors, attorneys, or cash buyers — is transparent about the process.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Foreclosure
Everything you need to know about selling your home in this situation
In most states, you can sell your home right up until the foreclosure auction takes place. However, the more time you have, the better your options. Some of our investors can close in as few as five business days. Even if your auction is two weeks away, it is worth submitting your property to see what offers are available. Many states also allow you to request a postponement of the auction if a sale is in progress.
If your mortgage balance exceeds your home's current value, you may need your lender's approval for a short sale. Many of our investors are experienced with short sales and can work directly with your lender to negotiate the payoff. While a short sale does affect your credit, it is significantly less damaging than a foreclosure. See our underwater mortgage page for more information.
If you sell for enough to cover your mortgage, there is no remaining balance to worry about. If a short sale is needed, the lender's approval typically includes a waiver of the deficiency balance, though this varies by state and lender. An attorney experienced in foreclosure can help negotiate these terms on your behalf.
Yes. A notice of default begins the foreclosure process but does not prevent you from selling. In fact, the pre-foreclosure period between the notice and the auction is exactly when selling is most advantageous. You still own the home and have the right to sell it until the auction is completed.
A voluntary sale, even one where you were behind on payments, has a much smaller impact on your credit than a foreclosure. Most people who sell voluntarily can qualify for a new mortgage within two to four years. A foreclosure typically requires a seven-year waiting period for conventional loans. Selling now protects your future buying power.
Still have questions? We are here to help.
Common Questions from Philadelphia Homeowners
How does Philadelphia's high transfer tax affect my cash sale?
Philadelphia's combined transfer tax of 4.278% is among the highest in the nation — on a $250,000 sale, that is nearly $10,700 in transfer taxes alone. In traditional sales, this is typically split between buyer and seller, but in cash transactions, the split is negotiable. Many of our investors are willing to cover a larger portion of the transfer tax as part of their competitive offer. This effectively reduces your closing costs compared to a traditional sale where you would also be paying agent commissions.
My Philadelphia rowhouse has lead paint, knob-and-tube wiring, and an old roof. Can I sell it as-is?
These issues are standard in Philadelphia's pre-war housing stock, and they are exactly what our investors handle every day. Lead paint remediation, electrical upgrades from knob-and-tube to modern wiring, and roof replacements on rowhouses are routine renovations for experienced Philadelphia investors. You do not need to address any of these issues before receiving offers — our investors price in the renovation costs and have established contractor networks throughout the city.
I have a vacant property with code violations. Can investors buy it?
Vacant properties with L&I code violations are among the most common transactions in Philadelphia's cash market. The city's Licenses and Inspections department issues violations for everything from exterior maintenance to structural concerns, and resolving them can be expensive and time-consuming for individual sellers. Cash investors purchase properties with existing violations, negotiate or pay the fines, and complete the required work as part of their renovation process. Your violations do not reduce investor interest — they actually increase it, because properties with violations are less likely to have competing traditional buyers.
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