Calculate the deficiency balance after foreclosure: remaining loan balance minus foreclosure sale price minus fees. Check anti-deficiency state protections.
When a home goes through foreclosure, the lender sells the property — often at a significant discount — to recover the loan balance. The deficiency is the gap between what the borrower owes and what the lender recovers after accounting for foreclosure costs. This deficiency can result in a deficiency judgment: a court-ordered obligation for the borrower to pay the remaining balance.
Foreclosure costs are substantial: legal fees ($5,000–25,000), property maintenance during the process, REO (real estate owned) holding costs, and reduced sale prices (typically 20–40% below market value). These costs increase the deficiency and are ultimately borne by the borrower if the lender pursues a judgment.
However, many states have anti-deficiency protections that limit or prohibit deficiency judgments, especially on purchase-money mortgages for primary residences. This calculator estimates the deficiency amount and provides information about state-level protections.
Homebuyers, investors, and real-estate professionals all benefit from precise foreclosure deficiency figures when evaluating properties, negotiating deals, or planning long-term investment strategies. Save this calculator and revisit it whenever market conditions or your financial situation changes.
Understanding the potential deficiency helps you evaluate whether to pursue alternatives like a short sale, deed in lieu, or loan modification. If you're in an anti-deficiency state, your exposure may be zero. This calculator quantifies the financial risk. Instant recalculation lets you compare scenarios side by side, so every buying, selling, or investment decision is grounded in solid financial analysis.
Net Foreclosure Proceeds = Foreclosure Sale Price − Foreclosure Costs Deficiency = Total Owed − Net Foreclosure Proceeds Loss Rate = Deficiency / Total Owed × 100
Result: $163,000 deficiency after foreclosure
Total owed: $350,000 + $18,000 arrears = $368,000. Foreclosure sale: $230,000 − $25,000 costs = $205,000 net. Deficiency: $368,000 − $205,000 = $163,000. In a non-protected state, the lender could pursue this as a judgment.
Foreclosure proceedings can be judicial (through the court system, taking 6–18 months) or non-judicial (trustee sale, taking 3–6 months), depending on the state. During this time, legal fees accumulate ($5,000–25,000), the property may deteriorate without maintenance, and the lender eventually sells at auction — typically at 60–80% of market value.
Anti-deficiency statutes exist to protect homeowners from double punishment: losing their home AND owing a large debt. California's protection (CCP §580b) is among the strongest, prohibiting deficiency judgments on purchase-money mortgages for 1–4 unit owner-occupied properties. Arizona's anti-deficiency statute (A.R.S. §33-814) covers similar scenarios. Each state has specific conditions and exceptions.
After foreclosure, the credit recovery timeline is: 2–3 years to qualify for FHA/VA loans (with extenuating circumstances), 3 years for FHA standard, 7 years for conventional loans. The foreclosure stays on your credit report for 7 years but its impact diminishes over time, especially with responsible credit management afterward.
A deficiency is the amount remaining after the lender sells the foreclosed property and applies the proceeds to your loan balance. If you owe $350,000 and the lender recovers $205,000 net, the $145,000 difference is the deficiency. The lender may seek a court judgment for this amount.
Major anti-deficiency states include California, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Minnesota, Montana, and North Dakota — though protections vary. Some apply only to purchase-money mortgages on primary residences. Others have partial protections. Consult a local attorney for your specific situation.
If the court grants a deficiency judgment, the lender can pursue collection like any debt: wage garnishment, bank account levy, property liens. The judgment accrues interest and can be renewed. However, many lenders don't pursue judgments against borrowers with no collectible assets.
Yes, forgiven debt is generally taxable as ordinary income. The lender issues a 1099-C for the canceled amount. Exceptions include: IRS insolvency exclusion (if your debts exceed assets at the time of forgiveness), qualified principal residence indebtedness (when applicable), and bankruptcy discharge.
Foreclosure typically results in a larger deficiency (lower sale price, higher costs) and more severe credit impact (150–250 point drop, 7-year wait for new mortgage). Short sales produce smaller deficiencies, less credit damage, and shorter waiting periods for future financing. Lenders also save money with short sales.
Yes. Many lenders will settle deficiency judgments for 10–50 cents on the dollar, especially if you can demonstrate limited assets. Hiring a debt negotiation attorney can reduce the amount. Some lenders also agree to payment plans. Get any settlement agreement in writing before paying.