Calculate short sale proceeds to the lender, deficiency balance, and potential judgment risk. Compare short sale outcomes to foreclosure alternatives.
A short sale occurs when a homeowner sells their property for less than the outstanding mortgage balance, with the lender's approval. The lender agrees to accept the sale proceeds as full or partial satisfaction of the loan. Short sales are an alternative to foreclosure when the homeowner can no longer afford payments and the property value has fallen below the mortgage balance.
The key financial question in a short sale is the deficiency: the difference between the remaining mortgage balance and the net sale proceeds (after closing costs). Whether the lender can pursue this deficiency through a deficiency judgment depends on state law, the type of loan, and the terms of the short sale approval. Many states limit or prohibit deficiency judgments on certain types of loans.
This calculator estimates the proceeds flowing to the lender, the remaining deficiency, and provides context on whether the lender may pursue the shortfall. It also compares the short sale outcome to the estimated foreclosure outcome.
Short sales involve complex math: closing costs, junior liens, back payments, and deficiency calculations. This calculator shows exactly what the lender receives, what the deficiency is, and helps you evaluate whether a short sale is better than foreclosure for your situation. Instant recalculation lets you compare scenarios side by side, so every buying, selling, or investment decision is grounded in solid financial analysis.
Net Proceeds to Lender = Sale Price − Closing Costs Deficiency = Total Owed (Balance + Back Payments + Penalties) − Net Proceeds Loss Severity = Deficiency / Total Owed × 100
Result: $105,000 deficiency after short sale
Sale price $250,000 minus $20,000 closing costs = $230,000 net to lender. Total owed: $320,000 balance + $15,000 arrears = $335,000. Deficiency: $335,000 − $230,000 = $105,000. Loss severity: 31.3% of total owed.
A short sale begins when the homeowner contacts the lender to request permission to sell below the loan balance. The lender requires a hardship letter, financial documentation, and a listing agreement. Once listed and an offer is received, the lender's loss mitigation department reviews and approves or counters the offer. This review can take weeks to months.
Several states have anti-deficiency protections: California, Arizona, and Nevada prohibit deficiency judgments on purchase-money mortgages for primary residences (with conditions). Other states allow deficiency judgments but require lenders to get fair market value credits. Always consult a local attorney to understand your state's specific protections.
A short sale typically drops your credit score 80–150 points and stays on your record for 7 years (like a foreclosure). However, the recovery is faster because you can demonstrate financial responsibility sooner. Many people who short-sell rebuild their credit to mortgage-qualifying levels within 2–3 years.
A short sale is when a homeowner sells property for less than the outstanding mortgage balance, with lender approval. The lender accepts the reduced proceeds to avoid the higher costs of foreclosure. The seller avoids foreclosure on their record, and the buyer gets a discounted price.
A deficiency judgment is a court order requiring the borrower to pay the remaining balance after a short sale or foreclosure. Not all states allow deficiency judgments, and many lenders waive the right as part of short sale approval. Check your state's laws and negotiate a waiver in the approval letter.
Usually yes. Short sales cause less credit damage (80–150 point drop vs. 150–250 for foreclosure), allow faster mortgage eligibility recovery (2–4 years vs. 5–7), and often result in smaller or waived deficiencies. Lenders also save on foreclosure costs, making them motivated to approve short sales.
Short sales typically take 3–6 months from listing to close, though some take longer. The main delay is lender approval of the offer. Multiple lien holders (first mortgage, second mortgage, HELOC) each must approve independently, adding complexity and time.
The forgiven deficiency (the amount the lender writes off) is generally taxable as cancellation of debt income. However, exceptions exist: the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act (extended periodically) excludes qualified principal residence debt, and IRS insolvency rules may also apply.
Yes, but there are waiting periods: FHA loans require 3 years after a short sale, conventional loans typically require 2–4 years (depending on circumstances and down payment), and VA loans have a 2-year waiting period. These are shorter than post-foreclosure waiting periods.