If you’ve missed payments or received a notice from your lender, you’re in pre-foreclosure — but pre-foreclosure is not foreclosure. You still have time and you still have options. This page explains both clearly, without sugarcoating the timeline.
Pre-foreclosure is the period between your first missed mortgage payment and the moment the bank completes a foreclosure sale. During this window, you still own the property. You still have legal options. And — critically — you still have time to act.
The term shows up differently depending on where you are in the process. A lender might send you a notice of delinquency after one missed payment, a demand letter after 60–90 days, and a formal Notice of Default once they’ve decided to begin foreclosure proceedings. Each stage shrinks your window, but none of them close it completely.
What makes Texas different from most states is the speed. Texas is a non-judicial foreclosure state — lenders don’t have to go through the court system. That means once the formal process starts, it can conclude in as little as 21 days. Most lenders take longer than the minimum, but you should never assume you have more time than you can verify.
The most important thing to understand: pre-foreclosure ends the moment the auction gavel falls. After that, your options disappear. Before that moment, real options exist — and the earlier you act, the better all of them become.
Free help is available. HUD-approved housing counselors provide no-cost foreclosure prevention counseling to Texas homeowners. They can review your specific loan situation and help you understand what your lender is required to offer before proceeding with foreclosure.
Day 1–30: First Missed Payment. Lender sends notice of delinquency. Late fees begin. Your options are widest here. A modification, reinstatement, or sale is straightforward.
60–90 Days: Demand Letter. Lender formally demands full payment of the overdue amount. This is a warning before formal default proceedings begin.
90–120 Days: Notice of Default. The formal pre-foreclosure clock starts. Lender has notified you they intend to pursue foreclosure if the situation isn’t resolved.
Notice of Sale Posted. Posted at the county courthouse at least 21 days before the auction. Once this is filed, a foreclosure auction date exists — typically the next first Tuesday of the month.
Foreclosure Auction (First Tuesday). Property sells to the highest bidder. Your ownership ends here. Options that existed before are gone.
These misconceptions cost homeowners time — which is the one thing they can’t afford to lose.
“I have months before anything happens.”
In Texas, once a Notice of Sale is filed, an auction can be scheduled in as little as 21 days. Most lenders take longer to get to that point — but once they’re there, the timeline is fixed. You can’t assume you have more time than you’ve verified.
“If I’m underwater, I have no options.”
A short sale is specifically designed for homeowners who owe more than the home is worth. Lenders often prefer a negotiated short sale over a foreclosure auction — it’s cheaper for them and produces a better result for you.
“Calling the bank will speed up the foreclosure.”
Communicating with your lender early almost always helps. Lenders have loss mitigation departments specifically to avoid foreclosure — it’s expensive for them too. Early contact keeps options open; silence accelerates the process.
“A cash buyer will just lowball me.”
One cash buyer will. Multiple competing buyers won’t. Running a competitive offer process through a buyer network produces significantly better results than accepting any single company’s first offer. The competition is the point.
What is pre-foreclosure in Texas?
Pre-foreclosure is the period after missed payments where the lender has started the default process but hasn’t yet completed the foreclosure auction. During this time you still own the property and still have real options — selling, modifying, or reinstating. In Texas, this window can be shorter than most states because no court order is required for foreclosure.
How long is the pre-foreclosure period in Texas?
Texas law requires only 21 days’ notice before a foreclosure sale, though most lenders take 90–180 days from first missed payment before reaching that point. Once a Notice of Sale is posted, the clock is fixed. Don’t assume you have longer than you can verify — call your lender’s loss mitigation department to get the actual date in writing.
Can I sell my house during pre-foreclosure in Texas?
Yes. Selling is one of the most effective ways to stop foreclosure. If you have equity, a traditional or cash sale pays off the lender in full. If you’re underwater, a short sale may still be possible with lender approval. The key is acting before the auction — once the sale happens, your ownership ends and so do your options.
What happens to my credit if I let foreclosure happen?
A foreclosure judgment typically drops your score 100–150 points and stays on your credit report for 7 years. Most mortgage lenders require a 3–7 year waiting period after foreclosure before approving another home loan. Selling during pre-foreclosure — even in a distressed situation — produces a significantly better credit outcome and an earlier path back to homeownership.
Is there free help for Texas homeowners facing foreclosure?
Yes. HUD-approved housing counselors offer free foreclosure prevention counseling. They can review your loan, explain your options, and communicate with your lender on your behalf. This is a federally funded resource — there is no cost to you and no obligation to use any particular service afterward.
I’ll look at your actual numbers — payoff, timeline, property value — and tell you honestly what your best path is. No pressure, no pitch, no obligation. Just a clear-eyed review of where you stand.