Sell Before the Sheriff's Sale — Keep Your Equity, Protect Your Credit
Get Your Cash Offer in 24 Hours
In Wisconsin, you can stop foreclosure at any point before the sheriff's sale by paying off the mortgage debt — and selling your house to a cash buyer is one of the fastest ways to do that. Wisconsin is a judicial foreclosure state under Wisconsin Statute 846, which means foreclosure typically takes 6 to 12 months from notice of default. That window is enough time to sell, pay off the loan, and keep your remaining equity. Selling before the foreclosure completes also avoids the seven-year credit mark a completed foreclosure leaves behind.
Updated May 2026. Informational only — not legal advice. Consult a Wisconsin attorney for case-specific guidance.
We're not a national call center. We're a local, veteran-owned Wisconsin business that's spent 10 years helping homeowners stop foreclosures with dignity.
We buy your house directly for cash. We pay off your mortgage balance, missed payments, late fees, and any liens at closing. We pay all closing costs and fees. You keep all your equity. You don't catch anything up first. You don't fix anything. You don't list with an agent.
Whatever equity is left after the debts are paid goes to you. The foreclosure stops because the underlying debt is settled. Your credit is protected from the seven-year foreclosure mark. You walk away with a fresh start, on the timeline that works for you.
Every stage of Wisconsin foreclosure has different options. Here's where you might be, and what's possible from each point.
The best place to act. Wisconsin lenders typically don't begin formal foreclosure proceedings until you're 120 days delinquent. You have the most leverage and the most options at this stage. A quiet, private sale now means no public foreclosure filing on record, no court involvement, and the cleanest possible exit.
The formal process has begun. In Wisconsin, this is when the clock starts moving in earnest — but you typically still have several months before any sheriff's sale. Plenty of time for a clean sale if you start now. We pay off the balance owed, including the default amount, at closing.
Your lender has filed a lawsuit in Wisconsin civil court. By law, you have 20 days to respond. This is a critical deadline. The lawsuit doesn't end your ability to sell — it just means the formal process is moving. We've closed deals at this stage many times.
The court has ruled and a judgment is in place. The window is tighter, but a sale is often still possible. Wisconsin's redemption period runs from judgment to sheriff's sale, and during that window, paying off the debt — including through a sale to a cash buyer — stops the foreclosure cold.
Even with a date on the calendar, it's not over. We've closed deals the week before a scheduled sheriff's sale. It's tight, but possible — and there is no other realistic path to keeping your equity at this point. Call immediately. The first conversation tells us honestly whether we can beat your date.
If you've missed one, two, or three mortgage payments, this is the moment to act. Here's what's about to happen — and how a sale ahead of it changes the outcome.
In Wisconsin, your lender generally cannot begin formal foreclosure proceedings until you are 120 days delinquent. But the moment you cross that line, the process moves quickly. Late fees compound. Your credit score drops with each missed payment. Once a lawsuit is filed, the public record exists permanently — even if you eventually cure the default.
The earlier you sell, the more you control the outcome. The longer you wait, the more decisions get made by lenders, courts, and the foreclosure process instead of by you.
There's more than one way to stop foreclosure in Wisconsin. Here's how the most common options compare for a homeowner who needs to act.
Foreclosure is complicated. The path out doesn't have to be. Here's exactly what happens when you reach out.
Fill out the form or call directly. Share where you are — missed payments, notice of default, lawsuit filed, judgment, or sale scheduled. No judgment, no scripts.
We look at the stage you're at and any date on the calendar. We tell you honestly whether we can help in the time you have.
If a sale makes sense, we pay off the mortgage, back payments, and any liens at closing. We pay all closing costs and fees. You keep all your equity. The foreclosure stops because the debt is settled. Close when it works for you — fast if you need it, longer if you need time to plan.
We're not a national call center. We're a Wisconsin business that's been here, with these homeowners, through ten years and hundreds of conversations.
Brendan Piper served before he closed his first deal. The same discipline and integrity he brought home is the standard we work to every day.
A decade of doing this in one state. We know the courts, the lenders, the redemption periods, and what's actually possible at every stage.
If it's not a fair outcome for the homeowner, we don't do the deal. That's not a marketing line. It's why our reputation is what it is in this state.
These are the people we've helped. Every situation is different, but the principle is the same: we listen, we move fast, we treat people right.
"They made the process so easy. I was facing foreclosure and they helped me close in just 10 days. Highly recommend!"
"Fair offer, no hassle, and they closed on my timeline. Couldn't ask for a better experience."
"I inherited a property that needed a lot of work. They bought it as-is and saved me thousands in repairs."
When homeowners search for foreclosure help, they often find bad information. Here's what's actually true under Wisconsin law.
"Once I get a notice of default, it's too late to do anything."
A notice of default is the start of a process that typically takes 6 to 12 months in Wisconsin. You almost always have months — not days — to act. The earlier you move, the more options you keep.
"Selling for cash will hurt my credit worse than foreclosure."
The opposite is true. A completed foreclosure stays on your credit for seven years. Selling before it completes — at any stage — does not carry that mark. Your credit recovers faster, and future lenders treat you differently.
"I have to catch up my payments before anyone will buy."
We pay off the entire loan balance — including missed payments, fees, and any liens — directly at closing. You bring nothing to the table. The debt is settled as part of the purchase.
"Cash buyers will lowball me because they know I'm desperate."
Our offers factor in real costs we cover — agent commissions you avoid, repairs you don't pay for, and months of carrying costs you skip. For distressed sales, the net often comes out comparable to a retail listing, with the money in your pocket on your timeline instead of after 6 months of waiting.
Straight answers from the conversations we have every week with Wisconsin homeowners.
Foreclosure runs on a clock you didn't set. The sooner we talk, the more we can do. One conversation tells you exactly where you stand — and it costs you nothing.