Michigan Foreclosure Help
The complete guide to MI foreclosure law, sheriff sale, and stopping it before sale.
Read full guide →Facing foreclosure on a Grand Rapids home? You have more options than you think — including Michigan's 6-month redemption period and the ability to close fast for cash. Here's what Grand Rapids homeowners need to know.
If you're facing foreclosure in Grand Rapids, Michigan, time matters more than anything else. The good news: Grand Rapids is West Michigan's biggest market and has been one of the fastest-appreciating mid-size cities in America. Strong rental demand and an active flipper community make this a premium cash-buyer zone. Most Grand Rapids foreclosures take 6-12 months from first missed payment to sheriff sale at Kent County Circuit Court (180 Ottawa Ave NW, Grand Rapids) — but if you're reading this with a sale date scheduled, you may only have weeks left.
⚠️ Sheriff sale within 30 days?
Call us at (313) 217-3067 right now. We can typically close on a Grand Rapids home in 7-14 days — fast enough to pay off your lender and stop the auction entirely.
Michigan uses primarily "foreclosure by advertisement" — the same process applies in Grand Rapids and across Kent County. Here's how it works locally:
| Stage | Typical Grand Rapids Timeline | What You Can Do |
|---|---|---|
| 1st missed payment | Day 1 | Contact lender, explore loss mitigation |
| Default notice sent | Day 30-60 | Apply for forbearance or modification |
| Federal 120-day waiting period | Day 1-120 | Cash sale possible at any time |
| Foreclosure notice published | Month 4-6 | Cash sale highly recommended |
| Sheriff sale at Kent County Circuit Court (180 Ottawa Ave NW, Grand Rapids) | Month 6-9 | Last chance for traditional sale |
| 6-month redemption period | Months 9-15 | Still own home, can still sell |
Even after sheriff sale at Kent County Circuit Court (180 Ottawa Ave NW, Grand Rapids), you legally own your home for 6 more months. This is called the statutory redemption period, codified in MCL §600.3240. During this 6-month window in Grand Rapids, you can:
If your sheriff sale already happened, you have not lost everything. Many Grand Rapids homeowners come to us 1-2 months after sheriff sale and we still close in time to recover meaningful equity.
| Factor | Cash Sale | Foreclosure |
|---|---|---|
| Credit score impact | ~50 point drop | 100-160 point drop |
| Stays on credit report | ~2 years | 7 years |
| Wait to buy again (FHA) | ~12 months | 3 years |
| You preserve equity? | Yes, if any exists | Almost never |
| Public record / stigma | Standard sale | Newspaper + court records |
| Deficiency judgment risk | Low | Possible (MCL §600.3280) |
Grand Rapids has tighter inventory and higher per-square-foot pricing than Detroit, meaning stronger ARV but also a competitive cash-buyer market.
Get your free, no-obligation cash offer in 24 hours. Takes about 60 seconds to start. No spam. No pressure. Just a number.
Here's what a typical Grand Rapids foreclosure-prevention cash sale looks like:
In situations where the loan exceeds the cash offer, we work directly with your lender on a discounted payoff. This is faster and cleaner than a formal short sale — and we've done it dozens of times across Kent County.
From first missed payment to sheriff sale at Kent County Circuit Court (180 Ottawa Ave NW, Grand Rapids): typically 6-12 months. Then add the 6-month redemption period before the new owner can take possession. Total: 12-18 months from start to eviction.
Yes — if you contact us at least 14 days before the scheduled auction. We've stopped dozens of Kent County sheriff sales by closing fast and paying off the lender directly.
If your home sells at sheriff sale for more than you owe, the surplus belongs to you. But sheriff sales typically generate prices well below market value — meaning equity often gets wiped out. Cash sale before foreclosure usually preserves more.
Yes — Michigan requires foreclosure notices to be published in local newspapers for 4 consecutive weeks. Anyone can search public records or read the legal notices section of Grand Rapids-area papers.
Yes. During the 6-month redemption period, you still own your Grand Rapids home and can sell. We've helped many homeowners during this window — you walk away with cash instead of an eviction notice.
This page provides general information about Michigan foreclosure law as it applies to Grand Rapids. We are not attorneys. For complex foreclosure situations, consult a Michigan-licensed real estate attorney. Information based on Michigan Compiled Laws as of May 2026.