Here's the arithmetic nobody explains at 2 a.m.: every missed payment adds the payment itself plus late fees plus escalating lender costs to what you owe — and once a Massachusetts foreclosure formally begins, legal fees pile on top while your options narrow. Selling your Plymouth County house now clears the entire balance at closing and hands you the difference. Selling later, under a sale date, means negotiating with no leverage. Same house, very different outcomes, and the variable is time. Across Plymouth County's roughly 535,075 residents and a median home value near $556,000, that need shows up every single week — and it's solvable.
Talk to your lender — and know your walk-away number
If keeping the house is realistic, pursue it: call your servicer's loss-mitigation line, ask about forbearance and modification, and get free guidance from a HUD-approved housing counselor. These programs exist and work — when the underlying income supports the payment.
The mistake is pursuing them without knowing your alternative. Get a real cash offer for your Plymouth County house in parallel: what it pays, what clears the loan and arrears, what lands in your pocket. With both numbers in hand, you're negotiating from information — and if the modification math doesn't work, you haven't burned months finding out.
What's actually happening in Plymouth County
Plymouth County sits inside a metropolitan market, so there's no shortage of investors who know these streets — we route your property to the ones actively buying right now, not whoever answers a national call center. Median home values in Plymouth County sit near $556,000, almost exactly the midpoint for Massachusetts counties, which makes offers easy to sanity-check against nearby sales. Households in Plymouth County earn a median of about $114,000, and homes here remain within reach of local investors — which keeps the cash-buyer market liquid and offer turnaround fast.
The early-exit advantage, in dollars
A cash sale is uniquely suited to payment trouble because it's fast enough to outrun the compounding: no 60-day escrow while fees stack, no financing contingency that can collapse and cost you your window. Buyers in our network can coordinate directly with your servicer's payoff department so the arrears, the balance, and the late fees all die at the closing table — and what's left is yours.
- Credit takes a bruise, not a seven-year foreclosure scar
- Sell exactly as-is: no repairs, no cleaning, no staging, no showings
- No financing contingencies, so the deal can't die at the bank
- Zero obligation: get the offer, compare it to listing, decide on your terms
The Massachusetts timeline from missed payment to real trouble
Federal rules generally bar servicers from starting foreclosure until a loan is more than 120 days delinquent — that's your guaranteed runway. After that, Massachusetts's process takes over: Massachusetts foreclosures are technically non-judicial but layered with requirements: a 90-day right-to-cure notice, Land Court review under the Servicemembers Act, and strict publication rules — botched paperwork has voided many sales. Add it up and a homeowner who acts within the first two or three missed payments has months of genuine control; one who waits for the sale date has days. (General information, not legal advice — a HUD-approved counselor can review your specific situation for free.)
You still have the leverage. Use it while that's true — get matched with a vetted local buyer, get your offer inside 24 hours, and make your next decision from strength instead of panic.
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