Home Mortgage Short Sale Information FAQs
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Q: Short Sale definition. What is a Short Sale?
Answer: In ”short”, a shortsale is when the lender agrees to settle the debt owed on the property for less than the full amount of the debt. In most cases “Settled” means the lender writes off the debt. You usually will receive a 1099 after a short sale for the amount of debt forgiven. The bank is agreeing not to go after you for the money they lost by filing a deficiency judgment in the future. The exception is the HELOC loan where they reserve the right to file a default judgment.
Q: How do I know if I qualify for a short sale?
Answer: If you have a heavy asset portfolio that would cover the amount above the home’s value then the answer is likely to be no. Each case is different and would be better answered after a professional review to help learn how to short sale.
Q: Will a short sale affect my credit?
Answer: There is a lot of misinformation on the internet about this. A short sale is recorded on your credit report as “debt settled for less than the amount owed”. In plain English, this will result in a relatively minor hit to your credit compared to a foreclosure or late payments on your mortgage. A short sale will affect everyone’s credit differently. The more established your credit, the less of an impact it will have on your score.
If you stop making your mortgage payments for 4 months, regardless of whether you do a short sale or not, 4 months of missed mortgage payments will have a significant negative impact on your credit. A short sale will drop your credit 100 points or more.
If you are already behind on your payments, you have already incurred the majority of the hit that a short sale will have on your credit. Moving forward with a successful short sale will insure that your debt is settled with your lender.
However, if you are current on your payments and can stay current throughout the short sale process, you will save your credit to a large extent.
Q: SHORT SALE TAXES: Will I have to pay taxes on the $$ the lender loses in the short sale?
Answer: THIS IS THE MOST ASKED QUESTION: There are several scenarios with regard to whether or not you will owe federal income taxes on the loss the lender takes in a short sale.
When you do a short sale, your lender is agreeing to settle the debt on the property for less than the amount they are owed. As a result the IRS allows them to write off this loss, which is why your lender will send you a 1099-C after the short sale.
The IRS considers “debt relief” to be income for tax purposes. If your lender writes off $20,000 on your short sale, they will send you a 1099-C for that amount, and you would include that when you file your income taxes. The “C” stands for “Cancellation of Debt” and the law says canceled debt is taxable as income.
However there are EXCEPTIONS that most people who do a short sale qualify for, excluding them from having to pay taxes on their short sale.
Thanks to the Mortgage Tax Debt Relief Act that George W. Bush signed into law in January of 2008, homeowners who do a short sale on their primary residence, and have a purchase money loan (in other words, they have not pulled cash out of their home with a cash-out refinance HELOC) pay no taxes on the loss that their lender incurs in a short sale.
What is… pull cash out/Equity?
Answer: Homeowners who have pulled out cash from their home but have put that money back into their home to “substantially improve” their home, also are excluded from taxes on the short sale.
All other short sale scenarios – if you pulled cash out on your primary residence and spent it on something other than upgrading your home or if you are doing a short sale on a second home or investment property – result in a taxable event unless you qualify for the “Insolvency” exclusion.
The IRS does not require you to pay taxes on the loss the lender takes in a short sale if, at the time of the short sale, you are insolvent. “Insolvency” means your debts (including your mortgage) exceed the value of all your assets. In other words, if, at the time of the short sale, you have more debt than you do money or assets, you are considered insolvent.
Many people who short sale are insolvent and excluded from paying taxes on a short sale. I recommend you check with your accountant or IRS form 982, which is the IRS form for debt relief and short sales. The IRS gives an explanation of “Insolvency” on this form.
Q: Will I have to pay CA state taxes on the money my lender loses?
Answer: California has passed its own version of the federal Mortgage Tax Debt Relief Act. It is Senate Bill 1055, which conforms to the federal law described in detail above, but applies to California state income taxes on a short sale.
There are differences between the state and federal law.
The term of the California law was only until the end of 2008. As of Jan 2009, this law is no longer in effect.
However, CA, Tax Code Section 17131 provides that, unless there is some specific California statute to the contrary, California law tracks federal law on what income is excluded from taxation. Since there is currently no specific California law on this issue, short sales do not produce taxable income under California law as long as the Federal Mortgage Tax Debt Forgiveness Act is in effect (until the end of 2012).
I recommend you speak with your accountant and have them answer any tax questions that you have. I am not a tax accountant and do not give tax advice.
Q: Can my lender go after me for the deficiency in the short sale?
Answer: The whole point of a mortgage short sale is to get out from under the debt of the mortgage. Your lender cannot write off their loss on their corporate taxes, send you a 1099-C, so you have to pay taxes on the loss, report the short sale as a “settled debt” on your credit and then turn around and go after you for the money.
This is why your lender will send you a 1099-C after the short sale. The “C” in “1099-C” stands for “Cancellation of Debt.”
Hiring an inexperienced short sale consultant or negotiator who does not negotiate a FULL release from your lender, could result in the liability becoming yours for the money the lender loses in a short sale or you could find yourself being forced to sign a promissory note to close escrow.
Q: What if I have a first and a second loan on my property with 2 different lenders (or the same lender)?
Answer: In most cases where people have a first and a second loan, they often are with 2 different lenders. For the short sale process to close escrow, both lenders have to agree to the short sale and agree to settle the debt. Thankfully, both lenders have a vested interest in doing this. The lender with the first loan does not want to foreclose, and therefore is willing to give a little money to the second in order to get them to agree to the short sale.
The second lender will get nothing if the first mortgage forecloses. The attitude that something is better than nothing is becoming more prevalent.
Q: What is the difference between recourse and a non-recourse loan?
Answer: A purchase money loan is considered to be a “non recourse” loan, while a “cash out” loan is considered to be a “recourse” loan.
The difference between these two loans is that in a “recourse loan” the lender has recourse to go after the borrower for the money they lose in a foreclosure, technically. For this to take place, the lender has to file a judicial foreclosure, which is rarely done in CA.
The majority of foreclosures in CA are “non-judicial” foreclosures, where the property is sold at a trustee sale.
Q: How will I know that I am being released from the debt?
Answer: You will know that you have been released from the debt right on the front in plain English. “releasing the lien”, “accepting a short payoff to satisfy the lien”, “reporting the sale as a settled debt to the reporting agencies”, “issuing a full satisfaction of the mortgage”, “not pursuing a deficiency judgment”, or some other variation that states they are settling the debt for less than what they were owed.
More importantly, your bank will issue a 1099-C to you, the borrower, after the short sale, confirming that the debt has been written off and is settled. Your lender cannot write off the debt, issue a 1099-C and subsequently go after you for the deficiency.
Q: What are the advantages of a short sale vs. letting my home go to foreclosure?
Answer: Many people ask this question: The primary advantage is that in a short sale, the debt is settled and you no longer owe the bank any money. If you foreclosure, you may still be liable for the deficiency in the event that the bank files a judicial foreclosure.
Secondly, in a short sale, your credit takes much less of a hit compared to a foreclosure.
Finally, Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac revised their guidelines in August of 2008 with regard to how they view borrowers who have filed bankruptcy, gone through foreclosure or done a short sale. Through these new guidelines, they are in effect severely penalizing those who go the route of foreclosure or bankruptcy, and rewarding or encouraging those who do short sales, which they view as the borrower doing the responsible thing in light of the circumstances.
Recent Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac guidelines stated borrowers, filing bankruptcy or foreclosure, may have to wait up to 7 years to buy another home.
In contrast, the new guidelines stipulate only a 24 month period after a short sale.
Q: Are there any advantages to letting my home go to foreclosure vs. doing a short sale?
Answer: I have yet to hear a good premise for letting your home go to foreclosure vs. short sale. Depending on whether you have recourse or non-recourse loan, when you let your home go to foreclosure you either run the risk of being liable for the deficiency amount or liable for the income taxes on that loss.
Secondly, your credit will drop up to 400-500 points and you will not be able to buy a home or obtain respectable credit for up to 7 years.
Comparison: With a short sale, the lender agrees to SETTLE the debt for less than the amount owed. If you have a recourse loan, you may be liable for income taxes on the lender’s loss (just as in a foreclosure) but you will not be liable for the deficiency (and if you qualify for the “Insolvency” exclusion, you will avoid the income taxes as well).
Furthermore, the loss that the lender takes in a short sale will be MUCH LESS than the loss the lender will incur following a foreclosure. The foreclosure process takes months & months, at the end of which the lender has to process the property through its overwhelmed system (another 3 -5 months) and then put the property back on the market, all while the market forces move against them.
Most importantly, the impact on your credit from a short sale will be significantly less than with a foreclosure and you will be able to buy again within 2 years, in most cases, compared to a 7 year waiting period to buy a home following the path of foreclosure.
Q: How much will a short sale cost?
Answer: Nothing –lender pays all closing costs, escrow fees, commissions etc. The lender may also pay any outstanding property taxes if negotiated properly.
Q: How long will a short sale take?
Answer: The short sale process typically takes from 2-4 months, start to finish. It can take longer depending on the subject lender, the abilities of your chosen professional and your personal level of determination. You can choose to live in the property for the entire duration of the short sale or you can simply move out whenever you wish.
Q: Do I need to be behind on my payments to do a short sale?
Answer: No, however lenders are known to be more motivated if you are not making payments or behind. If you have a forbearance agreement it should not affect the commencement of a short sale.
Q: Do I need to hire an attorney to do a short sale?
Answer: You will be better represented in a short sale by an experienced Realtor who practices real estate sales on a daily basis. A Realtor is an integral part of the short sale and possesses the experience to market your property aggressively in order to attract, screen and deliver buyers to successfully execute the sale.
With that said a word of caution. Many attorneys seem to be preying on the fear and desperation of people facing foreclosure. Their websites use scare tactics to make people think that they would be crazy to do a short sale without first hiring an attorney. They wrongly attorneys as the only people qualified to interpret a short sale approval, and that hiring an attorney is normal and an accepted part of doing a short sale, like hiring an attorney for divorce proceedings.
The overwhelming majority of short sales are conducted by real estate brokers who are experienced at negotiating with the lenders and charge NO UPFRONT FEES for their services. You can hire a realtor who employs a team of professionals that include an advising attorney to help.
Q: I found an attorney’s short sale website that says a new law in California, as of July 1 2009, supposedly limits negotiating short sales to attorneys ONLY. It says that from July 1 on, all short sales have to be negotiated by attorneys and not realtors. Is this true?
Answer: No. Misinformation put out of late regarding this law by attorneys looking to get into the short sale business. I recommend you be wary of an attorney trying to interpret the law for his or her enrichment.
The California Foreclosure Consultant Act (July 1 2009) applies to foreclosure consultants – those who collect an advance fee for modifying loans or helping borrowers avoid foreclosure in situations where a Notice of Default has been filed on the property. This Act has an exclusion in it Realtors
Per CA Civic Code and the CA Assoc of Realtors, The California Foreclosure Consultant Act does not apply to real estate agents facilitating a short sale except in the extremely unusual event that an agent is 1) Making a direct loan for a residence in foreclosure, 2) Acquiring an interest in a residence in foreclosure, 3) Receiving an advance fee before performing services for a residence in foreclosure, or 4) Assisting an owner in obtaining the remaining proceeds if any from a foreclosure sale of an owner’s residence.
Q: Should I file bankruptcy? Will it allow me to keep my home? I’ve heard the lender cannot foreclose if I file bankruptcy.
Answer: In bankruptcy there are two types commonly used– Chapter 7 a.k.a “Fresh Start” & Chapter 13 “Wage Earner.” Chapter 7 can give individual filers ability to wipe away debts such as credit card and medical issues and continue to make their mortgage payments.
Chapter 13 encompasses setting up a 3-5 year repayment plan to repay debts. It requires you have a steady income, as you will be repaying all of your debt. Both have a very negative impact on your credit and remain on your credit report for 10 years.
Due to the new 2005 bankruptcy law, which raised the bar for people to qualify for Chapter 7 “fresh start” bankruptcy proceedings, fewer and fewer people pass the “means” test to qualify for Chapter 7 and for this reason can only qualify for Chapter 13 bankruptcy (a 3-5 year repayment plan).
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, in a foreclosure stay process, allows the bank trustee to choose the Realtor and the price for the impending bankruptcy sale of your home. While a Chapter 13 allows you to have some control of the sale of your home and who you employ.
Unfortunately, both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 temporarily delay foreclosure proceedings, neither allows you to keep your home unless you can bring your mortgage current.
Q: Can any agent do a short sale?
Answer: NO. Many agents have no interest in doing short sales because they require a tremendous amount of time and expertise. If you don’t know what you are doing, they often go to foreclosure. 93% percent of short sales do not sell due to poor representation.
You get one shot at doing a short sale – if your Realtor has not learned the many strategies, necessary, through experience, you will likely find yourself in a foreclosure proceeding.
Tip: Taking action quickly will serve you well in preventing foreclosure through the short sale process.
Our Short Sale team is qualified to provide professional advice and the ability to secure short sale approvals in all 151 counties in California and refer other tested professionals throughout the Nation upon request.
this faqs document created in collaboration with Justin DeCesare SdHomeGuy.com

Hi Michael… WOW what a fully detailed article… very very informative… I think not only the consumers but realtors as well can get much benefit from this article. Thnx for putting it out there… Isi
Hi IsiThank you for your friendly comment. I too hope that it helps dispense some of the misinformation that seems to be so prevalent
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