How does foreclosure work in Iowa?
Iowa uses a judicial foreclosure process. In a standard foreclosure, through the redemption period (the first 6 months are exclusively the debtor's — sell, redeem for the sale price-based amount, keep the surplus). In a 654.20 'without redemption' case, the sheriff's sale is the hard deadline.
Can you catch up and keep your home?
30-day statutory right to cure arrears (without acceleration) after the notice of right to cure, for one- and two-family owner-occupied homesteads with institutional lenders; curing restores the mortgage. Also: pay the amount claimed before judgment and the action must be dismissed; pay the judgment before the sale and the sale is called off.
Until when can you sell and keep your equity?
In a standard foreclosure, through the redemption period (the first 6 months are exclusively the debtor's — sell, redeem for the sale price-based amount, keep the surplus). In a 654.20 'without redemption' case, the sheriff's sale is the hard deadline. See your exact dates with the free Iowa Foreclosure Deadline Calculator.
The honest math on a Iowa foreclosure
Every day you carry the loan, arrears, fees, and interest grow. A traditional listing takes weeks to market and 30–45 more days for a financed buyer to close — time you may not have before the sale date.
A cash sale that closes before the sale date lets you walk away with your equity instead of losing it at auction. Talk to a free HUD counselor too — you may have options beyond selling.