The insurance problem nobody planned for
Florida looks great from the outside. But I talk to homeowners every week whose insurance renewal came back double, or didn't come back at all. Since Ian, carriers have been dropping anything with a roof over 15 years old. Meanwhile the house went up in value, so the taxes went up too. The mortgage you could afford a few years ago suddenly has a stack of new bills riding on top of it. A lot of people did everything right and still can't make the math work. No shame in that. It just means there's a decision coming, and it's better to make it on your own schedule.
Foreclosure here goes through a judge
Miss a payment and your lender can't just take the house. Florida makes them sue you. They file in court, serve you papers, and have to convince a judge before anything gets auctioned. Start to finish, that usually takes the better part of a year, sometimes longer. Sounds like good news, and it sort of is. But the meter runs the whole time: interest, attorney fees, a lawsuit sitting in the public record with your name on it. And once the auction happens, that's it. Florida gives you no redemption period, no buying it back. The time you have right now is the good time.
The other clock: property taxes
Here's one most people don't see coming. Fall behind on property taxes and the county sells a tax certificate to an investor, who collects interest on what you owe (it can run as high as 18 percent). After two years, that investor can apply for a tax deed and force a sale of your house. This runs completely separate from any foreclosure. The homestead exemption helps if you live in the house and actually filed for it. It doesn't help with an inherited place where nobody refiled the paperwork. I've watched people fight the bank on one front and lose the house out the back door on taxes.
Why a cash sale actually works here
A regular sale takes months you may not have. A buyer with a mortgage needs an appraisal, an inspection, and an insurance policy on your house, and that last one is where old roofs kill deals now. A cash sale skips all of it. We can close in two or three weeks, and we buy the houses insurers won't touch. Florida keeps closing simple too (you don't even need an attorney), and the transfer tax is the same modest rate statewide. Honestly, the biggest thing I've learned buying houses here: the people who move early walk away with money. The people who wait end up handing it to the lawyers.