New York's Real Estate Landscape for Distressed Sellers
New York ranks 8th in the country for property taxes, with a statewide effective rate of 1.72% — and in many counties, real-world bills run significantly higher than that. For homeowners already stretched thin, those annual tax bills become a chokehold. The state's housing market is sharply bifurcated: New York City commands median prices well above $700,000, while upstate cities like Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse sit closer to $150,000–$200,000. Whether you're in a high-value borough or a struggling Rust Belt city, the pressure on distressed sellers is real, and the legal process for lenders to take your home is one of the slowest — and most expensive — in the country.
How New York Foreclosure Law Works
New York is a judicial foreclosure state, meaning every foreclosure must go through the court system. That process typically runs 15 to 24 months from the first missed payment to a completed foreclosure sale, and many cases stretch even longer due to mandatory settlement conferences that require the lender and borrower to meet before a judge. There is no statutory redemption period after the foreclosure sale — once the sale is confirmed, the prior owner has no right to buy the property back. That court conference requirement sounds like a protection, and in some ways it is, but it also means months of legal fees and uncertainty for a homeowner who already knows they need to sell.
Property Taxes and What Happens When You Fall Behind
At an effective rate of 1.72% — the 8th highest in the country — New York's property taxes are a constant source of financial pressure. On a $200,000 home in Rochester or Buffalo, that's roughly $3,400 per year in taxes alone. Miss those payments, and the county can pursue a tax lien or, in some municipalities, a tax deed sale where the property itself is eventually auctioned off to satisfy the debt. New York City operates its own aggressive lien sale program. Once a tax lien is sold to a third-party investor, interest accrues quickly and the homeowner faces a second creditor with separate enforcement rights.
Why Cash Offers Work in New York
New York is an attorney close state — by law, an attorney must handle the real estate closing. That's an added cost and time commitment on top of an already complicated process. The state's transfer tax starts at $2 per $500 of value, and in New York City that's layered with additional city transfer taxes and a mansion tax on properties over $1 million. For a distressed seller, those transaction costs can eat into whatever equity remains. A cash buyer can close in days rather than months, eliminates the settlement conference delay, and doesn't require a mortgage commitment that could fall through. When you're 15 months into a judicial foreclosure clock, speed and certainty are worth more than a marginal difference in offer price.