Washington's Real Estate Landscape for Distressed Sellers
Washington state's property tax rate of 1.03% ranks 20th nationally — right in the middle — but that average masks enormous variation. A $310,000 home in Spokane generates around $3,200 in annual property taxes; a $1.1 million home in Bellevue generates over $11,000. For homeowners already under financial stress, that tax clock keeps running whether or not the mortgage gets paid. Washington also runs a non-judicial foreclosure process, meaning lenders don't need a judge's approval to take a property — they just need to follow a procedural timeline. Distressed sellers here often have more equity than they realize, especially with how much values have appreciated over the past decade.
How Washington Foreclosure Law Works
Washington uses non-judicial foreclosure under the Deed of Trust Act, with a typical timeline of 4 to 5 months from the notice of default to trustee sale. There is no redemption period after a non-judicial sale — once the trustee's auction closes, the previous owner has no legal mechanism to reclaim the property. Lenders must provide a 30-day notice of intent to accelerate, followed by a notice of trustee sale, but the process moves without court oversight. That speed and lack of judicial review means the lender holds most of the cards once formal proceedings begin, which is why a pre-foreclosure sale almost always gives sellers better options.
Property Taxes and What Happens When You Fall Behind
Washington's 1.03% average effective rate (rank 20) translates to real dollar pressure when you're already behind on other obligations. Delinquent property taxes in Washington accrue interest at 12% annually plus a 3% penalty, and counties can begin foreclosure on tax liens after three years of delinquency. King County — home to Seattle and Bellevue — has one of the most active tax foreclosure enforcement programs in the state. On a $500,000 home, a single year of delinquent taxes plus penalties adds roughly $7,500 in additional obligations that sit ahead of your mortgage in the lien priority order.
Why Cash Offers Work in Washington
Washington's real estate excise tax (REET) is tiered and can reach 3.0% on higher-value properties — one of the steepest transfer taxes in the country. But on most distressed properties at or below $500,000, the REET rate runs 1.1% to 1.28%, and the seller typically pays it. A cash sale sidesteps the unpredictable repair demands and contingency clauses that retail buyers bring, and it avoids the weeks of back-and-forth on inspection credits. Washington doesn't require an attorney to close, so title companies can move quickly once both parties agree on price. For sellers who need certainty, that combination of speed and simplicity is hard to replicate on the open market.