How does foreclosure work in District of Columbia?
District of Columbia uses a both (judicial dominates residential in practice — after the 2010 mediation law, title insurers largely stopped insuring nonjudicial residential sales; the power-of-sale track triggers notice-of-default and mediation rights) foreclosure process. You can sell the home and keep your equity any time BEFORE the foreclosure sale/auction. In a judicial case that is typically many months after the summons, and the sale itself is not final until the court ratifies it — but plan around the auction date, not ratification.
Can you catch up and keep your home?
For a residential mortgage you have the right to cure the default — pay all past-due amounts plus allowable fees and costs (not the full accelerated balance) — at any time up to 5 BUSINESS days before bidding starts at the foreclosure sale. Limit: usable no more than once in any 2 consecutive calendar years. Cure restores you to the same position as if the default and acceleration had not occurred. Separately, you can pay off the entire loan, refinance, or sell at any time before the sale.
Until when can you sell and keep your equity?
You can sell the home and keep your equity any time BEFORE the foreclosure sale/auction. In a judicial case that is typically many months after the summons, and the sale itself is not final until the court ratifies it — but plan around the auction date, not ratification. See your exact dates with the free District of Columbia Foreclosure Deadline Calculator.
The honest math on a District of Columbia 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.