If you have missed a mortgage payment in Ohio and you are wondering what happens next, this guide is for you. We will walk through the entire process, in plain language, with the actual statutory deadlines.
We are a real estate acquisition firm, not a law firm. Some homeowners reading this will end up selling their house for cash to avoid foreclosure. Many others will not, and that is fine. Either way, you deserve to know exactly where you stand.
For an interactive version that calculates your specific dates based on when you missed your first payment, use our Foreclosure Timeline Calculator.
This is the single most important fact about foreclosure in Ohio. Your lender cannot simply schedule a sale and take your property. They have to file a lawsuit in your county's Court of Common Pleas, serve you with the complaint, and obtain a judgment from a judge before the sheriff can sell your home.
That is good news. It means the process is slow, formal, and gives you multiple opportunities to respond. In Ohio, the entire process from first missed payment to actual sheriff sale typically takes between 9 and 18 months, sometimes longer. Some non-judicial states (Texas, Georgia, California) move much faster.
Your mortgage payment was due. You missed it. Here is what happens.
Nothing legal has happened yet. Your credit will eventually take a hit (typically reported at 30 days late), but the lender has not started any formal foreclosure action.
If this is a one-time hardship and you can pay within 30 days, the cleanest move is to call your servicer and ask about a short reinstatement plan. Late fees can sometimes be waived for first-time delinquencies.
Six weeks to two months after your first missed payment, your servicer will send a written notice called a breach letter or notice of intent to foreclose. This is required by most mortgage contracts.
The breach letter tells you:
Read this letter. Save the envelope. Note the date received.
Federal law (the CFPB's mortgage servicing rules under Regulation X) prohibits your servicer from making the first official foreclosure filing until you are more than 120 days past due on your payments.
This is a hard floor. Even if you are not responding to letters or phone calls, the foreclosure case cannot legally start before this date. There are narrow exceptions (loans not subject to RESPA, certain reverse mortgages, abandoned properties), but for the vast majority of owner-occupied homes, day 121 is the earliest possible foreclosure start.
If you have not cured, your lender's attorney files a foreclosure complaint in the Court of Common Pleas in the county where your property is located. The complaint is a lawsuit. It names you (the borrower), the lender, and any other parties with an interest in the property (HOA, junior lienholders).
You will be served with:
Service is typically by certified mail or by a process server. The date you are served is the date that starts your response clock.
Under Ohio Civil Rule 12(A), you have 28 days from the date you are served to file a written Answer with the court. This is the most important deadline in the entire process.
If you do not file an Answer within 28 days, the lender will request a default judgment. The court will almost certainly grant it. From that moment, you have largely lost the ability to defend the case on the merits. The foreclosure proceeds against you uncontested.
Filing an Answer does not require you to be a lawyer. You can file pro se (representing yourself). However, this is the moment where consulting an attorney pays for itself many times over. Free or low-cost foreclosure defense attorneys exist in every Ohio county. See the Free help section below.
The 28-day window is the most consequential decision point in your foreclosure. Filing an Answer, even a basic one, preserves your rights to negotiate a loan modification, raise defenses, request mediation, and ultimately sell the property on your terms.
Whether by default or after litigation, the court will eventually enter a judgment of foreclosure and sale. This document orders the property to be sold at a sheriff's sale to satisfy the debt.
From judgment to actual sheriff sale, expect 3 to 6 months. The county sheriff (or a private selling officer) appraises the property, schedules the sale date, and publishes notice of sale in a local legal newspaper for three consecutive weeks before the sale.
At the sale, the property is auctioned to the highest bidder. The lender almost always bids at least the judgment amount. If no third party outbids the lender, the lender takes the property as REO (real estate owned).
After the sheriff sale, Ohio law gives you a limited right of redemption. Until the court formally confirms the sale (which happens after the sheriff returns the writ of sale to the court), you can redeem the property by paying the full amount due, including costs.
In practice, this is a narrow window of approximately 30 days, and redemption requires a substantial lump sum. Most homeowners cannot redeem at this stage.
Once the court confirms the sale, the buyer receives the deed. You no longer own the property. If you have not vacated voluntarily, the new owner can pursue an eviction.
Ohio has a strong free legal aid network for foreclosure defense:
ProjectXRL acquires properties as-is, on your timeline, for fair cash. We work with institutional buyer partners who fund closings. There is no obligation to accept any offer we send. We do not charge sellers a fee. If we are not the right fit, we say so.