Facing foreclosure on your home in Auburn? You have more options than you've been told.
If you're behind on your mortgage, you've been served with a foreclosure complaint, or a sheriff sale has been scheduled, there is almost always a path other than losing the home outright. The first step is a straight conversation about what's actually possible.
If any of this sounds familiar...
- You owe more on your home than it's currently worth.
- You've fallen behind on mortgage payments and don't see how you catch up.
- You've received a notice of default, a foreclosure complaint, or a sheriff sale date.
- The home needs repairs you can't afford, and the cost of fixing it is more than it's worth.
- A change in circumstances (illness, job loss, divorce, death in the family) has changed what's possible.
- You've been ignoring calls from your lender because you don't know what to say.
You're in the right place to start. Any one of these is enough to make a phone call worthwhile, and none of them is something to figure out alone.
There is no single right answer. There is the right answer for you.
Matthew Klein at Walnut Creek Realty has spent more than two decades working the hardest cases in Northeast Ohio real estate: short sales, foreclosures, sheriff sales, and the kind of complex transactions most agents walk away from. That experience has taught him one thing above everything else: every situation is different, and the first job is to understand yours before recommending a path.
Your Options
Ohio is a judicial foreclosure state, which means the process moves through the Court of Common Pleas in the county where the property sits. Every case has multiple points along the timeline where it can be paused, redirected, or resolved. The four most common paths:
What a multi-lender short sale actually looks like
Most short-sale conversations stay abstract. Here's what a multi-lender Auburn short sale tends to look like in real numbers: a representative case, not a specific past client. Names and amounts are illustrative; the proportions reflect what we see in practice.
Three liens, a junior-lien negotiation, and an offer below total debt
The homeowner owes a primary mortgage, a small second mortgage from a refinance several years ago, and a home equity line of credit pulled during a renovation. Total debt across the three: $500,000. The home, in current condition and current market, draws a best offer of $380,000, well above what a sheriff sale would yield, but $120,000 below the total debt.
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Primary mortgage balance | $390,000 |
| Second mortgage balance | $85,000 |
| HELOC balance | $25,000 |
| Total debt against the property | $500,000 |
| Best offer received | $380,000 |
| Estimated closing costs (≈5%) | −$19,000 |
| Net available to lenders | $361,000 |
The primary lender, first in line, would normally take the entire $361,000. That's $29,000 short of what they're owed, which they may accept because foreclosing on a home in this price band typically costs them $50,000 to $75,000 once you factor in legal fees, appraisal, sheriff sale process, holding costs, and likely write-down at auction. A short sale net of $361,000 beats a foreclosure net somewhere closer to $300,000.
But the second mortgage and the HELOC each have separate liens that must be released for the title to clear. They will not release for nothing. The negotiation is the primary lender agreeing to share a portion of their recovery to satisfy the junior liens: usually a token amount that's still better than what the junior lenders would recover in a foreclosure.
| Lender | Owed | Receives | Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary lender | $390,000 | $316,200 | 81% |
| Second lender | $85,000 | $32,300 | 38% |
| HELOC lender | $25,000 | $12,500 | 50% |
| Total disbursed | $500,000 | $361,000 | — |
Auburn Township, Ohio
Walnut Creek Realty works the territory that fans out from Auburn: Bainbridge Township to the west, Russell Township and South Russell Village to the northwest, Newbury Township to the east, and Aurora and Mantua Township across the line in Portage County to the south. Auburn sits along Geauga's southern edge, sharing its entire southern border with Portage and giving the township the kind of cross-county housing market that Geauga's more interior townships do not have. Auburn shares the Kenston School District with Bainbridge, which means Kenston buyers searching across the district commonly look in both townships. The township is largely residential on larger lots, a semi-rural character with established subdivisions and acreage parcels along its older roads, with the kind of steady inflow of new residents that has made Auburn one of the faster-growing townships in the county. The buyer pool is broad: Geauga locals, Cleveland east-side professionals coming up the corridor through Bainbridge, and Portage-side buyers crossing the line for school-district reasons. The right strategy on a distressed sale in this market looks different than the same sale in a denser suburb or a more rural township.
Matthew Klein
Matthew has spent more than twenty years working distressed real estate in Northeast Ohio: the short sales, foreclosures, and complex transactions that define what kind of agent someone really is. The work that built the brokerage is the same work he still does himself for the clients who need it most. A few of those stories are on a page of their own.
What to gather, what to expect
Most homeowners feel better when they walk into a hard conversation prepared. Here's what to have on hand and what the call actually sounds like, so the first ten minutes go to the situation rather than to setup.
Documents to gather
You don't need anything to call. Before any short sale package goes to a lender, though, we'll work together to assemble the financial picture they require: recent mortgage statements, two years of tax returns, paystubs, bank statements, hardship documentation, and any court paperwork you've been served. If it's helpful to look ahead, the full short sale document checklist is on its own page as a working reference.
What the first call sounds like
- We ask about your current mortgage and any other liens on the property: primary, second, HELOC, tax liens, anything recorded.
- We ask what's happened, financially, personally, whatever's relevant. The hardship piece matters because lenders require it.
- We ask what you want to happen next. Some homeowners want to keep the home and need a modification. Some need to sell and walk away clean. Both are valid starting points.
- We tell you honestly what we'd do if it were our own family. If a short sale is the right path, we explain what comes next. If it isn't, we say so and point you to who can help.
Your situation stays between us. We do not share details with neighbors, family members, or your lender beyond what's required to negotiate the sale on your behalf, and even then, only with your written authorization. The first conversation is private regardless of what you decide afterward.
We are not cash buyers. We are not house flippers. We are not wholesalers. We are licensed Realtors representing you in the sale. We do not buy homes from distressed sellers, and we are paid only when the sale closes, by the lender, from the sale proceeds. If you've been getting calls or postcards from companies offering to "buy your house fast for cash," that is a different category of business with very different incentives. We work the other side of the table. Yours.
A few questions specific to Auburn
Most of the questions about how short sales work, deficiency judgments, taxes on forgiven debt, second-position lenders, and the foreclosure timeline get answered in the first phone call. The two questions below are specific to Auburn, and to the fact that the township's entire southern border runs along the Geauga/Portage County line, which generates real confusion about where a foreclosure case actually lands.
What does the foreclosure process look like in Geauga County?
Foreclosures in Geauga County are filed in the Geauga County Court of Common Pleas in Chardon. After judgment, the property is appraised by three impartial county residents per Ohio Revised Code requirements, then advertised in a local newspaper for at least three consecutive weeks before the sheriff sale. Sheriff sales in Geauga County are conducted online through the state's official auction platform. Confirmation is issued by the same court that entered the judgment, typically within 30 to 60 days of the sale. Geauga's docket is smaller than the urban-county dockets, which means individual cases tend to move at a more predictable pace, both an advantage and a constraint depending on what the homeowner is trying to achieve.
My Auburn property has a mailing address routed through Aurora: is my foreclosure case filed in Geauga or Portage County?
Geauga County. Auburn Township sits on the southern edge of Geauga, sharing its entire southern border with Portage County: Aurora to the southwest, Mantua Township to the southeast. Many Auburn properties carry mailing addresses that route through Portage-side post offices, which generates a real and recurring source of confusion. Your county for foreclosure purposes is the county where the property physically sits, not the county your mail is sorted through. For Auburn properties, that means the Geauga County Court of Common Pleas in Chardon, about 18 miles north, handles the case, not the Portage County Court of Common Pleas in Ravenna. The practical consequence runs two directions. First, the local rules of court differ between counties, and you want counsel who knows which docket your case is on. Second, sheriff sales are conducted by the sheriff of the county where the property sits: Geauga County Sheriff sales for Auburn properties, conducted online through the state's RealAuction.com platform, not the Portage County Sheriff. If you are not sure which county your property is in, the Geauga County Auditor's parcel search will confirm it in under a minute; a foreclosure complaint arriving by certified mail will also name the court at the top of the first page.