Finding Foreclosure Properties in Portland Oregon
Tuesday, October 28th, 2008Most home buyers have the same goal; Get a great price on a good property! So one of the popular ideas is that you’ve got to get your hands on a foreclosure list. Buy it from direct from the bank and save tons of money over retail. Sounds like a super plan but are you willing to do the work?
Searching the MLS
Truth is that searching homes for sale in Portland, Beaverton, Lake Oswego or other areas is done pretty much one way, online. Portland’s MLS system (RMLS, regional multiple listing service) is the source for 99.9% of properties advertised for sale. Whether it’s John L Scott, Prudential, RE/Max or whoever all listings are input into RMLS. From there the information is just redistributed to everyone’s website. Foreclosures (bank owned properties) are typically no different.
Banks work with local Realtors to get their properties sold at fair market value as soon as possible. Dumping them to a handful of cash buyers on courthouse step doesn’t do much for the sale price. List them in a MLS and these properties will get a million times more exposure, bumping up the sale price. If you’re searching online properties for sale you’re already getting the vast majority of foreclosure listings. This may not be overly apparent because buyer’s generally don’t know who the seller is.
Portland foreclosure lists
Yep, they’re all trying to sell you something of public record. Foreclosures are out there but today more than ever and a few of such are purchased by full-time investors for cash on the courthouse steps. You’ve got to be there with certified funds (10% minimum in cashier’s checks) to even participate. Seller’s (banks) won’t wait for the lucky bidder to secure conventional financing and close weeks later. Good luck easily finding a published list outside of what’s already in the MLS.
Notice of Default lists
NOD (notice of default) lists are the only thing I know of distributed for free. These are public notices of people who are at least 3 months behind on mortgage payments. Lists are distributed by the title company and are the first step to potential foreclosure. Cash buyers, Realtors, and property solutions people promoting “win-win” garbage all prey on these homeowners. It’s a full time job for people choosing this route (trying to capture a potential easy buck) and what they’re promoting is to “save the homeowner from foreclosure.” Some chasers are legitimate (Realtors for the most part), others not. I’ll argue in depth about the scammers out there if you want to listen…
Short-Sale Listings
In reality these days the majority of properties go through short-sale negotiations (bank agrees to work with a seller and take a loss rather than go through the more expensive foreclosure process, losing even more $$). Properties are listed in the MLS and you’re already seeing them within the set search parameters if they exist. Bank representatives generally don’t give the properties away as urban myth would have you believe. By far the majority of foreclosure and short-sales sell through Realtors on RMLS.
Summary
Late night TV is great for promoting a bunch of trash. But if you’re willing to make it a full-time job… you may get lucky eventually. There are easier ways of accomplishing the same goal and getting a good deal. Contact a good Realtor in Portland! Keep in mind too that foreclosures generally come with cosmetic or bigger issues, especially in our target price range.
I’m wrapping up my 6th yr in real estate and figured out long ago that this avenue was a giant headache… and I love doing rehab! Out of the thousands of people I’ve talked with about real estate I’ve met 2 folks who’ve actually purchased foreclosures on the courthouse steps and know that the one guy was barely breaking even after all was said and done.
Investigate Beaverton, Hillsboro, Tigard, Lake Oswego and Portland neighborhood information at www.MaxwellSinclair.com , we’re happy to help!
