RecourseA service of Blue Mar Real Estate Group

Foreclosure and short sales in Brevard County, Florida

Live foreclosure data

Filings, last 30 days

At summary judgment

Sale dates scheduled

Avg days filing → title

Live county foreclosure data integrates with Wave 3 of the build. Source: County clerk and court docket feeds.

If you own a home in Brevard County and you can no longer afford your mortgage payments, this page covers the basics of the Florida foreclosure process as it applies in Brevard County — typical timeline, court structure, and what short sale options look like locally.

Quick facts: Brevard County

Factor Detail
County seat Titusville
Major communities Melbourne, Palm Bay, Titusville, Cocoa, Merritt Island, Cape Canaveral
Judicial circuit Eighteenth Judicial Circuit of Florida
Region Space Coast
Local distress context Space Coast; mixed coastal/inland; insurance pressure on barrier islands

How the Florida foreclosure process applies in Brevard County

Florida is a judicial foreclosure state. Every foreclosure goes through a court case. Brevard County foreclosure cases are heard in the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. The process steps are the same statewide:

  1. Missed payments — usually 90+ days before legal action
  2. Notice of default — lender sends a breach letter
  3. Lis pendens filed — public record of pending foreclosure
  4. Summons and service — homeowner is formally served
  5. Answer period — 20 days to respond
  6. Summary judgment — court rules on the foreclosure
  7. Notice of sale — sale date is published
  8. Foreclosure sale — public auction at the courthouse
  9. Certificate of title — issued 10 days after sale if no objection
  10. Writ of possession — if homeowner does not vacate voluntarily

For a complete walkthrough of each stage and what it means for your options, see the Florida foreclosure process.

Brevard County foreclosure timeline (typical)

Statewide, Florida foreclosure cases take an average of about 922 days from filing to certificate of title. Brevard County timelines vary based on court caseload, motion practice by the defense, and whether the case is contested. [LIVE DATA: county-specific average days from filing to certificate of title, refreshed nightly]

[LIVE DATA: count of active foreclosure cases in Brevard County, refreshed daily]

[LIVE DATA: count of cases with scheduled sale dates in the next 60 days]

What short sale looks like in Brevard County

Recourse lists short sales in every Florida county. In Brevard County we work through standard Florida real estate processes — listing on the appropriate MLS, negotiating with the homeowner's mortgage servicer, coordinating with the homeowner's foreclosure defense attorney (if any), and managing the closing.

When a listing arises in a Brevard County market where we don't yet hold MLS membership, we join the appropriate MLS so we can list locally.

Common situations in Brevard County

Without revealing client details, the situations Recourse most often sees in Brevard County include:

  • Vintage 2022-2024 mortgages where the homeowner bought at peak prices and now faces a combination of high payments, rising insurance, and softening market values
  • Inherited properties where the heirs do not want to keep paying a mortgage and the property is upside-down
  • Job loss or income reduction where modification is not an option and the homeowner needs to move on
  • Insurance non-renewals that push monthly payments past what the homeowner can sustain
  • Divorce or separation where one spouse needs to be removed from the loan and refinance is not possible

If your situation looks like one of these (or anything else), we can talk through whether short sale is the right path or whether a different option (modification, deed-in-lieu, forbearance, attorney consultation) makes more sense.

Frequently asked questions

How long does a foreclosure take in Brevard County?

Florida foreclosure timelines average about 922 days statewide. Brevard County cases tend to track close to the state average, with variation based on court caseload and whether the case is contested.

Can I still do a short sale if my Brevard County foreclosure case is already filed?

Yes — in fact, most short sales happen while a foreclosure case is active. The legal deadline is the certificate of title issuance, which is 10 days after the foreclosure sale. As long as the sale has not happened, short sale remains possible.

Where do I check the status of my Brevard County foreclosure case?

The Brevard County Clerk of Court maintains the public docket. You can search by case number, party name, or property address through the clerk's website. Recourse pulls case status automatically when you create a portal account.

Do I need a Brevard County foreclosure defense attorney to do a short sale?

Not always. Short sale itself does not require an attorney. However, if there are defenses to the foreclosure that could buy time, or if there are issues with the loan that warrant scrutiny, an attorney can be valuable. We are happy to refer you to Brevard County attorneys we have worked with.

See your recourse in Brevard County

If you own a Brevard County property and want to understand your options, enter your property address and we will pull what is publicly available about your case, your servicer, and where you are in the timeline.

Equal Housing Opportunity. We are not attorneys and do not provide legal advice. Modifications are decided by your servicer based on investor guidelines and your specific financial situation. We cannot guarantee any particular outcome.

Blue Mar Real Estate Group, Inc. | Licensed Florida Real Estate Brokerage License | License #CQ1018554.

See your recourse in Brevard County.

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