New Jersey Real Estate Q&A Discussion Forum
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies

Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal



Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback
Updated over 2 years ago on . Most recent reply

New Jersey Sheriff Sale
Hello,
I'm interested in bidding on properties at sheriff sales in New Jersey. Before I do so, I have a few questions that I hope can be answered for me by someone who has both experience and knowledge in acquiring properties at New Jersey sheriff sales. It would help me a great deal.
1. I attend a sheriff sale in New Jersey, in which a property (for example: a single family home) has an upset price of $200,000. Now, I become the successful bidder at $300,000. Also, I've conducted a title search beforehand, which found no easements, restrictions, or judgments, but liens of a $100,000 1st mortgage and a $60,000 2nd mortgage. Aside from the $300,000 winning bid that I have to pay, is the mortgage that I need to pay based on lien priority, so based on which mortgage is foreclosing on that property?
2. Using the same example, after I conduct a title search, I find that the $100,000 1st mortgage is foreclosing on the property, so am I responsible for paying the $300,000 winning bid (since the $100,000 1st mortgage is already factored into the $200,000 upset price) and the $60,000 2nd mortgage is divested (wiped off completely)?
3. Vice versa, I find that the $60,000 2nd mortgage is foreclosing on the property, so am I responsible for paying the $300,000 winning bid (since the $60,000 2nd mortgage is already factored into the $200,000 upset price) and whatever amount is remaining on the $100,000 1st mortgage?
4. I'm interested in bidding on a property that has an upset price of $150,000.00. Now, a title search was conducted through a title company, in which they found no judgments, liens, easements, or restrictions, but just a $50,000 mortgage. Based on your experience, is this $50,000 mortgage already factored into the upset price of $150,000.00?
Most Popular Reply

@Alkjad Lelaj Hello, I'm not sure that I follow your questions, but here is a bit of advice to help you as it pertains to NJ Sherrifs auctions
1) Partner with a seasoned investor and/or attorney that have experience with sheriffs auctions, the sales are nuanced and there is a lot of due diligence that you need to do before placing your bid, the title searches are a great place to start but you shouldn't stop there you need to run OPRA reports, check city violations view the property (if possible) etc
2) Understand the redemption period and how it works, the auction isnt always over after you place a winning bid make sure you understand the redemption period before you spend additional funds, buy materials etc
3) Each county auction is a bit different as are the profile of the buyers/ level of competition make sure that you're prepared as some auctions the bids are very aggressive (almost nonsensical) and others they are a bit more laid back comparatively.
4) Not every property at an auction is a deal so don't bid blindly, auctions can be a great place to purchase a property but there are properties there that are also over valued and may not make sense based on your expected rate of return/investment strategy