REO (Real Estate Owned)
Property a lender owns after an unsuccessful foreclosure auction — the end state when a non-performing note is converted into real estate.
REO, or real estate owned, is property that a lender (or note holder) owns after a failed foreclosure auction — when no third party bid enough at the trustee sale and the holder took title via a credit bid. REO is the point at which a defaulted note becomes real estate: the holder no longer owns a loan, they own a house. For note buyers and sellers, REO is one possible exit for a non-performing note, and understanding it clarifies how distressed notes are valued.
How a note becomes REO
The path runs: the borrower defaults → the note becomes non-performing → the holder forecloses → at the trustee sale (or judicial sale), if bidding does not cover the debt, the holder takes the property with a credit bid → the property is now REO. From there the owner typically:
- Secures and maintains the property
- Clears any remaining junior liens or occupants (sometimes via eviction)
- Lists and sells the property to recover capital
Why REO matters in note valuation
When a note buyer underwrites a non-performing note, one realistic outcome is foreclosing to REO and reselling the property. So the buyer estimates:
- The property value (via a BPO or appraisal) and likely as-is resale price
- Time and cost to complete foreclosure and reach REO — heavily driven by judicial vs. non-judicial process and any redemption period
- Carrying, repair, and selling costs that reduce net recovery
- The lien position — only a senior lienholder reliably ends up with clean REO; a junior holder can be wiped out
The price of the NPL is essentially the net recovery from this REO scenario (and other exits) discounted to today. This is why fast-foreclosure states and strong equity produce better NPL pricing — the route to REO is cheaper and surer.
REO vs. short sale vs. deed in lieu
REO is the outcome when other resolutions fail:
- A short sale avoids foreclosure by selling for less than the balance with the holder's approval.
- A deed in lieu has the borrower voluntarily hand over the deed, skipping the auction.
- REO results when the foreclosure auction itself does not produce a paying third-party buyer.
What it means when you sell
If you hold a non-performing note, the buyer is weighing the REO exit, so the property and the foreclosure path are what drive your price, not a payment stream. Provide a current value, the state and security instrument, any foreclosure already in progress, the lien position, and senior-lien/tax status. If you have already foreclosed and hold the REO property itself, that is a real estate sale rather than a note sale — though Mortgage Note Capital can still discuss non-performing notes that may end there. An accurate recovery picture is what lets a buyer price NPL paper fairly.