Sell your note in Rhode Island

Sell a Mortgage Note in Rhode Island

We buy performing and non-performing private mortgage notes secured by Rhode Island property — fast, fair, and all cash. Here's how RI foreclosure law shapes what your note is worth.

Foreclosure type Non-judicial (power of sale) common
Typical timeline ~3–4 months
Post-sale redemption None
Deficiency judgment Allowed (via lawsuit after the non-judicial sale)

Note-buyer friendliness: High

Rhode Island is, like Massachusetts and New Hampshire, a New England state that allows non-judicial foreclosure — and it pairs that with no post-sale redemption and a quick timeline. That makes it considerably more note-friendly than the region's judicial states. Mortgage Note Capital buys Rhode Island notes for cash.

Rhode Island's non-judicial process

Rhode Island commonly uses non-judicial foreclosure through the statutory power-of-sale clause that appears in most Rhode Island mortgages. On a default, after the required notices (including a mediation-conference offer for owner-occupants), the lender can conduct the foreclosure sale without filing a lawsuit. The process is relatively quick, commonly running about 3 to 4 months.

The key positive for note value is that Rhode Island has no statutory post-sale right of redemption after a power-of-sale foreclosure. Once the sale is complete, the borrower cannot reclaim the property, so the outcome is final. Quick, certain recovery with no redemption claw-back is exactly what lets a note buyer accept a lower yield, which translates to a higher price for your note — placing Rhode Island in the high tier of note-friendly states, well above judicial neighbors like Connecticut.

Deficiency in Rhode Island

Rhode Island allows deficiency judgments through a lawsuit brought after the non-judicial sale to recover any shortfall. As with most owner-financed notes, recovery comes principally from the property and its equity rather than from chasing the borrower personally, so the deficiency right is a secondary consideration next to the speed and finality of the sale.

Rhode Island's note market

Rhode Island is the smallest state, but it has a real, relatively high-value note market. Providence and the surrounding metro dominate, with Warwick, Cranston, and the Newport coastal area adding volume. Proximity to the Boston market, a constrained housing supply, and a meaningful share of second-home and coastal property make seller financing a viable niche.

Selling your Rhode Island note

Rhode Island's foreclosure backdrop supports solid value, so the path to a top-of-range offer is a clean, well-documented note with a healthy equity cushion. Have your note and recorded mortgage, the current unpaid principal balance, the rate, payment, and payment history, and the property's approximate value ready.

A few specifics help. Clean documentation — the original promissory note, the recorded mortgage with its statutory power-of-sale language, and the closing statement — lets a buyer confirm the lien and terms without delay. A first-lien position earns the best pricing; second liens are reviewed case by case. A low investment-to-value ratio strengthens any offer, and on coastal or unique properties a recent appraisal or solid comparable sales help a buyer get comfortable with value. If you'd rather keep part of the income, a partial purchase lets you sell only a portion of the upcoming payments while retaining the back end and any balloon.

One Rhode Island detail to confirm is that your mortgage actually contains the statutory power-of-sale (STFA-style) language that enables the fast non-judicial route. Most Rhode Island residential mortgages do, but if a mortgage lacks proper power-of-sale terms, the lender may be pushed toward a slower judicial process — so a buyer checks. Rhode Island has also been comparatively active in passing borrower-protection rules over the years (mediation requirements, notice standards), which is one reason clean, well-documented paper and a verifiable payment history are especially valued here. For a coastal or second-home note in the Newport or South County area, expect a buyer to look closely at off-season marketability and insurance/flood considerations, since those affect how quickly the collateral could be resold.

We buy performing and non-performing Rhode Island notes statewide and price each on its own merits.

This page is general information, not legal advice. Rhode Island foreclosure procedures change — verify current law and consult an attorney before acting on a specific note.

Important: This page is for general educational purposes only and is not legal, tax, or financial advice. Foreclosure, redemption, and deficiency rules vary by state and depend on the specific note and security instrument. Verify the controlling statute and consult a qualified attorney or advisor before acting.

Selling a mortgage note in Rhode Island: FAQ

Is Rhode Island a non-judicial foreclosure state?

Commonly, yes. Rhode Island uses non-judicial foreclosure through the statutory power-of-sale clause in most mortgages, after required notices and a mediation-conference offer for owner-occupants. That makes it more note-friendly than judicial neighbors like Connecticut.

Is there a redemption period after a Rhode Island foreclosure?

No. Rhode Island has no statutory post-sale right of redemption after a power-of-sale foreclosure. Once the sale is complete, the borrower cannot reclaim the property — which gives a note buyer certainty and supports a stronger offer.

How fast can a Rhode Island note be foreclosed?

About 3 to 4 months. Rhode Island uses non-judicial foreclosure under the mortgage's statutory power-of-sale clause, so the lender can complete the sale after the required notices without a lawsuit.