Reinstatement: Catching Up to Save Your Home
If you can catch up, you can stop the foreclosure.
Reinstatement is the cleanest, fastest way to keep your house in Illinois.
But it’s also the most misunderstood—and most homeowners wait too long to even consider it.
Let’s fix that.
What Is Reinstatement?
Reinstatement means you pay back everything you owe in one lump sum.
Your mortgage is brought current. The foreclosure stops.
It’s not a negotiation. You don’t need approval. It’s your legal right under Illinois law (735 ILCS 5/15-1602).
✅ If you pay before the sheriff’s sale, the lender must stop the foreclosure.
What You’ll Have to Pay
This isn’t just your missed payments. Reinstatement includes:
- Missed principal & interest
- Late fees
- Legal and court filing costs
- Property taxes advanced by lender
- Attorney fees
- Inspection or maintenance charges
Your lender will send you a full reinstatement quote if you ask for it.
Get it in writing—and check it carefully. These numbers are often wrong.
When Reinstatement Works
This strategy works when:
- Your hardship was temporary (job loss, medical issue, divorce)
- You’ve regained income and stability
- You have access to a lump sum (savings, bonus, loan, family help)
- You’re not deep into repeated delinquencies
In this case, reinstating gives you a hard reset. You’re current, your credit damage stops getting worse, and you stay in your home.
When It Doesn’t Work
Reinstatement won’t fix long-term affordability issues.
If your income hasn’t bounced back—or you’re just delaying the inevitable—you could reinstate now and default again in six months. That’s a fast way to burn your last shot.
Reinstatement is a great tool—but it’s not a fix for a broken budget.
Common Mistakes
❌ Not asking for a reinstatement letter
The lender is legally required to give it. Don’t guess.
❌ Trying to make partial payments
It doesn’t count. You need the full amount, not half.
❌ Assuming you have until the auction
Wrong. You can reinstate up to 90 days after judgment in Illinois.
After that, the window slams shut.
❌ Not checking for junk fees
Errors are common. Attorneys add random charges. Check line by line—or have someone review it for you.
What If You Can’t Afford It?
Then you don’t have a reinstatement problem—you have a different problem.
And a different solution.
You might need:
- A loan modification
- A repayment plan
- To sell the property
- A different exit altogether
But if you can reinstate and want to stay in the home, don’t waste time chasing more complex options.
Bottom Line
Reinstatement = cleanest way to stop foreclosure. But it only works if you’re ready to act fast.
You don’t need a lawyer. You don’t need a third-party. You just need the full payoff amount—and the guts to pull the trigger before the court calendar does.
Want Help Reviewing Your Reinstatement Letter?
We’ve reviewed dozens. We know where lenders pad numbers, miss deadlines, or screw up timelines. If you’re not sure what your options are, we’ll break it down with you—free.
📞 Call or Text: (312) 825-1212
🌐 Visit: www.alliedacquisition.com
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