State Guide · Texas

Selling a commercial loan in Texas

Texas is a non-judicial foreclosure state. A trustee's sale can complete in roughly 60 days, making it one of the fastest states. There is generally no post-sale right of redemption (a limited exception applies to certain tax sales). Because a lender absorbs carrying cost and risk for that entire period, a cash note sale today often beats carrying the credit through foreclosure.

Process

Foreclosure in Texas

Texas uses a non-judicial, power-of-sale process: after notice of default and a notice of sale, the trustee conducts the foreclosure sale on the first Tuesday of the month. Because it is fast and certain, Texas credits are often resolved quickly — but the lender still bears carry and price risk through any hold.

Compare the foreclosure path to a cash sale with the loan-sale-vs-foreclosure calculator, using the timeline above.

Selling the note instead

A note sale transfers the loan to a buyer for cash, removing the timeline, the legal cost, and the risk of ending up as the owner of the property. Standing Bid Capital is a direct principal buyer of CRE loans, discounted payoffs, and REO — $250K–$25M, all-cash, no re-trade, confidential. Request a confidential review.

Common questions
How long does commercial foreclosure take in Texas?

A trustee's sale can complete in roughly 60 days, making it one of the fastest states. Timelines vary with the property, court or trustee schedule, and any borrower defenses; confirm with local counsel.

Can I sell a Texas commercial loan that is in foreclosure?

Yes — a note can be sold at any stage; the buyer steps into the lender's position and continues or resolves the process. Send the current legal status with the loan tape.

Who buys commercial loans secured by Texas property?

Standing Bid Capital buys nationwide, directly and all-cash, $250K–$25M. Request a confidential review.

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