Finding this page means you are carrying a lot right now. That feeling is real, and it deserves honest information in plain English. If you own a home in North Miami Beach, the most important thing to know first is this: your options are usually not gone when the first hard letter arrives.
Florida is a judicial foreclosure state. In plain English, that means your lender must file a lawsuit before your home can be sold at foreclosure. North Miami Beach cases move through Miami-Dade County Circuit Court at 73 West Flagler Street. That court process matters because it creates structure, notice, and time. The court system protects you from the kind of fast non-judicial foreclosure used in some other states.
For many North Miami Beach homeowners, the timeline still runs between 12 and 24 months from the first missed payment to a foreclosure sale date. That window is significant. Most people do not use it well because nobody explains what it is for. It can give you time to gather documents, review a loan modification, ask about forbearance, prepare a short sale, or speak with an attorney before the case reaches the end.
North Miami Beach adds location advantages that matter here. The city sits between high-demand markets like Aventura and North Miami, with Sunny Isles Beach nearby and the Intracoastal edge creating additional value for certain properties. Oleta River State Park, Greynolds Park, and the 163rd Street corridor all contribute to buyer interest. That means there is still real market movement working in your favor if a sale becomes the right path.
The legal terms can sound harsh. A Lis Pendens is simply the court notice that a foreclosure case has begun. It is serious, but it is not the end. Where you are right now is not where this has to end. Florida law gives you time and options, and the next section explains what they are with more clarity and more hope.