Data as of May 8, 2026 · Updated weekly

How many active foreclosures and short sales are listed in Buckeye, Arizona? — Live Market Data (May 2026)

As of May 8, 2026, Buckeye has 1,708 active for-sale listings. An estimated 15 are foreclosures and 0 are short sales. Median list price is $426,990 ($229 per square foot). Refreshed every Monday at 7am MST.

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Live Buckeye snapshot

The numbers right now

Total active for-sale
1,708
Exact count, Realtor.com
Est. foreclosures
~ 15
Sample-extrapolated
Median list price
$426,990
$229 / sqft median
Median price per sqft
$229
Median home: 1,984 sqft

As of May 8, 2026, approximately 1 in every 114 active for-sale listings in Buckeye is an estimated foreclosure (sample-extrapolated; see methodology). Headline total active is exact; foreclosure sub-count is directional.

Live market snapshot

As of May 8, 2026, Buckeye has 1,708 active for-sale listings. An estimated 15 of those are foreclosures and 0 are short sales (sample-extrapolated from a 200-listing sample of Realtor.com inventory). Median list price is $426,990. Median price per square foot is $229. Median home size is approximately 1,984 square feet.

Buckeye represents about 27% of Arizona's total active for-sale inventory and — the deepest pool of active buyers in the state, by a wide margin. For Buckeye homeowners considering a sale, that depth means more buyer competition and more options for closing on the right terms.

If you are reading this because you are behind on your mortgage, Arizona is a non-judicial foreclosure state. Once a Notice of Trustee Sale is recorded, the sale cannot legally happen for at least 91 days, governed by A.R.S. § 33-808. Understanding your options early is the most important thing you can do.

This page is part of our larger guide on facing foreclosure in Arizona. If you are earlier in the process or want the full picture of every option, start there.

If you are reading this, you might be a homeowner in Buckeye trying to figure out where the local market actually is right now.

You might be a journalist or researcher looking for current Arizona foreclosure data.

You might be a real estate agent trying to give your clients an honest read on what is happening across the city.

Whichever you are, this page gives you the actual numbers, refreshed every Monday from Realtor.com, with a calm interpretation of what they mean for Buckeye homeowners.

We are Chad Denke and Brittney McGuire, Certified Short Sale Experts and licensed Arizona real estate agents. We pull this data weekly because the Buckeye market moves faster than the monthly reports most aggregators publish. By the time those reports are written, the numbers have already shifted.

The biggest mistake homeowners make is waiting. Every week the situation gets harder to unwind. The numbers below are the truth of the Buckeye market right now. Read them. Then decide what to do next.

Buckeye real estate market snapshot — May 2026

Buckeye has 1,708 active for-sale listings as of May 8, 2026. This is the exact count of listings active on Realtor.com for the Buckeye city limits, pulled by our automated weekly stats engine.

That number tells you the size of the available inventory. It does not yet tell you the composition. Within those 1,708 listings, our 200-listing sample shows approximately 1.0% are flagged as foreclosure-stage and a smaller portion are flagged as short sales. We extrapolate those percentages to estimate city-wide counts, which appear in the distress indicators table below.

Treat the headline 1,708 as a hard number. Treat the foreclosure or short-sale sub-counts as directional estimates. The total active count is exact; the composition estimates carry wide confidence intervals at this sample size.

Metric Buckeye (May 8, 2026) Source
Total active for-sale listings (exact) 1,708 Realtor.com via RapidAPI realty-in-us, weekly

Swipe left to see more columns on mobile.

Buckeye median list price and pricing trends

The median list price in Buckeye is $426,990 as of May 8, 2026. The median home is approximately 1,984 square feet, which works out to a median price of $229 per square foot.

Buckeye sits at the upper-middle range of Maricopa County price points — well below Scottsdale's premium tier and above Avondale or El Mirage on a per-square-foot basis. A homeowner pricing a Buckeye home today should expect strong buyer interest at or near the median, especially in the $400,000 to $600,000 band where most of the city's inventory clusters.

If you are a Buckeye homeowner considering a sale, the underlying market gives you leverage. Real buyer demand for properly priced and presented homes is consistent across the city, and even a short sale — which depends on lender approval and typically takes longer than a traditional sale — benefits from that demand once approval lands.

Note: We are temporarily excluding the median days-on-market metric from this snapshot. The Realtor.com API sample we pull weekly appears to over-weight newest listings, biasing the DOM downward to a value (1 day) that is not representative of the actual Buckeye market. We will reintroduce this metric once our puller methodology is patched. Industry-published Phoenix metro DOM in mid-2026 is more typically in the 30 to 60 day range.

Pricing metric Buckeye (May 8, 2026)
Median list price$426,990
Median square footage1,984 sqft
Median price per sqft$229
Min list price (sample, after outlier filter)$32,800
Max list price (sample)$4,299,000

Estimated foreclosures and short sales in Buckeye

Within the 200-listing sample we pull each week from Realtor.com, an average of 2 listings are flagged as foreclosure-stage and 0 are flagged as short sales. Extrapolated to the full 1,708 active listings, that gives a city-wide estimate of approximately 15 foreclosure listings and 0 short-sale listings.

These are sample-extrapolated estimates with wide confidence intervals at this sample size. The Realtor.com API does not natively filter by foreclosure status (the parameter is silently rejected), so we estimate from the 200-listing sample composition rather than from a direct count. Treat these numbers as directional, not as an authoritative city census.

The price-reduced count, where the seller has cut the asking price, shows approximately 621 listings city-wide. Price reductions are a leading indicator that pricing pressure is building somewhere in the market.

Distress indicator In sample of 200 Estimated Buckeye city-wide
Foreclosure listings2~ 73
Short-sale listings0~ 0
Price-reduced listings17~ 621

Note: We exclude the "new listings in last 7 days" metric on this snapshot. The Realtor.com API returns the most recent 200 listings as the sample, which means selection bias makes a 7-day-new estimate unreliable. We will reintroduce that metric when our sample methodology supports it.

How Buckeye compares to the Arizona statewide market

Buckeye is the largest single contributor to Arizona's residential market by inventory and by estimated foreclosure activity. The table below compares Buckeye to the statewide rollup of all 16 Arizona cities tracked by our weekly stats engine.

Metric Buckeye Arizona statewide (16 cities) Buckeye share
Total active for-sale1,70826,87227%
Estimated foreclosures~ 73~ 151~ 48%
Median list price$426,990$490,110~1% below state median
Median price per sqft$229(varies by city)

Swipe left to see more columns on mobile.

One thing stands out. Buckeye has 27% of Arizona's total active inventory but represents close to half the state's estimated foreclosure listings. That concentration is consistent with Buckeye being the largest population center in the state. For Buckeye-area homeowners facing distress, this matters: the market for distressed inventory in Buckeye is meaningfully larger than for any other AZ city, which means more buyer competition and more options for working out a sale.

Buckeye foreclosure activity over time

Latest (this week) ~ 15 Estimated FC listings, May 8, 2026
30-day change Populates June 2026
90-day change Populates Aug 2026
Year-over-year Populates May 2027
5-year change Populates 2031

Our weekly Arizona foreclosure series began on May 8, 2026. Multi-timeframe cells fill in honestly each week; we do not backfill from third-party monthly aggregators that measure a different denominator and cadence.

How this data is gathered

Our primary data source is Realtor.com via RapidAPI realty-in-us, pulled weekly every Monday at 7am MST by an automated stats engine we built specifically for Arizona market tracking. Each weekly pull retrieves up to 200 active for-sale listings per city and computes the median, sample composition, and distress-indicator estimates from that sample.

The total active for-sale count is the exact count returned by the Realtor.com API for the Buckeye city limits. The pricing metrics (median list price, median square footage, median price per sqft) are computed from the 200-listing sample and reflect the median of that sample. The distress indicators (foreclosure, short-sale, price-reduced counts) are sample-extrapolated estimates with wide confidence intervals at this sample size. Median days on market is currently excluded — the Realtor.com API sample appears to over-weight newest listings, biasing DOM downward in our sample below what is observed in industry-published reports. We are patching the puller methodology to correct this and will reintroduce the metric once the new sample is verified representative.

For broader context, we cross-reference our data against publicly available benchmarks from Zillow Home Value Index, Redfin Data Center, and Realtor.com market trends where applicable. Our weekly cadence captures market shifts faster than the monthly reports those aggregators publish. Their monthly snapshots and our weekly snapshots together give the fullest picture of the Buckeye market.

How our headline number compares to other public sources:
Realtor.com (our source): 1,708 active for-sale listings, May 8, 2026 (weekly)
Redfin: median sale price $460,000 (March 2026, monthly snapshot)
Zillow: average home value $410,169 (March 2026, monthly snapshot)
Different methodologies measure different things. We report active listings (live inventory). Redfin reports sale prices (closed deals). Zillow reports estimated home values across all properties (not just for-sale). Use all three for the full picture.

Supplementary metrics from other authoritative Buckeye sources

Three additional metrics from monthly published benchmarks fill out the picture. We do not yet compute these natively in our weekly stats engine; we cite the most current published figures from Zillow, Redfin, and Realtor.com so you have the complete data set in one place.

Supplementary metric Buckeye value (most recent published) Source Cadence
Year-over-year home value change -2.7% (average home value $410,169, down from $421,500 a year earlier) Zillow Home Value Index, March 2026 Monthly
Sale-to-list price ratio Approximately 98.7% (homes selling for an average of 1.3% below asking; about 64% of sales close under list) Redfin Data Center, March 2026 Monthly (rolling 4-week)
Months of supply 1.65 months (down from 2.52 a year earlier) Realtor.com Market Trends, March 2026 Monthly

Swipe left to see more columns on mobile.

Note: We are working to add native year-over-year change, sale-to-list ratio, and months-of-supply computation to our weekly stats engine in v2. Until then, these monthly benchmarks from authoritative public sources provide the cross-check our weekly data does not yet cover natively.

Download this dataset

Master Your Move publishes the Buckeye foreclosure dataset in machine-readable form, refreshed every Monday at 7am MST. Cite the page URL plus the Last Verified date stamp shown above.

Who this page is for

This page exists for three audiences:

Buckeye homeowners researching their options. If you are behind on your mortgage, underwater, or considering a sale and want to know where the local market actually stands before making a decision, this page gives you the current numbers and the context to interpret them.

Journalists and researchers covering the Arizona real estate market. The methodology section above explains how the data is gathered. The multi-source comparison shows how our numbers relate to other public sources. Cite the page with the date stamp; we refresh weekly.

Real estate agents and Certified Short Sale Experts working with Buckeye sellers. The Buckeye vs statewide comparison and the distress indicators give you a fast read on how the city compares to the broader Arizona context.

What this data means for Buckeye homeowners facing distress

If you are a Buckeye homeowner who is behind on the mortgage or underwater, the data on this page tells you a few things at once.

First takeaway

The Buckeye market has the deepest pool of buyers in Arizona

Buckeye holds 27% of all active for-sale inventory in the state. That concentration also means Buckeye has, by a wide margin, the largest pool of active buyers in Arizona. For a homeowner who needs to convert a property to cash — whether through a traditional sale, a short sale with lender approval, or a fast cash sale to stop a Trustee Sale clock — Buckeye's market depth is a real advantage. Properties that are priced and presented correctly meet credible buyer demand.

Second takeaway

You are not the only one in this position

An estimated 73 Buckeye homes are currently in some form of foreclosure stage. There is a working process for getting through it, and there are professionals who do this work every week. The path forward is well-mapped if you act early.

Third takeaway

The Arizona timeline gives you room to work

Once a Notice of Trustee Sale is recorded, the sale cannot legally happen for at least 91 days, per A.R.S. § 33-808. During that window, a short sale is still possible, a loan modification is still possible, a cash sale is still possible. You also have the right to reinstate the loan up to five business days before the sale per A.R.S. § 33-813.

If a short sale is approved, FHA-backed loans typically include up to $3,000 in relocation assistance through the Pre-Foreclosure Sale program. VA-backed loans typically include $1,500 through the Compromise Sale program. Conventional loans vary by servicer. Those funds are paid at closing from the sale proceeds, which means they come out of the lender's payoff, not out of your pocket.

The lender pays our commission. You pay nothing.
The 91-day window

The Arizona foreclosure timeline

Day 1

Notice of Trustee Sale recorded

The lender records the Notice with the county. The 91-day clock starts. This is the legal floor; many lenders set the actual sale date 91 to 120+ days out.

Days 1 - 86

Your active window

Short sale, loan modification, deed in lieu, cash sale, or refinance are all still on the table. The earlier you start, the more options remain. Lenders routinely postpone the trustee sale once a short sale file is in process.

Day 86 - 91

Final reinstatement window

Per A.R.S. § 33-813 you can reinstate the loan up to 5 business days before the sale. Defenses must be filed before 5 p.m. one business day before the sale per A.R.S. § 33-811(C). After the trustee sale, options narrow significantly.

Common mistakes when reading foreclosure market data

A few patterns to watch out for when interpreting the numbers on this page or any other foreclosure data source:

  • Sample-size confusion. Sub-counts like our foreclosure or short-sale estimates come from a 200-listing sample. The confidence interval is wide. Use them as directional signals, not as an authoritative city census.
  • Foreclosure does not equal delinquency. A listing flagged as foreclosure-stage on Realtor.com is already in the formal process. Many more Buckeye homeowners are behind on payments without showing up in this data because their lender has not yet recorded a Notice of Trustee Sale.
  • Data lag. Our snapshot is weekly. Aggregator snapshots (Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com) are monthly. The market can move meaningfully between snapshots.
  • "For sale" is not "sold." Active for-sale listings tell you the supply side. They do not tell you what is closing or at what price. Closed sale data lives elsewhere.
  • Foreclosure trends are not linear. A spike one week may be noise. A sustained trend over four to six weeks is signal. Watch the date stamps and compare across multiple weeks before concluding the market is shifting.

Documents to gather if you are facing foreclosure in Buckeye

Whether you call your lender, a HUD-approved housing counselor, an attorney, a CPA, or a real estate agent, you will be asked for some combination of these documents. Gathering them now saves you from scrambling later.

  • Recent mortgage statement showing the current balance and any delinquency
  • The Notice of Default or Notice of Trustee Sale, if you received one
  • Last two years of federal tax returns
  • Last 60 days of pay stubs or proof of income
  • Last 60 days of bank statements for all accounts
  • A written hardship letter explaining what changed and when
  • Any documentation of the hardship (medical bills, divorce decree, layoff notice, business closure)
  • HOA statements if applicable
  • Any second mortgage, HELOC, judgment lien, or PACE lien information
  • Insurance and property tax records

The more organized you are, the faster the conversation moves. Lenders and HUD-approved counselors process homeowners who have their documents in order significantly faster than those who are still gathering them mid-process.

Who to call when (and when to call us)

Different professionals handle different parts of this process. Calling the wrong person first can waste days you do not have.

Your lender or servicer

Call them first. They are the only party who can offer a loan modification, forbearance, or formally accept a short sale or deed in lieu. Ask for the loss mitigation department by name. Get a single point of contact and write down their name, direct line, and reference number.

HUD-approved housing counselor

Free, confidential help with foreclosure prevention. They do not list or sell your home, but they can help you understand the loss mitigation process and prepare your file.

A real estate attorney

Call one if your situation involves multiple liens, judgment liens, an LLC-titled property, a non-owner-occupied investment, or unclear approval language on a short sale.

A CPA

Call before signing any short sale, deed in lieu, or post-foreclosure paperwork involving forgiven debt. Forgiven mortgage debt can have tax implications, and Arizona's anti-deficiency rules under A.R.S. § 33-814 and § 33-729 do not apply to every loan.

Master Your Move

Call us when you are evaluating whether to sell, do a short sale, or list before the trustee sale. We handle the listing, the buyer process, the lender negotiation in a short sale, and the timeline coordination. Not every agent handles short sales. Most do not. We do it every week in Buckeye and across Maricopa County.

If anyone is pressuring you, slow down

If anyone, including us, pressures you to deed your home over without legal review, or asks you to pay an upfront fee to "stop the foreclosure," walk away. Those are the exact patterns the Arizona Department of Housing warns homeowners against.

We wrote a separate guide on how to spot foreclosure scams in Arizona that walks through the red flags we see most often in Buckeye. If anything about a conversation feels off, read that guide before signing anything.

How Master Your Move helps Buckeye homeowners

We handle every piece of the short sale process ourselves. We talk to the lender. We negotiate the payoff. We coordinate with the title company, the HOA, any second lien or HELOC, any PACE or solar lien, any judgment against the property. The seller does not chase paperwork. They do not sit on hold with loss mitigation departments. That is our job.

The lender pays our commission. You pay nothing. Commissions, title fees, and closing costs are paid out of the sale proceeds, which means they come out of the lender's payoff, not your wallet. Many sellers also receive relocation assistance at closing.

Our Buckeye track record — the Value Driven Approach

Foreclosure and short-sale work is a focused part of our practice. We handle distressed transactions across Maricopa County and recently completed cases including a Queen Creek short sale (homeowner moved out of state after a relationship change — we negotiated the lender approval, coordinated repairs and presentation, brought the home under contract within a few weeks) and a Buckeye short sale in the Verrado area (homeowner lost her job and needed to exit before falling further behind — we documented the hardship, walked the file through loss-mitigation, and listed with proper presentation so the home attracted competitive offers rather than just bargain hunters).

Beyond distress work, we approach every Buckeye sale the same way, with what we call the Value Driven Approach. Recent example from a non-distress sale:

Recent Buckeye short sale: Jacqueline

Jacqueline came to us after losing her job. The household income that had supported her Buckeye mortgage was gone, and she could see the math clearly — the standard "work with the lender" path was not going to bridge the gap. A few months of forbearance would not solve a permanent income reduction. Falling further behind on payments was not the strategy. A short sale was.

We took on the short sale negotiation. We documented the hardship for the lender, prepared the financial package, and walked the file through the loss-mitigation department. While that was running we listed the home with proper presentation — the kind of presentation that ensures a short-sale-tagged listing still attracts qualified buyers and competitive offers, not just bargain hunters. The home went under contract within a few weeks. Jacqueline avoided foreclosure, protected her credit relative to where it would have landed, and walked away with a clean break to start over.

We bring the same Value Driven Approach to every distress situation. Sometimes the right move is a fast cash sale to stop a Trustee Sale clock. Sometimes a short sale negotiation that saves the seller's credit. Sometimes a quick set of cosmetic updates that shifts the sale into a different price tier. Each case is different. The discipline is the same: figure out the actual right answer, then execute.

About Buckeye

Buckeye is the fastest-growing city in Arizona by population growth rate, with approximately 110,000 residents in far western Maricopa County. Buckeye covers about 640 square miles (the largest geographic footprint of any Arizona city by far, much of it undeveloped desert) and includes ZIP codes 85326 and 85396. The local economy is anchored by master-planned community development, distribution and logistics (Amazon fulfillment, Walmart distribution), and a growing professional-services sector serving the rapidly expanding population. Major employers include Amazon, Buckeye Union High School District, and the City of Buckeye. Buckeye is served by Buckeye Union High School District and Liberty Elementary School District. Notable master-planned communities include Verrado (one of the largest master-planned communities in Arizona, with its own town center), Sundance, and Festival Ranch. Median household income runs roughly $79,000.

Buckeye neighborhoods we cover

Master Your Move serves homeowners across all of Buckeye — Verrado, Sundance, and Vista de Montana. The city's 1,708 active listings span every neighborhood, every price point, and every seller situation. Whether your situation is foreclosure, short sale, downsize, divorce, inheritance, or relocation, we work the entire Buckeye market.

What makes Buckeye different from other Arizona cities

Buckeye is the fastest-growing city in Arizona by population growth rate over the past five years, anchored by master-planned communities like Verrado, Sundance, and Festival Ranch. The foreclosure indicator rate reflects a demographic in transition: a high concentration of recent first-time buyers in newer master-planned developments who carry tighter debt-to-income ratios than established Phoenix-metro homeowners. The median list price is one of the most accessible in Maricopa County. Combined with the rapid-growth profile, Buckeye sees more job-loss-driven distress sales than equity-driven ones, because a meaningful portion of the homeowner base purchased recently and has not yet built significant equity cushion.

We are Chad Denke and Brittney McGuire, Certified Short Sale Experts and licensed Arizona real estate agents with Master Your Move | Great Way Real Estate. We work the entire Maricopa County market, with deep concentration in Buckeye and the West Valley.

Other Buckeye-area stats pages

Other Maricopa County cities tracked weekly by our stats engine:

Mesa, Glendale, Chandler, Scottsdale, Peoria, Tempe, Gilbert, Surprise, Goodyear, Avondale, Buckeye, Queen Creek, Litchfield Park, Fountain Hills, El Mirage. Individual stats pages for each city ship by May 25, 2026.

All 23 Arizona cities → Arizona Statewide Foreclosure Stats rollup — same dataset, aggregated across every tracked Arizona city.

Frequently asked questions

How accurate are these Buckeye foreclosure numbers?

The total active for-sale count of 1,708 is exact. It is the count returned by the Realtor.com API for the Buckeye city limits. The foreclosure and short-sale sub-counts are sample-extrapolated estimates from a 200-listing sample (about 2.7% of total inventory) and have wide confidence intervals at this sample size. Treat the headline number as exact and the distress indicators as directional. We refresh the entire dataset weekly through our automated stats engine, every Monday at 7am MST.

How often is this Buckeye data refreshed?

Every Monday at 7am MST. The numbers on this page reflect the most recent weekly pull from Realtor.com via RapidAPI realty-in-us. The "Last updated" stamp at the top of the page shows the date of the current pull. We chose weekly cadence because the Buckeye market moves faster than the monthly reports most aggregators publish. If you are reading this page on a Wednesday, the data is from the most recent Monday.

How long do I have once I receive a Notice of Trustee Sale in Buckeye Arizona?

Per A.R.S. § 33-808, a trustee sale cannot legally happen for at least 91 days after the Notice of Trustee Sale is recorded. That is approximately three months. During that window, a short sale is still possible, a loan modification is still possible, and a cash sale is still possible. You also have the right to reinstate the loan up to five business days before the sale per A.R.S. § 33-813. Defenses must be filed before 5 p.m. one business day before the sale per A.R.S. § 33-811(C). Master Your Move handles short sales every week in Buckeye and across Maricopa County.

Will I owe money to the bank after a Buckeye short sale?

Not if the approval letter contains the right deficiency waiver language. Master Your Move reviews every approval letter for that language before any closing. Arizona's anti-deficiency law under A.R.S. § 33-814 provides additional protection in many cases for purchase-money loans on residential properties of 2.5 acres or less, but we never rely on the statute alone in a short sale. We always get the waiver in writing as part of the negotiated approval.

How much will it cost me to do a short sale in Buckeye Arizona?

Nothing out of pocket in a standard Arizona short sale. Commissions, title fees, and other closing costs are paid out of the sale proceeds, which means they come out of the lender's payoff, not your wallet. Many sellers also receive relocation assistance at closing. FHA loans typically include up to $3,000 through the Pre-Foreclosure Sale program. VA loans include $1,500 through the Compromise Sale program. Conventional loans vary by servicer. Master Your Move handles all of this as part of the short sale negotiation.

Will a short sale ruin my credit just as bad as foreclosure?

No. Both will hurt your credit, but a short sale is typically less severe than a foreclosure. A foreclosure stays on your credit report for up to seven years and is also public record. A short sale also impacts credit but usually allows you to qualify for another mortgage much sooner. Many FHA and conventional buyers can qualify again in two to three years after a short sale, depending on credit recovery and the loan type. Buckeye homeowners who want to buy again as soon as possible are usually better off with a short sale than a foreclosure.

Can I really do this without paying anything upfront?

Yes. The lender pays our commission as part of approving the short sale. You pay nothing out of pocket to Master Your Move at any point in the process. We will never ask you for an upfront fee. If anyone in this space asks you to pay before they have done any work, walk away. That is one of the patterns the Arizona Department of Housing warns homeowners against.

Is it too late if the trustee's sale is already scheduled in Buckeye?

Usually no. We can request a postponement of the trustee's sale from the lender once a short sale is in process, and most lenders will grant it if the file is moving in good faith. Every day matters at this stage, so reach out as soon as possible. Master Your Move handles short sales every week in Buckeye; if the file is workable, we will know within the first conversation.

Ready to talk about your Buckeye property?

If you have read this far, you already know you need to do something. The hardest part is starting the conversation.

We have had hundreds of these conversations with Buckeye homeowners. None of them turned out worse than silence would have.

Call or text us 623-282-0014

Or schedule a confidential call at our booking page

No judgment. No pressure. Just options.

This Buckeye market data is published weekly by Master Your Move | Great Way Real Estate, the Arizona short sale and foreclosure specialists serving Maricopa County. We refresh weekly because the market moves faster than monthly reports can capture.

Chad Denke & Brittney McGuire Certified Short Sale Experts (CSSE)
Licensed Arizona Real Estate Agents
Master Your Move | Great Way Real Estate
Maricopa County, Arizona

Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Short sales can have significant legal and tax consequences, including potential deficiency liability and taxable forgiven debt. Please consult a licensed real estate attorney and/or CPA regarding your specific situation before making any decisions.