Understand where you stand — and what to do this week.
A clear, AI-generated review of your foreclosure exposure: timeline, documents to assemble, red flags in servicer correspondence, and the highest-leverage next steps.
Foreclosure timelines move faster than answers come.
Homeowners and investors face a flood of letters, deadlines, and unfamiliar terms with no single picture of what is urgent and what can wait.
- Letters and notices are hard to interpret under pressure
- Critical deadlines slip without a tracked timeline
- Loss-mitigation options aren't surfaced until it's too late
An organized risk file and a 7-day action plan.
Open a foreclosure case, upload what you have, and get a scorecard, red flags from your servicer correspondence, missing documents, and a prioritized action list.
- Timeline and urgency scoring
- Document completeness and missing-information checklist
- Red flags surfaced from notices and statements
- Next 7-day action plan you can work through step by step
Where teams use it.
Owner-occupants
Get organized before a deadline and assemble the file your housing counselor or attorney needs.
Real estate investors
Triage distressed assets in the portfolio and prioritize where intervention is highest leverage.
Housing counselors
Standardize intake and produce a clean risk file for each client in a fraction of the time.
Common questions
- Is this legal advice?
- No. Pure Alpha provides AI-generated risk guidance and document organization. For legal strategy, consult a licensed attorney in your state.
- What documents help most?
- Mortgage statement, notice of default, any servicer correspondence, and a recent payoff. Even partial documents improve the scorecard.
- How fast is the review?
- An initial risk scorecard and findings are generated in minutes after intake.
Open your first case in under three minutes.
Free during preview — no credit card. Get a 1–100 risk scorecard and a clear next-action plan.
Pure Alpha is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Foreclosure outcomes depend on state law and your servicer. Consult a licensed attorney.