Connecticut

Foreclosure Overview

State Foreclosure Rules
Trigger:
Reinstatement:

Reinstatement window (days):

Sale notice minimum (days):

Sale notice rule:

Right of redemption:

Statute
View statute →
Official state statute
Notice sequence
Timeline note

What this means for you

In Connecticut, foreclosure runs outside the courtroom (a trustee or attorney handles it). That usually moves faster than court cases, so dates on notices matter and the window to act can close quickly. The process starts when is issued.

The state requires at least days’ public notice of the sale —

Reinstatement:

Right of redemption:

We’ll use the dates on your notices to build a simple attack plan: line up the deadlines, match each one with your available moves, and make sure nothing slips.

Keep the most recent notice handy—we’ll map from its date lines.

Continue to the Playbook →

What this means for you

Connecticut uses a judicial foreclosure. The lender files in court, you’re served, and the clock runs off court deadlines (responses, hearings, and orders). These cases often run longer than non-judicial ones, but missing an early response can speed things up in the wrong direction. The process begins when is filed/served.

Before a sale can occur, the state requires at least days’ notice — . Reinstatement: . Right of redemption: .

We’ll turn the court dates and response windows into a practical plan—what to do first, what to prepare next, and how to stay ahead of each deadline. If you’ve been served, keep the papers nearby so we can pull the key dates. Continue to the Playbook →