What is a Mortgage Default?

Defaulting on a Mortgage

First Published Date : June 25, 2010 ADawnJournal.com

There are few phrases or words more chilling for the holder of a mortgage than “default notice”. While the appearance of those words at the top of a letter are never what anyone wants to see, they hold a special dread and fear for the mortgage holder because of the genuine fear that the bank’s next step will be to take possession of their house. This fear comes about – with good reason – because the money lent in a mortgage is considered a “secured loan” – that is to say that it is given strictly on the basis that collateral is provided. “Collateral”, for the purposes of a loan, essentially means security. If you don’t pay the loan, then the bank have something of equal value that they can reclaim from you.

It is never desirable to default on a mortgage. The payments can be difficult to keep up, that much is undeniable. A mortgage is, in a lot of ways, the most challenging kind of borrowing that an account holder can take out. Although the longer term of the borrowing and the frequently lower interest rates (available because the loan is secured) lowers monthly payments, the fact that they are stretched out over a long term can mean that there is some doubt in the mind of the borrower over whether the conditions will always exist that make it possible to meet monthly payments. Therefore, especially in the early to middle period of the term of the loan, there will be some recurrent dread of one day defaulting on the mortgage. It is for this reason also that many people who are in a position to do so pay off their mortgage early.

If you default on your mortgage it does not mean that the house you have secured it on will be repossessed. In actual fact, banks tend to prefer not to go that far. It is up to you as a borrower to keep in contact with the bank and stay true to your intention of paying monthly payments at a sustainable rate. If you have already made a substantial dent in the principal of your mortgage, the bank may well be willing to restructure a loan for the remainder, over a longer term so as to allow smaller, affordable monthly payments. How long the term will be depends on factors such as your continuing earning potential and how much is left to pay off. Although you may not be able to stick to the original term, a difference of a few years may be all it takes to make that monthly payment manageable.

Aside from this method, you may have the opportunity to remortgage with a different lender – paying off your old mortgage with a loan that covers the remaining principal and interest, although the earlier you decide on this the better – missed payments and particularly expired default notices will put black marks on your credit file, making it harder to get a decent remortgaging deal, if you can get one at all.