Due-on-Sale Clause

Due-on-Sale Clause

A due-on-sale clause is a provision in a mortgage contract that requires the mortgage to be repaid in full upon a sale or conveyance of partial or full interest in the property that secures the mortgage. The holders of a below-market-interest-rate mortgage – or a mortgage-backed security, asset-backed security or collateralized debt obligation backed by a below-market-interest-rate mortgage – generally favor early retirement of that mortgage. A due-on-sale clause helps protect the lender, or the ultimate mortgage holder, from the risk that the mortgage may be transferred to the new owner of a property when the rate on the mortgage is below current market interest rates. A due-on-sale clause is a provision in a mortgage contract that requires the mortgage to be repaid in full upon a sale or conveyance of partial or full interest in the property that secures the mortgage. They must use the sale proceeds to pay off the mortgage, and the buyer must obtain a new mortgage.

What Is a Due-on-Sale Clause?

A due-on-sale clause is a provision in a mortgage contract that requires the mortgage to be repaid in full upon a sale or conveyance of partial or full interest in the property that secures the mortgage. This provision as also sometimes referred to as an acceleration clause. Mortgages with a due-on-sale clause are not assumable. This clause helps protect lenders against below-market interest rates.

Due-on-Sale Clause

A due-on-sale clause helps protect the lender, or the ultimate mortgage holder, from the risk that the mortgage may be transferred to the new owner of a property when the rate on the mortgage is below current market interest rates. This would extend the life of the mortgage. The holders of a below-market-interest-rate mortgage – or a mortgage-backed security, asset-backed security or collateralized debt obligation backed by a below-market-interest-rate mortgage – generally favor early retirement of that mortgage.

Because of the due-on-sale clause, when homeowners sell their houses, they cannot transfer the mortgage to the buyer. They must use the sale proceeds to pay off the mortgage, and the buyer must obtain a new mortgage. If it were not for the due-on-sale clause, the mortgage that could be assumed with a home purchase might be part of homebuyers’ purchasing decisions.

Potential Exceptions to the Due-on-Sale Clause

It is possible that if a homeowner attempts to circumvent this clause when selling the property to a buyer, the lender might initiate foreclosure proceedings and potentially cause the prospective buyer to lose the home in the process. There may also be instances where the lender might not put this clause into action even when faced with the probability of losing a portion of the principal and interest they are due. For example, the market conditions of a real estate collapse might compel lenders to be more amenable to any offer that might allow them to recoup some of their losses.

Under the 1982 Garn-St. Germain Act_,_ lenders cannot enforce the due-on-sale clause in certain situations even though ownership has changed. If there is a divorce or legal separation and ownership between spouses changes (for example, the property was jointly owned and becomes owned by a single spouse), the lender cannot enforce the due-on-sale clause. The same is true if the owner transfers the property to their children, if a borrower dies and the property is transferred to a relative, or if the property is transferred to a living trust and the borrower is the trust’s beneficiary.

Related terms:

Acceleration Clause

An acceleration clause is included in certain loan agreements allowing the lender to end a contract and demand payment if the borrower violates terms of the agreement. read more

Alienation Clause

An alienation clause in a financial contract allows an asset to be sold or transferred to another party, often used in real estate deals. read more

Assumption Clause

An assumption clause in a mortgage contract that allows a home seller to pass responsibility for the existing mortgage to the new home buyer. read more

Beneficiary of Trust

A beneficiary of trust is the individual or group of people chosen to benefit from trust assets and the income they generate. read more

Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO)

A collateralized debt obligation (CDO) is a complex financial product backed by a pool of loans and other assets and sold to institutional investors. read more

Closing Costs

Closing costs are the expenses, beyond the property itself, that buyers and sellers incur to finalize a real estate transaction. read more

Federal Housing Administration (FHA) Loan

A Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loan is a mortgage insured by the FHA that is designed for home borrowers. read more

Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act

The Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act was a 1982 U.S. law to ease interest rate pressures on banks and savings and loans. read more

Legal Separation

A legal separation is a court-ordered arrangement whereby a married couple lives apart, leading separate lives.  read more

Mortgage

A mortgage is a loan typically used to buy a home or other piece of real estate for which that property then serves as collateral. read more