Default & Workout

Forbearance

A temporary agreement to pause or reduce payments during borrower hardship, with the missed amounts repaid later — a workout that can lead to a re-performing note.

Forbearance is a temporary agreement between a lender and a struggling borrower to pause or reduce payments for a defined period, with the understanding that the missed amounts will be repaid later. It is a workout tool, not forgiveness — the debt is not erased, just deferred. For note holders, forbearance is one of the common ways a delinquent borrower is kept from full default and a path toward a re-performing note.

How forbearance works

During a hardship — job loss, illness, a temporary income gap — a borrower and the note holder (or servicer) agree to a short-term break:

  • Payments are suspended or lowered for, say, 3–6 months.
  • The borrower does not accrue late-payment default status during the forbearance, though interest generally continues to accrue.
  • At the end, the parties agree how to repay the skipped amount — a lump sum, a repayment plan spread over months, or by adding it to the end of the loan (sometimes formalized as a loan modification).

Forbearance vs. related terms

  • Grace period: an automatic, penalty-free window every month — routine, not a workout.
  • Forbearance: a negotiated, temporary pause due to hardship — a workout, time-limited.
  • Loan modification: a permanent change to the loan's terms — often how a successful forbearance is ultimately resolved.
  • Default / foreclosure: what forbearance is meant to avoid.

Why forbearance matters to note value

For a note buyer, a forbearance in the loan's history is a yellow flag and a data point, not a deal-killer:

  • It signals the borrower hit a rough patch but the holder chose to work with them rather than foreclose.
  • How the forbearance resolved is what matters: if the borrower repaid and resumed normal payments, the note may now be performing or re-performing; if the forbearance failed and the borrower re-defaulted, the note is heading toward NPL territory.
  • Forbearance can reset seasoning — a buyer counts clean, on-schedule payments after the workout when judging the current track record.

What it means when you sell

If your note has had a forbearance, document it clearly: the hardship, the terms of the pause, how the missed payments were repaid, and the payment record since. A forbearance that was cured and followed by steady payments tells a reassuring story and supports a fair price. An unresolved or repeatedly extended forbearance signals ongoing risk and will be priced more conservatively. Disclose it either way — a buyer will see the gap in payments during due diligence, and an honest explanation protects your credibility and your offer.

This is general information, not legal or financial advice; forbearance terms and protections vary by loan type and agreement.

Questions about forbearance

Does forbearance forgive the missed payments?

No. Forbearance only pauses or reduces payments temporarily. The skipped amounts must still be repaid afterward — as a lump sum, a repayment plan, or by adding them to the loan, often through a loan modification. The debt is deferred, not erased.

How does a past forbearance affect selling my note?

It depends on how it resolved. A forbearance that was cured and followed by steady payments tells a reassuring story and supports a fair price. An unresolved or repeatedly extended forbearance signals risk. Either way, document it clearly because a buyer will see the payment gap.

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