Title & Deeds

Marketable Title

Title that is free from significant defects, liens, or doubts — clear enough that a reasonable, well-informed buyer or lender would accept it without hesitation.

Marketable title (also called merchantable title) is title to real estate that is reasonably free from defects, undisclosed liens, and legitimate doubt about ownership — clear enough that a prudent, well-informed buyer or lender would accept it and pay fair value without fear of litigation. Marketability is the practical standard most purchase contracts require the seller to deliver, and it is exactly what gets undermined by a cloud on title. In the mortgage-note world, the marketability of the collateral's title is a core driver of how safe — and how valuable — a note is.

What makes title unmarketable

Title is generally considered unmarketable when the record shows problems such as:

  • Unreleased liens — old mortgages, tax liens, or judgment liens still on record.
  • Gaps in the chain of title — missing or unrecorded deeds or assignments.
  • Encumbrances that materially affect use — significant undisclosed easements or encroachments.
  • Ownership doubts — heirship problems, possible forgery, or pending litigation (lis pendens).

Minor, common items — like a routine utility easement — usually do not make title unmarketable. The defect must be serious enough that a reasonable buyer would object.

Marketable vs. insurable title

The two are related but not identical. Marketable title is a legal standard of acceptability. Insurable title means a title company is willing to issue a title insurance policy, sometimes by insuring over a known minor defect with an exception. A title can occasionally be insurable even if a purist would call it less than perfectly marketable, which is why title insurance is so central to real estate and note transactions.

Why marketable title matters when you buy or sell a note

A note's collateral is only as strong as the title behind it. If the borrower holds marketable, insurable title, the property can be reliably valued, refinanced, foreclosed, and resold — all of which support the note's value. If the title is unmarketable, the note carries hidden risk: a future foreclosure could be contested, and the property might be hard to sell. During due diligence, a note buyer orders a title search and looks for marketability, often requiring title insurance. A note backed by clean, marketable title earns a stronger offer; one clouded by recording gaps or unreleased liens is discounted until the issues are cured — sometimes via a quiet title action.

Why it matters for sellers specifically

If you are selling a note, taking steps to ensure the collateral's title is marketable — confirming the assignment chain is recorded, paid liens are released, and the chain of title is unbroken — directly improves your sale price and speed. Buyers reward certainty.

Example

A note buyer evaluates a $180,000 note. The title search comes back clean: an unbroken chain of title, a properly recorded first-lien deed of trust, no outstanding liens, and an owner's title policy in place. Because the collateral has marketable, insurable title, the buyer is confident it could foreclose and resell if needed, and offers a relatively small discount to face value.

This entry is general information, not legal advice. What constitutes marketable title and how title objections are handled vary by state and by contract; consult a qualified attorney or title professional.

Questions about marketable title

What is the difference between marketable and insurable title?

Marketable title is a legal standard — title clear enough that a reasonable buyer would accept it. Insurable title means a title company will issue a policy, sometimes by insuring over a known minor defect with an exception. A title can be insurable even when it is not perfectly marketable.

Does an easement make title unmarketable?

Usually not. Routine easements, such as standard utility easements, generally don't render title unmarketable. The defect must be serious enough that a reasonable, well-informed buyer would object — like an unreleased lien, a gap in the chain of title, or a major encroachment.

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