Note Parties

Trustee

In a deed of trust, the neutral third party that holds legal title to the property as security and can conduct a non-judicial foreclosure sale on the lender's instruction.

In a deed of trust, the trustee is the neutral third party that holds legal title to the property in trust as security for the loan. The deed of trust has three roles: the borrower (trustor), the lender (beneficiary), and the trustee in the middle. The trustee is commonly a title company, an escrow company, or an attorney. Crucially, the trustee is the party empowered to conduct a non-judicial foreclosure under the power-of-sale clause if the borrower defaults — and that power is a big reason deed-of-trust notes are often worth more than mortgage notes.

What the trustee does

  • Holds legal title to the property in trust until the loan is satisfied — it does not own or use the property; it holds bare title purely for security.
  • Reconveys title to the trustor when the loan is paid in full (a deed of reconveyance or release).
  • Conducts the foreclosure sale when the beneficiary declares a default and instructs the trustee to act, following the statutory notice-and-sale process for that state (notice of default, notice of sale, public auction).
  • Acts neutrally between borrower and lender, owing duties defined by the deed of trust and state law.

Why the trustee makes deed-of-trust notes attractive

Because the trustee can sell the property without a court order, a deed-of-trust default can be resolved far faster and more cheaply than a judicial foreclosure. In strong power-of-sale states, a trustee sale can be completed in a matter of weeks to a few months, versus many months or over a year in judicial states. Faster recovery means lower risk for the holder, which raises the present value of the note.

Why the trustee matters when you buy or sell a note

When a deed-of-trust note is sold, the beneficial interest transfers to the buyer (via endorsed note plus recorded assignment), but the trustee usually stays the same unless the new beneficiary substitutes a different trustee — a routine step done by recording a substitution of trustee, often right before initiating foreclosure. During due diligence, a buyer confirms a valid trustee is named, that any required substitution can be made, and that the state's foreclosure process is available. A note in a power-of-sale state with a clean deed of trust and an enforceable trustee mechanism commands a premium over a comparable judicial-state note.

Example

A homeowner (trustor) borrows from a lender (beneficiary), with a title company serving as trustee under the deed of trust. The lender sells the note to a buyer, who records an assignment naming itself the new beneficiary. When the borrower later defaults, the new beneficiary records a substitution of trustee and instructs the trustee to start a non-judicial foreclosure, completing the trustee sale within the statutory timeline.

This entry is general information, not legal advice. A trustee's powers, duties, and the foreclosure timeline vary significantly by state; consult a qualified attorney.

Questions about trustee

Who serves as the trustee in a deed of trust?

A neutral third party — most often a title company, escrow company, or attorney. The trustee holds legal title in trust and, on the lender's instruction, can conduct a non-judicial foreclosure sale. The lender can replace the trustee by recording a substitution of trustee.

Does the trustee own the property?

No. The trustee holds only bare legal title for security purposes and has no beneficial use of the property. It reconveys title to the borrower at payoff, or sells the property at a trustee sale if the borrower defaults and the lender directs foreclosure.

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