Scammers promise to make changes to your mortgage loan or take other steps to save your home, but they don’t deliver. Never pay a company upfront for promises to help you get relief on paying your mortgage.
Scammers target desperate homeowners looking to avoid foreclosure and stay in their homes. These scammers promise they’ll get changes to your loan so you can keep your home. But they want you to pay them an upfront fee before giving you any services or getting any results. Don’t do it. It’s illegal for a company to charge you upfront for promises to help you get relief on paying your mortgage. If you’re working with a lawyer , make sure they’re licensed in the state where you live and are reputable.
If a company offering help with your mortgage debt doesn't follow these rules, it could be trying to scam you. Here’s what to know about your rights.
Here are some common warning signs of a mortgage relief scam:
Scammers come up with different stories to pressure you into paying them. Knowing some of their come-ons can help you avoid them.
Scammers say: “If you give us the deed to the home, we’ll get our own financing to save the home from foreclosure.” These scammers say you can stay there as a renter and your rent payments — supposedly — will go to helping you buy the home back from them later.
A reputable lawyer doesn’t guarantee results, no matter what your circumstances.
Before you hire someone who claims to be a lawyer (also called an attorney or counsel), or someone who claims to work with lawyers, ask relatives, friends, and others you trust for the name of a lawyer with a proven record of helping homeowners facing foreclosure.
Get the name of each lawyer who’ll be helping you, the state or states where each lawyer is licensed, and their license number in each state. Your state has a licensing organization — or bar — that monitors lawyers’ conduct. Call your state bar or check its website to see if a lawyer you're thinking of hiring has gotten into trouble. The American Bar Association has links to your state bar or search online for the name of your state and the words “state bar” to find the site for your state’s bar association. Get — in writing — specific information about the work the lawyer or firm will do for you, including the cost, and the payment schedule
If you decide to hire a lawyer , stay in touch with them and keep a file with a record of your conversations, letters, emails, texts, and paperwork.
Some less-than-honest law firms send direct mail flyers that urge you to participate in a “mass joinder lawsuit.” The firms charge upfront fees and bend the truth to make you think you’re joining with other people in similar circumstances to sue your lender. They make it seem like they can stop your foreclosure, cut your loan balance or interest rates, get you money damages, and even get you the deed to your home, free and clear of your mortgage. Mass joinder lawsuits are not class action lawsuits. In a mass joinder lawsuit, you still have to go to trial separately to prove your case. And a mass joinder lawsuit is not likely to help you save your home.
Under the MARS Rule, lawyers can ask you to pay an upfront fee, but only if they
If you're having trouble paying your mortgage or you've gotten a foreclosure notice, contact your servicer or lender immediately, even if the foreclosure process has already started.
Scammers often ask you to pay in ways that make it tough to get your money back. No matter how you paid a scammer, the sooner you act, the better. Learn more about how to try to get your money back .
If you think you’ve run into a mortgage relief scam, report it to