What Is Notice of Default?
A notice of default (NOD) is a formal written notice from a mortgage lender or trustee to a borrower stating that the borrower has failed to make required payments and is in default on their mortgage. In non-judicial foreclosure states, the NOD is typically recorded with the county recorder as the first official step of the foreclosure process, starting the clock on the borrower's cure period.
Key Facts
- The NOD is the formal legal document that begins the pre-foreclosure period in most non-judicial foreclosure states
- Federal law (12 CFR § 1024.41) requires servicers to wait at least 120 days after the first missed payment before recording a notice of default
- After receiving an NOD, borrowers typically have 30 to 120 days to cure the default before the property can be scheduled for sale, depending on state law
- The NOD is a public record — once recorded with the county, it appears in property title searches and can be found by investors, neighbors, and credit agencies
- In judicial foreclosure states, the equivalent of an NOD is a lis pendens (notice of pending litigation) filed with the court when the lender initiates the foreclosure lawsuit
Live Data
What Does a Notice of Default Mean?
A notice of default is your lender's formal declaration that you have broken the terms of your mortgage by failing to make payments. It serves two purposes: it notifies you that foreclosure proceedings may begin, and it starts the statutory timeline that the lender must follow before selling your home.
An NOD is not the same as a late payment notice or a demand letter. Those are informal communications. The NOD is a legal document, typically prepared by the lender's attorney or the foreclosure trustee, and in most states it must be recorded with the county recorder's office as a matter of public record.
What Should I Do When I Receive a Notice of Default?
Receiving an NOD is serious, but it does not mean you have lost your home. Here is what to do immediately:
- Do not ignore it. The NOD starts a legal clock. Every day counts.
- Contact your mortgage servicer and ask about loss mitigation options — forbearance, loan modification, or repayment plan.
- Call a HUD-approved housing counselor at 800-569-4287 for free expert guidance. They can help you understand your options and negotiate with your servicer.
- Submit a complete loss mitigation application. Under federal dual-tracking rules, your servicer cannot proceed with foreclosure while a complete application is under review, as long as you submit it at least 37 days before a scheduled sale.
- Know your cure deadline. Check your NOD and state law for the exact number of days you have to cure the default (pay all past-due amounts plus fees).
How Is an NOD Different from a Notice of Sale?
The notice of default is the first step — it tells you that you're in default and gives you a cure period. The notice of sale comes after the cure period expires, and it schedules the actual foreclosure auction. Between the NOD and the NOS, you have your best window to negotiate or cure. Once the notice of sale is published, the timeline to auction is typically 21-30 days and options narrow significantly.
State-by-State Variations
NOD requirements, cure periods, and recording procedures vary significantly by state. Some states require the NOD to be recorded with the county; others require only mailed notice to the borrower.
| State | Key Difference |
|---|---|
| California | NOD must be recorded with the county recorder. 3-month cure period after recording before notice of sale can be filed. Contact information for HUD counselor required in NOD. |
| Colorado | NOD filed with Public Trustee. 110-day right to cure after first publication — one of the longest cure periods in any non-judicial state. |
| Idaho | 115-day right to cure after NOD — the longest statutory cure period in the country for non-judicial foreclosure. |
| North Dakota | Strong 90-day pre-foreclosure notice and cure right for non-judicial track. Cure available until sale in judicial track. |
| Washington | NOD must include 30-day pre-notice + meeting requirement with borrower. Foreclosure Fairness Act mediation available upon request. |
Frequently Asked Questions
How many missed payments before a notice of default?
Federal law requires servicers to wait at least 120 days after the first missed payment before recording a notice of default. Most servicers begin the process at 90-120 days delinquent, though some may wait longer depending on loss mitigation efforts.
Can I cure my mortgage after receiving a notice of default?
Yes. Most states provide a cure period after the NOD — typically 30 to 120 days — during which you can pay all past-due amounts plus fees to bring your mortgage current and stop the foreclosure process. Contact your servicer for the exact payoff amount.
Does a notice of default show on my credit report?
The NOD itself may not appear on your credit report, but the underlying missed payments that triggered it will. Each 30-day late payment is reported separately. The foreclosure process, if it continues, is reported as a separate major negative event.
Is a notice of default the same as foreclosure?
No. The NOD is the beginning of the foreclosure process, not the end. It starts the pre-foreclosure period during which you can still negotiate with your lender, apply for loss mitigation, sell your home, or cure the default. The actual foreclosure happens at the sale.
Can I sell my home after receiving a notice of default?
Yes. You can sell your home at any point before the foreclosure sale is completed. If your home is worth more than you owe, a regular sale pays off the mortgage. If it's worth less, you can negotiate a short sale with your lender's approval.