Reaffirmation agreements are the equivalent to re-signing the loan with the lender. While this might not sound like a big deal, there is a lot of avoidable risk associated with signing a reaffirmation agreement. I know what you’re thinking: “I want to keep my house and my car, so why wouldn’t I sign the reaffirmation agreement to keep my house and my car?” The reason is simple: because you can keep your house and your car without signing the reaffirmation agreement and avoid the risks associated with signing.
Reaffirmations are rarely mandatory in order to keep the collateral secured to the loan. With a home mortgage, a reaffirmation agreement is never mandatory to keep your home. There are too many state laws and regulations that keep you protected from foreclosure. As long as you remain current and on time with your payments, you will get to keep your home.
The reaffirmation agreement has no influence on your mortgage lender’s intentions to foreclose or not. The only thing that can motivate foreclosure is if you miss payments on your home.
The reason we do not recommend signing mortgage reaffirmation agreements is because they only add risk back to your mortgage loan. Since the lender will let you keep your home without signing it, there is no benefit to signing it. There are only risks added back to your life by signing it. The risks include the lender’s ability to hurt your credit or sue you for the unpaid loan balance should you ever miss payments or foreclose.
Even those with the best intentions or ability to pay their mortgage shouldn’t take on this risk, because you do not know what the future holds for you. God forbid something tragic happened and you no longer could afford your mortgage, you want to be protected from the mortgage which is a protection provided form your bankruptcy discharge.
If you reaffirm the loan, you lose this protection and the lender gains back the ability to sue you and damage your credit. Without signing, they cannot damage your credit and cannot sue you for any unpaid balance in the unfortunate event of foreclosure.
Vehicle loan reaffirmation agreements follow the same rules I explained above regarding mortgages, but there are a couple details with vehicles that I want to add:
Kain & Scott’s experienced bankruptcy attorneys know how to help Minnesotans navigate reaffirmation agreements. If you are interested in learning more about how bankruptcy can help with secured debts, reach out to Minnesota’s nicest bankruptcy law firm by going now to www.kainscott.com. You will be thankful you did.