Congradulations!! Your Loan Is Now Paid…. Now What Do I Do?
It has been years since you purchased your home and you now have decided to payoff your mortgage. So what do you do ?I recently received a call from someone who was asking me this very question.
Well, if you remember your closing when you purchased, you were given all sorts of legal documents to sign from your lender. One of these documents was a promisory note and a mortgage (deed of trust). The deed of trust is recorded as a lean by the lender in the county where the property is located.
After you make your final mortgage payment both documents should be returned to you by the lender stamped “paid and cancelled”. The cancelled promissory note is proof that you paid the mortgage in full and the deed of trust which was recorded as a lean on the property needs to be released.
Different lenders will have different procedures to release such trusts. You should call your lender to see if they will take care of recording the release of your mortgage. if they say yes, then my recommendation is to go to the county recorders office or call them and give them the original deed of trust document number and ask them to search to see if the lender has recorded the release. If this has not been done, then I recommended you request the lender mail you the stamped ‘paid and cancelled” promissory note and deed of trust and go to the county recorders office and have it released.
Finally, keep all records in a Safety box for future records. Remember, when you decide to sell you will be asked to give clear title to the property and these documents are your proof.






This is great advice. Three thoughts from a mortgage broker perspective:
1) Before you make that last payment, call your lender’s customer service number and ask them to provide you a “Payoff letter.” Use that letter, once received, to make your final payment. This will be cleaner.
2) Call your mortgage broker who got you the loan you are paying off and ask him/her to help you record the release by way of a title company. This will help you ensure that it gets recorded.
3) When you get the cancelled mortgage, login the recorder of deeds website, in Cook County, IL, that is www.ccrd.info, use your PIN number to find your property. Once you do, you will see all the documents recorded on your title. If the mortgage isn’t there, then go back to 2 above and make sure you get it recorded.
Comment on March 14, 2007 @ 2:54 pm
When you receive your release from the lender, if it has been recorded, it will usually already have the recorder’s stamp and document number on it. If it does not (or if it does but you want to doubIe-check just to be sure), in Cook County, Illinois, as in many if not most counties in the USA today, the Recorder of Deeds maintains a website that allows you to quickly check.
In Cook County, the Recorder’s website is
http://www.ccrd.info/CCRD/il031/index.jsp
If you type in your PIN you will see a list of all the documents and liens recorded with respect to your property, in reverse chronological order, going back a few years. The list shows only the grantor and grantee, the type of document, and the document number, but if you see a release listed, with your lender as grantor and you as grantee, then you can be pretty confident the release was recorded.
You can often obtain a copy of the document online; in Cook County you have to pay a fee and give the Recorder personal information and a credit card. Many attorneys who practice regularly in real estate law have accounts with the Recorder and can obtain information on the legal status of your property, including mortgages and releases, relatively quickly. I am often asked to do this for clients. While some governmental websites can be difficult to navigate and the language on recorded documents can be confusing, professionals can wade through it much more easily.
Comment on March 17, 2007 @ 11:57 pm
I want to thank Dan Fogel from Perl Mortgage and Jeff Smith Attorney for their comments.
Comment on March 21, 2007 @ 3:16 am
I want to thank dan fogel from Perl Mortgage and Jeff Smith (Jefflaw.com) their comments.
Comment on March 21, 2007 @ 3:17 am