The California Homeowner Bill of Rights is a set of laws that provide protections to homeowners who are facing foreclosure. It became law on January 1, 2013, with many sections renewed and modified as of January 1, 2019.
The Homeowner Bill of Rights generally applies to first-lien mortgages on owner-occupied homes that have no more than four units, and the protections above generally apply if your servicer foreclosed on more than 175 homes in the last year.
Key provisions include:
- Notification of foreclosure-prevention options:
Your servicer must try to contact you at least 30 days before starting
the foreclosure process to discuss your financial situation and explore
your options to avoid foreclosure. Your servicer can then start the
foreclosure process by recording a notice of default in the county
where your home is located, and will then send you a copy within 10
business days. Within 5 days of recording a notice of default, your
servicer must generally give you information about options to avoid
foreclosure that may be available. See Civil Code section 2923.55 and
Civil Code section 2924.9
.
- Guaranteed single point of contact: If you ask
for a loan modification or other foreclosure-prevention option, your
servicer must assign you a specific person or team who can walk you
through application requirements and deadlines, knows the facts and
status of your application, including missing documents needed to
complete your application, and can get you a decision on your application.
See Civil Code section 2923.7
- Acknowledgment of application: If you apply for
a loan modification, your servicer must notify you within five business
days of any missing information, other errors, and deadlines for completing
your application. See Civil Code section 2924.10
- Restrictions on fees: You cannot be charged a fee
for applying for a loan modification. You cannot be charged late fees
while your servicer is making a decision on your completed loan-modification
application, while you are making timely payments under an approved
modification, or while a denial is being appealed. Your application
is "complete" once you submit all required information within the
servicer’s reasonable deadlines. See Civil Code section 2924.11.
- Restrictions on dual tracking: Your servicer must
generally pause the foreclosure process while it is making a decision
on your completed loan-modification application and until after it
gives you time to appeal a denial. It also cannot foreclose on you
while you are complying with the terms of an approved loan modification,
forbearance, repayment plan, or other foreclosure-prevention option.
See Civil Code section 2923.6 and Civil Code section 2924.11.
- Denial rights: If your servicer denies your loan-modification
application, it must state its reasons and identify other possible
foreclosure-prevention options in writing. It must also give you a
chance to appeal the denial. You may submit a new loan-modification
application if you have had a material change in your financial situation
since the last application. See Civil Code section 2923.6 .
- Transfer rights: If your servicer approves a loan
modification or other foreclosure-prevention alternative and then
sells or transfers your loan to another servicer, the new servicer
must honor that foreclosure-prevention alternative. See Civil Code
section 2924.11
- Verification of documents: Your servicer must review
certain foreclosure documents to make sure they are accurate, complete,
and supported by reliable evidence about your loan, your loan’s status,
and the servicer’s right to foreclose. See Civil Code section 2924.17.
- Tenant rights: Purchasers of foreclosed homes must
give tenants at least 90 days before starting eviction proceedings.
If the tenant has a fixed-term lease that was entered into before
the foreclosure sale, the new owner must honor the lease unless certain
exceptions apply. See Code of Civil Procedure section 1161b.
The Homeowner Bill of Rights generally applies to first-lien mortgages on owner-occupied homes that have no more than four units, and the protections above generally apply if your servicer foreclosed on more than 175 homes in the last year.
If you are having trouble making payments, contact your servicer to ask for help and keep following up with your servicer about any foreclosure-prevention application you submit.
From State of California Department of Justice / California Homeowner Bill of Rights
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Disclaimer - All information is provided for informational purposes only and is Not legal advice, consult an attorney or financial expert for legal advice. This is general information and is not intended to provide advice on any specific question or transaction. Parties to any real estate transaction should seek competent legal and/or tax counsel to determine the legal, credit and tax consequences of buying or selling a home. Listing your home for sale and attempting to do a California Short Sale is a possible solution to avoiding foreclosure but not a guarantee that your lender won't foreclose or pursue other means of collecting the unpaid debt between what you owe and what the home may sell for.