Job gone. Medical bills piling up. A hurricane just ripped through your neighborhood. Whatever the reason. You can’t make your mortgage payment. Maybe not this month, maybe not for several months.
Forbearance might help. But it’s not a get-out-of-jail-free card, and misunderstanding how it works can make a bad situation worse.
What Is Mortgage Forbearance?
Think of it as a pause button. Not a delete button. Your mortgage servicer agrees to temporarily reduce or suspend your payments while you get back on your feet. But every dollar you owe? Still owed. Forbearance isn’t forgiveness. Not even close.
What it does is buy you time. Usually three to six months, sometimes up to twelve. During that window, your servicer agrees not to pursue foreclosure even though you’re falling behind on payments.
How to Get It
Step one: call your mortgage servicer. That’s whoever you send your payments to. Not necessarily the original lender. Explain what happened. Most servicers have dedicated loss mitigation teams for exactly this kind of call.
Expect to provide:
- A hardship letter laying out your situation
- Documentation showing income loss (or current income)
- Recent bank statements
- A breakdown of your monthly expenses
Got a federally backed mortgage — FHA, VA, USDA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac? You have a legal right to request forbearance for qualifying hardships. Servicers are required to work with you. That’s not optional for them.
The Catch: Repayment Options
Here’s where people get blindsided. Forbearance ends, and suddenly all those missed payments come due. How you handle them depends on your servicer and loan type, and the options vary wildly:
- Lump sum — everything owed, all at once. This is the worst option for most people and frankly unrealistic in many cases. But some servicers push it first anyway.
- Repayment plan. Your normal payment plus a chunk of the missed amount, spread across several months. Manageable if your income has stabilized.
- Loan modification, the missed payments get folded into your loan balance. Your term might extend. Your rate might change. But at least it’s structured.
- Deferral, missed payments shift to the very end of your loan, due as a balloon payment when you sell, refinance, or pay off the mortgage entirely.
Deferral tends to be the easiest path forward for most homeowners. If your servicer doesn’t bring it up, ask for it specifically. Push for it.
Does Forbearance Hurt Your Credit?
It depends on timing. Enter forbearance before missing any payments, and (assuming your servicer reports it accurately. It shouldn’t show as a delinquency. Your credit report will note the account as “in forbearance” or “current) in forbearance.” That’s manageable.
Already behind when you entered? Those missed payments still appear on your report. And if you don’t follow through on the repayment plan once forbearance wraps up, your credit takes a real hit.
The bigger picture: forbearance itself won’t tank your credit. But fumbling the exit strategy absolutely can.
When to Consider It
Forbearance works best when the hardship is temporary. You lost your job but expect to land something soon. You’re recovering from surgery. A natural disaster disrupted your finances but the situation is stabilizing.
But if the income loss is permanent (if there’s no realistic path back to making full payments) forbearance just kicks the problem down the road. In that case, a loan modification or even a short sale might be the more honest conversation to have.
And here’s the single biggest mistake people make: ignoring the problem entirely. Your servicer can’t help if you don’t call. Reach out before you miss a payment, not after. That one move (just making the call early) gives you dramatically better options.
Sources reviewed
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau mortgage forbearance guidance
- HUD housing counselor and mortgage relief guidance
- Fannie Mae mortgage payment assistance guidance
- Freddie Mac Borrower Help Center for mortgage hardship options
Keep Reading
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Official resources and reference points
This page is homeowner education, not a property-specific appraisal, legal opinion, tax advice, or lender/carrier instruction. Use these when you need the real consumer rules behind PMI, escrow, refinance timing, or mortgage math, not just rate-shop marketing.
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