WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

1.3K

In its simplest form, the “subject to” in a subject to mortgage refers to the loan that’s already in place. When you purchase a property subject to, you are essentially buying the home subject to the existing mortgage — that’s really all there is to it. The original underwriting is kept as is, including the name in which the loan was purchased.

Compared to a traditional house sale, a new concept being pushed is a subject to loan assumption. It sounds good on paper, but ive never heard of them before

>In its simplest form, the “subject to” in a subject to mortgage refers to the loan that’s already in place. When you purchase a property subject to, you are essentially buying the home subject to the existing mortgage — that’s really all there is to it. The original underwriting is kept as is, including the name in which the loan was purchased. Compared to a traditional house sale, a new concept being pushed is a subject to loan assumption. It sounds good on paper, but ive never heard of them before

(post is archived)

Plus the companies who pull this crap are absolute grade-A assholes, they essentially take over the ownership of the house before documents are ever approved, which im pretty sure is beyond illegal

[–] 0 pt

It's probably in one of those legal gray areas where it's not really regulated per se but it could maybe fall under either this or that so it doesn't really fall anywhere that's concrete.

Pretty much, in this case some a-hole company put a memorandum on my house and is now demanding 50,000 to take it off ... piece of crap scammers is what they are

[–] 0 pt

What is the memorandum for? Demand legal proof that they have the right to place this memorandum, and demand it has wet signatures. If they don't provide it, take them to small claims court for damages.