What Happens When a Borrower Defaults? How Real Estate-Backed Loans Protect Investors

The most common reason investors hesitate before allocating to private real estate debt is the default scenario: what happens to my capital if the borrower stops paying? It is a fair and important question. The honest answer is that the outcome depends almost entirely on how the loan was structured in the first place — specifically, the lien position the investor holds, the loan-to-value ratio at origination, and the quality of the underlying collateral. When those three elements are conservatively managed, a default is a process to be managed, not a catastrophe. This article walks through that process in concrete terms.
What ‘Default’ Means in Private Lending
A borrower is typically considered in default when they fail to make a contractually required payment by the scheduled due date, or when they breach another material term of the loan agreement. Most private loan agreements include a cure period — often 10 to 15 days — during which the borrower can make the missed payment without triggering formal default proceedings. If the payment is not cured within that window, the lender (or the fund acting as beneficiary) has the contractual right to begin the enforcement process. In practice, communication often begins before formal default — experienced private lenders maintain close contact with borrowers and often identify cash flow stress early enough to negotiate an extension or modification that avoids formal enforcement altogether.
The First Line of Defense: First-Lien Position
The most important protective structure in trust deed investing is the lien position. A first-lien lender holds a senior, priority claim on the property. In any enforcement action — whether a negotiated sale, a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, or a formal foreclosure and auction — the first-lien lender is repaid before any junior creditors, subordinated debt holders, or equity interests. This means that as long as the property retains sufficient value to cover the loan balance, the first-lien investor’s capital can be recovered. LBC Capital Income Fund, LLC structures all of its loans in a first-lien position precisely because this protection is foundational to the capital preservation objective the fund is designed to serve.
The Second Layer: Loan-to-Value Ratios
The loan-to-value ratio is the mathematical cushion between the investor’s capital and a potential shortfall. A loan originated at 70% LTV on a property appraised at $500,000 means the investor has lent $350,000, with $150,000 in equity between the loan balance and the property value. If the borrower defaults and the property must be liquidated, the property’s value would need to fall more than 30% from its appraised value before the investor’s principal is at risk. In most real estate markets and under normal conditions, a 30% decline in a property’s value is a severe stress scenario — not an everyday occurrence. Conservative LTV underwriting does not eliminate risk; it provides a defined buffer against the scenarios most likely to occur.
The Default Process Step by Step
When a borrower enters default and the cure period expires, the enforcement process in a deed-of-trust state proceeds through several stages. The trustee issues a Notice of Default, which is publicly recorded. This initiates a statutory reinstatement period — in California, for example, three months — during which the borrower can cure the default by paying all overdue amounts plus fees and penalties. If reinstatement does not occur, a Notice of Trustee’s Sale is issued, scheduling a public auction typically 21 days later. At auction, the property may be sold to a third-party bidder (who must pay cash), or it reverts to the lender as REO (real estate owned) if no adequate bid is received. The entire non-judicial process from Notice of Default to auction typically takes four to six months in California.
How Real-World Outcomes Usually Look
The majority of private real estate loan defaults do not proceed to auction. More commonly, the borrower negotiates a loan modification or extension once they understand the consequences of foreclosure. In cases that do proceed to sale, properties secured by first-lien trust deeds at conservative LTVs have historically sold for amounts sufficient to repay the outstanding loan balance and costs, particularly in markets where property values have remained relatively stable. The scenarios where investors lose principal are those where LTV ratios were too high at origination, where property values fell dramatically in a localized market, or where the appraisal used at origination proved inaccurate. This is precisely why disciplined underwriting — not just a senior lien position — is the foundation of risk management in private lending.
How a Well-Run Fund Manages Default Risk Proactively
Professional private lending funds do not simply wait for defaults to happen. Active portfolio management includes ongoing monitoring of borrower payment behavior, regular communication with borrowers approaching maturity, periodic property inspections to ensure collateral condition is maintained, and early intervention when borrowers show signs of cash flow stress. When a loan modification or short extension can prevent a formal default — and the underlying collateral supports the revised terms — experienced fund managers often take that path rather than proceeding directly to enforcement. The goal is capital return, not foreclosure. Foreclosure is the fallback when other options are exhausted; it is not the preferred outcome for a fund that is managing capital on behalf of income-seeking investors.
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