Mortgagee in Possession — When the Bank Sells Your Home
Mortgagee in possession (MIP) is the formal legal process by which a lender takes control of a property and sells it to recover the outstanding loan. It is the end stage of a mortgage default — not the starting point. Understanding the process and your rights at each stage is important.
The Process Leading to MIP
The legal path to mortgagee in possession follows a regulated sequence under both the NCCP and state property law:
- Missed repayments and lender contact attempts (typically 30–60 days)
- Formal Default Notice issued (required under NCCP — gives 30 days to remedy)
- Statement of Claim or Summons filed with the court if the default is not remedied
- Court hearing — you have the right to appear and present your circumstances
- Possession Order issued by the court
- Lender takes physical possession (sheriff enforcement if you do not vacate voluntarily)
- Property listed for sale and sold — usually at auction
This process typically takes 6–18 months from the first missed payment to sale, depending on the state, the court, and whether you engage with the lender and court process.
Your Rights During the Process
At every stage, you retain rights:
- Right to reinstate: Up until the sale, you can stop the process by paying all arrears and the lender's legal costs in full. If you can find the funds (through sale of assets, a loan from family, or a new mortgage), you can halt the MIP process even after a possession order.
- Right to participate in the court process: You can attend the possession hearing and present arguments for why the order should be delayed or refused. Courts have some discretion.
- Right to receive proper value: The lender must take reasonable steps to achieve the best price reasonably obtainable for the property. They cannot simply sell quickly at a discount to recover their funds. Courts have held lenders liable for selling below market value.
- Right to the surplus: If the property sells for more than the outstanding loan plus the lender's costs, you receive the difference.
Get legal help immediately. If you have received a Statement of Claim or a court date, you need legal representation. Community legal centres offer free assistance, and the National Debt Helpline can direct you to appropriate support in your state. Do not simply not turn up to court — a default judgment will be issued against you.
What Happens to the Sale Proceeds
When the lender sells the property as mortgagee in possession, the sale proceeds are distributed in order:
- Lender's costs of sale (agent fees, legal costs, maintenance during possession)
- Outstanding loan balance (principal plus accrued interest)
- Any shortfall deficit — you may still owe money to the lender after the sale if the property sells for less than the total owed
- Surplus — returned to you if the sale price exceeds all of the above
After the Sale — Shortfall Debt
If the sale price does not cover the outstanding loan, you are personally liable for the shortfall. This is a significant financial and legal exposure, particularly in markets where prices have fallen since you purchased. See the Selling in Negative Equity guide for guidance on this situation.
If you are facing potential MIP proceedings, speak to a financial counsellor now
1800 007 007National Debt Helpline — Free, confidential, no judgment
Related Guides
What Happens If I Miss a Payment?
The earlier stages of default — and how to address them before MIP.
Read guide →
Selling in Negative Equity
If the property will sell for less than the loan — what to do.
Read guide →
Mortgage Holiday & Repayment Pause
Hardship options available before legal proceedings begin.
Read guide →