Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Banks giving loan modifications but only if homeowners waive legal rights

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Banks and lenders with new requirements

It has been a dramatic year in the lending industry with changing requirements[1], news that half of the housing market is now distressed[2], and endless infighting over how to resolve the robosigning debacle wherein banks illegally (or “wrongfully” if we’re being politically correct) foreclosed on homes[3].

Some homeowners have stood up against banks by going on hunger strike[4], suing back for millions[5] and even foreclosing on bank branches through loopholes[6] to the point that we’ve asked how the legal system is going to handle the onslaught of lawsuits[7] of all the victims (and even those that are not victims but putting their palms out anyhow). All that could change, however.

Rights wavers buried in fine print

According to a new study by Slate and ProPublica[8], banks are now choosing to be proactive and have “buried in the fine print” a rights waver so that a homeowner has to agree to never sue the bank for anything relating to the loan in order to get a loan modification.

On one hand, it sounds fair and is part of a standard settlement- the bank will change your loan, but you can’t sue them over it. On the other hand, it is a form of blackmail, especially in light of ProPublica reporting this practice has already been banned.

Homeowners in a vulnerable situation?

The report implies that most homeowners won’t understand or realize they’re signing a waiver as it is not a separate form or given much attention, rather “buried” in fine print deep in the loan modification offer. Even if vulnerable homeowners do understand that they’re having to waive their rights, their choices may be limited- lose their home or lose their right to defend themselves?

ProPublica “identified eight banks and other mortgage servicers who offer help that limits homeowners’ ability to sue or fight foreclosure. When contacted, they offered a variety of responses. Some said the inclusion of the waivers had been a mistake and would stop. Some argued that language that seemed to waive the homeowner’s rights didn’t actually do so. One argued that a loophole in a rule barring the practice meant their inclusion in certain agreements was proper.”

The waivers have not been challenged in court yet, so it remains to be seen if they will hold up, but it seems highly questionable that the same banks (Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Chase and the like) that are losing lawsuits have responded by a back door waiver of rights that allows them to abuse homeowners in any way they deem “proper” given the homeowner has waived rights forever just to modify their loan.

Tell us in comments what you think of this rights waiver- is it a fair and acceptable part of a settlement with a homeowner (we’ll make this change but you can’t sue us for it later), or is it a gateway for further abuses in an industry whose ethics are consistently questionable?

Resources:
[1] “Government to mandate 20% down on all home loans – is housing doomed?”
[2] “Distressed homes now half of the housing market, is there a silver lining?”
[3] Robosigning debacle, stories of illegal foreclosures
[4] “Hunger strike in Austin over foreclosure comes to an end”
[5] “Military homeowners’ class action suit against Chase settled for $48 million”
[6] “Homeowner forecloses on Wells Fargo office, becomes folk hero”
[7] “How will the legal system handle the coming onslaught of lawsuits?”

[8] Slate & ProPublica story “Mortgage modifications: Some lenders ask homeowners to waive their rights in order to get mortgage relief”

The American Genius Staff Writers
The American Genius Staff Writershttps://theamericangenius.com
The American Genius is news, insights, tools, and inspiration for business owners and professionals. AG condenses information on technology, business, social media, startups, economics and more, so you don’t have to.

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