MERS saves time and money because the process of selling and transferring ownership of a mortgage loan, sometimes called the “chain of title,” can be cumbersome. There is an official document called an “assignment” that must be filed with the county recorder in the U.S. to transfer ownership when a mortgage loan is sold. MERS created a new system that allowed the process to happen digitally while still being official and legal. It also has become a hub that routes certain kinds of documentation to the current owner, rather than having to constantly change the official beneficiary of the loan every time it is sold.
Alternate name: Mortgage Electronic Registry SystemAcronym: MERS
How Does MERS Work?
Before MERS, every time a lender chose to sell a mortgage to another entity, they recorded the transaction by preparing an assignment for the county recorder, updating physical documents. MERS creates a centralized online system that still generates the necessary paper trail of loan sales. In some cases, MERS becomes the beneficiary or nominee for the loan, even as the current holder and subsequent buyers record their transactions on MERS. Sometimes, MERS is the beneficiary from the start; other times, that assignment is made later in the life of the loan. Confusion can arise, considering that the beneficiary, MERS in this case, isn’t actually the owner of the loan or holder of the promissory note. The actual owner of the loan, often a lender, just gives MERS permission to act as a designated beneficiary. This allows the loan to be bought or sold with much less paperwork and hassle.
Pros and Cons of MERS
Pros Explained
Serves as a hub for paperwork and transfer proceedings: Some lenders appreciate having MERS receive, handle, and forward relevant notices and information about loans. If the loan is sold, MERS remains a consistent point of contact for things like public notices about loans. Saves work, making loans cheaper overall: Interest rates and fees on loans are tied to the amount of work it takes to originate and service the loan. When MERS began, the practice of transferring or selling loans became faster and simpler, reducing needed work and therefore the cost of loans.
Cons Explained
MERS’ role as the beneficiary complicates foreclosure: Because judicial foreclosure turns to the beneficiary of the loan as the plaintiff in a foreclosure lawsuit, having MERS in this role can complicate those proceedings. MERS isn’t the actual servicer or owner of the loan, so even if it wants to handle the paperwork of a foreclosure, some states have decided they cannot legally be the plaintiff, and the actual loan owner must bring the suit. As a result, MERS stopped initiating most foreclosures on behalf of lenders in 2011, although exceptions exist. Can be difficult to know who is actually servicing a MERS-beneficiary loan: If MERS is the original mortgagee of a loan, it’s important to understand what MERS does and doesn’t have the right to do. These rights are spelled out in documents signed at closing. Keeping track of who your servicer or loan owner is can be a bit challenging until you understand what MERS is actually designed to do.
What It Means for Homeowners
Homeowners can look up their own properties on MERS to see whether the loan has been sold or is still being serviced by the original lender. Generally, though, MERS shouldn’t much affect the experience of owning your home with a mortgage loan, other than reducing some of the administrative costs of maintaining the loan.