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Dual Tracking: How Your Mortgage Servicer Moves Foreclosure Forward While Claiming to Help You

A worried couple sitting among moving boxes, looking at a laptop while reviewing their mortgage and foreclosure options

By Jonathan Stratton, Co-Owner, Creative Real Estate Educator/Expert, June 8, 2026

Dual tracking in foreclosure is one of the most dangerous things that can happen to a homeowner, and most people have never heard the term until it is too late. You are behind on your mortgage, you are talking to your bank, and they are making it look like they might be able to work with you. So you wait. You trust the process. And then, sometimes only a day or two before the auction date, the bank drops the ball and tells you that you are not qualified after all.

Here is the hard truth: you cannot afford to stop talking to your lender, but you also cannot put all of your trust in them and wait until the eleventh hour. What is really happening in the background is dual tracking, and understanding it is one of the most important things a homeowner in financial hardship can do.

This article explains what dual tracking is, what the federal rules say about it, and the specific patterns to watch for, so you can recognize what is happening to you and start thinking about a plan B before time runs out.

Key Takeaways

  • Dual tracking is when a mortgage servicer keeps advancing your foreclosure at the same time it says it is reviewing you for a loan modification or other help.
  • Federal rules limit the practice, including a 120-day rule before foreclosure can formally begin and a 37-day protection when a complete application is submitted before a sale, but the protections often hinge on whether your application is treated as “complete.”
  • It shows up in recognizable patterns: repeated document requests, approvals that were never final, verbal-only promises, payment records that do not match reality, loan transfers, successor and inheritance situations, and re-defaults after a modification.
  • Foreclosure works differently across New England… through the courts in Maine and Vermont, and through a power-of-sale process in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island… so what to watch for depends on your state.
  • The homeowners who fare best keep talking to their lender, get everything in writing, and start building a plan B early while they still have options.

What the Federal Rules Say

Federal mortgage servicing rules place limits on how and when a servicer can pursue foreclosure while a homeowner is seeking help. These rules come from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and apply the same way across all of New England, because they are federal rather than tied to any single state.

A few of the most commonly asked-about rules:

The 120-day rule

Federal rules generally bar a servicer from making the first official foreclosure filing until a borrower is more than 120 days delinquent. This window is meant to give a struggling homeowner time to apply for loss mitigation before foreclosure begins.

The 37-day protection

When a servicer receives a complete loss mitigation application more than 37 days before a scheduled foreclosure sale, the rules generally require the servicer to pause and evaluate that application before moving the sale forward.

How many payments before foreclosure

Because of the 120-day rule, homeowners often ask how many missed payments it takes before foreclosure can start. The short answer is that foreclosure generally cannot formally begin until a loan is more than 120 days past due, though the exact timeline and process vary by state and by loan type.

These rules exist to protect homeowners. The problem is that the protections often depend on technical conditions… such as whether an application is considered “complete”… and many homeowners never realize those conditions were never met. If you believe a rule like this applies to your situation, a HUD-approved housing counselor or a foreclosure attorney can review the specifics of your case. The earlier you understand where you stand, the more options you tend to have, which is why it helps to know how to stop foreclosure when you first fall behind. The patterns below explain how the protections can quietly fail to attach.

A skeptical woman lowering her glasses to take a closer look, illustrating how homeowners learn to spot dual tracking warning signs

The Patterns to Watch For

In my experience working with homeowners across New England, dual tracking does not always look the same. It shows up in a number of recognizable patterns, from the obvious to the technical. Knowing them by name makes it far easier to spot what is happening to you, and to start asking the right questions.

When the servicer keeps asking for the same documents

One of the most common things I see is the homeowner who applies for a loan modification, sends in everything they ask for, and then keeps getting asked for the same documents again. As long as the application is treated as incomplete, the strongest protections may never fully kick in, and the foreclosure can keep moving while the paperwork goes in circles. This is the experience a lot of homeowners describe as their application never being marked complete.

When you were told you were approved

Some homeowners are told they were approved for help, so they relax and stop looking at their other options… only to find out later that the approval was preliminary, conditional, or got reversed. A trial modification can also be canceled over a payment the servicer claims was missed or late, with the foreclosure picking right back up. Being approved for a loan modification but still facing foreclosure is one of the most disorienting versions of this.

When the promises were only verbal

A servicer’s representative may tell you over the phone that your sale is postponed or your modification is under review, but never send written confirmation. If the foreclosure proceeds anyway, that verbal promise can be very hard to rely on. Whether verbal loan modification promises can be relied on is a question worth understanding early, because getting things in writing is one of the most protective steps a homeowner can take.

When your payments are right but the records say otherwise

Sometimes a homeowner is making payments under a workout agreement, but the servicer’s records show them as behind. Foreclosure can then proceed based on the servicer’s numbers rather than the homeowner’s actual payment history. If you are paying on time but the bank says you are behind, that gap is worth documenting carefully.

When your loan is transferred to a new servicer

A loan can be sold or transferred to a new servicer right in the middle of loss mitigation. The new servicer’s review can effectively start over while the foreclosure timeline carries forward, and homeowners sometimes find that a new servicer does not honor an existing loan modification. When a loan changes hands mid-review, that question becomes common and painful.

When you inherited the home or came through a divorce

This pattern affects heirs, people going through divorce, and anyone who assumed or inherited a property. While the servicer reviews whether to recognize you as a legal successor on the loan, the delinquency can continue and the foreclosure clock can run… and you may not even be able to apply for loss mitigation because you are not yet officially recognized on the loan. Being left in limbo after you inherited a house in foreclosure is its own difficult situation.

When you are back in default a year after a modification

One pattern most people do not know about happens six to twelve months after a successful modification. Small servicing errors, such as escrow miscalculations or insurance and tax issues, can push the loan back into default. The servicer may treat it as a brand-new delinquency rather than a continuation, which leaves the homeowner in a weaker position. Falling back into default after a loan modification is more common than most homeowners expect.

When the formal foreclosure track keeps moving

Even when federal rules should pause a foreclosure, the formal process can keep advancing. This plays out differently depending on which New England state you are in. In Maine and Vermont, foreclosure goes through the court system, so a court case can keep moving on its own schedule and homeowners without representation can miss deadlines while believing they are fully protected. In New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island, foreclosure is typically handled through a power-of-sale process rather than the courts, so there is no court docket to pause… the danger is the auction date itself continuing to advance. Knowing whether submitting an application actually stops a foreclosure sale in your state is one of the most important things to understand.

Why This Matters in New England

We work with homeowners across New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Rhode Island, and the way foreclosure unfolds is not identical from state to state. The federal rules above apply everywhere, but the foreclosure process itself differs: Maine and Vermont handle foreclosure through the courts, while New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island typically use a power-of-sale process. That difference changes what to watch for and where the pressure points are, which is why general national advice often misses what actually matters for a homeowner here.

State How Foreclosure Usually Works What It Means for You
New Hampshire Power of sale (no court case required) There is no court docket to pause, so the auction date itself is the deadline to watch. Things can move quickly.
Massachusetts Power of sale (most common) Foreclosure typically proceeds without a court case, so the scheduled sale date is the pressure point to track closely.
Rhode Island Power of sale (most common) The sale is generally handled outside of court, so watching the auction timeline matters more than any court schedule.
Maine Court-supervised (judicial) Your foreclosure goes through the court, so there are court deadlines to meet. Missing one can hurt you even when federal rules should protect you.
Vermont Court-supervised (judicial), with a redemption period The process runs through the court, and Vermont gives many homeowners a redemption period, often six months to a year, to pay what is owed and keep the home. The court sets the timeline, so knowing your dates is critical.

What You Can Do

Recognizing dual tracking is the first and most important step. If you think it might be happening to you, a few things help:

  • Ask your servicer, in writing, whether your loss mitigation application is complete, and keep every response.
  • Keep your own records of payments, dates, and who you spoke with.
  • Do not rely on verbal promises… ask for written confirmation of any postponement or approval.
  • If you believe your rights under the federal rules are being violated, a HUD-approved housing counselor or a foreclosure attorney can review your specific situation.
  • Be cautious about anyone who contacts you promising to make the problem disappear, since the same vulnerable moment that dual tracking exploits is also when **foreclosure rescue scams** tend to appear.

If you are not sure which of these patterns applies to your situation, you do not have to figure it out alone. You can request a callback using the form at the bottom of this page and someone from the team will reach out to talk through what you are seeing, at no out-of-pocket cost to you. Sometimes simply understanding where you really stand is enough to help you decide your next step.

The homeowners who come through this in the best shape are the ones who do not put all their trust in the bank and wait. They keep talking to their lender, but they also start thinking about a plan B early, while they still have options. Understanding all of your choices early is exactly what the educational resources at Relief University are designed to help with, so you can make informed decisions before a deadline forces your hand.

If you are wondering what working with a team like ours actually looks like, you can explore our relief services or read through the frequently asked questions to see how it works. And if you would like to talk through your own situation, you can request a callback using the form at the bottom of this page.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the 120-day foreclosure rule?

Federal mortgage servicing rules generally prevent a servicer from making the first official foreclosure filing until a borrower is more than 120 days delinquent. This is intended to give homeowners time to apply for loss mitigation before foreclosure begins. The exact process after that point varies by state.

When a servicer receives a complete loss mitigation application more than 37 days before a scheduled foreclosure sale, federal rules generally require the servicer to evaluate that application before advancing the sale. The key word is “complete,” which is where many homeowners run into trouble.

Because of the 120-day rule, foreclosure generally cannot formally begin until a loan is more than 120 days past due, which is roughly four missed monthly payments. The precise timeline depends on your state and your loan type.

Federal rules place real limits on dual tracking, and many state laws add further restrictions. Whether a particular servicer’s conduct crosses the line depends on the specific facts, the loan type, and the state. This article is educational and not legal advice… a HUD-approved housing counselor or attorney can assess your individual situation.

Common signs include being asked repeatedly for the same documents, being told you were approved without written confirmation, relying on verbal promises that are never put in writing, or seeing the foreclosure process continue while you believe your application is under review. Keeping written records and asking your servicer to confirm your application status in writing are the best early steps.

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