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The bank or mortgage company that will provide your mortgage
will likely require that you buy a mortgage title insurance
policy insuring its interest in your property.
When you give a mortgage to a lender, you give the lender
an interest in your property as security for your promise
to repay the loan. In many instances, the lender's financial
stake in the property is greater than yours.
The mortgage gives the lender a conditional interest in
the property. This means that as long as the payments on
the loan secured by the mortgage are being paid, the lender's
interest is junior to yours. However, in the event you fail
to meet the terms of your agreement, the lender has the right
to have your interests in the property extinguished through
foreclosure. Foreclosure is the mechanism that enables the
lender to take or sell the property to satisfy the debt you
owe.
Because the lender has a substantial sum at risk, it is
entitled to seek a number of protections. One of these protections
is the mortgage title insurance policy. This policy insures
the lender's interest in the property from any potential
title defects. Coverage for specific risks to title in a
mortgage title insurance policy is similar to the coverage
provided to you with an owner policy.
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