Debt - An amount owed to another.
Deed - The legal document that transfers the ownership of real property from one party to another.
Deed-in-lieu - The transfer of title from a delinquent borrower to a lender to satisfy a debt and avoid foreclosure. Also called a voluntary conveyance.
Deed of Trust - A legal document that conveys title to real estate to a neutral third party (a trustee) who holds the title until the borrower has repaid the debt. In some states, this document is used instead of a mortgage.
Default - Failure to make mortgage payments on a timely basis or to comply with other requirements of a mortgage.
Delinquency - Failure to make mortgage payments when mortgage payments are due.
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) - An agency of the federal government that guarantees residential mortgages made to eligible veterans of the military services. The guarantee protects the lender against loss and thus encourages lenders to make mortgages to veterans.
Deposit - A sum of money given to bind the sale of real estate, or a sum of money given to ensure payment or an advance of funds in the processing of a loan. - See also "Earnest Money Deposit"
Depreciation - A decline in the value of property. The opposite of Appreciation.
Detached Single-Family Home - The most traditional type of single-family home. It stands separate from any other housing structure and serves as a place of residence for the occupants.
Direct Leveraging Loan Program - The Direct Leveraging Loan Program makes it easier and more economical for rural residents to own a home through lower interest rates and no down payment. - Under this program, the lender offers up to 50 percent of the mortgage amount as a conventional 30-year, fixed-rate first mortgage and the Rural Housing Service (RHS) offers the balance as a second mortgage at an interest rate that is generally below market. - The RHS is part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Discount Point - A fee paid by the borrower at closing to reduce the interest rate on a mortgage. A point equals 1 percent of the loan amount.
Dower - The rights of a widow in the property of her husband at his death.
Down Payment - The part of the purchase price of a property that the buyer pays in cash and does not finance with a mortgage. Sources for down payments may come from buyers savings accounts, checking accounts, stocks and bonds, life insurance policies, and gifts.
Due-on-sale Clause - A provision in a mortgage that allows the lender to demand full payment of the outstanding mortgage loan balance if the borrower sells the property securing mortgage.
Due-on-transfer Provision - This terminology is usually used for second mortgages. - See also Due-on-sale Clause above.
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