Unsecured Note
A promissory note backed only by the borrower's promise to pay, with no collateral the holder can seize on default — making it riskier and worth far less than a secured note.
An unsecured note is a promissory note that is not backed by any collateral. The holder's only recourse if the borrower stops paying is to sue for the money owed and try to collect on a judgment — there is no specific property to foreclose on. This makes unsecured notes substantially riskier, and far less valuable, than a secured note backed by real estate through a mortgage or deed of trust. Understanding the difference is essential for anyone holding or evaluating a note for sale.
How recovery works without collateral
If an unsecured borrower defaults, the holder must:
- Sue the borrower and obtain a money judgment, and
- Enforce that judgment — garnishing wages, levying bank accounts, or placing a judgment lien on any property the borrower owns.
This process is slow, costly, and uncertain. If the borrower has few assets, files for bankruptcy, or is hard to locate, the holder may recover little or nothing. By contrast, a secured holder can move against a known, valuable asset.
Where unsecured notes appear
Unsecured notes are common in personal and business lending, intra-family loans, and short-term advances. In real estate, an unsecured note may arise when a seller carries back a small portion of the price without recording a lien, or when a second-position arrangement is documented but never properly secured. A business note is often unsecured or only lightly secured.
Why it matters when you sell a note
Most serious note buyers either decline unsecured notes outright or pay a deep discount that reflects the elevated risk of non-collection. With no collateral cushion, value depends almost entirely on the borrower's creditworthiness, income stability, and willingness to pay — all of which are harder to verify and easier to lose. If you hold an unsecured note and want a stronger price, the best move is often to secure it: ask the borrower to grant and record a lien on real estate or another asset, converting it into a secured note. Absent that, expect modest offers and a smaller pool of interested buyers.
Example
A seller carries back $30,000 of a home's purchase price on an unsecured note while a bank holds the recorded first mortgage. A year later the seller tries to sell that $30,000 note. Because nothing is pledged — and the bank's lien would absorb the property's value in any case — a note buyer treats the note as collection-risk only and offers a steep discount. Had the seller instead recorded a second lien against the home, the note would be secured (though junior) and worth more.
This entry is general information, not legal advice. Judgment enforcement, collection limits, and bankruptcy treatment of unsecured debt vary by state and federal law; consult a qualified attorney.