Loan structure that lets the lender pursue the borrower beyond the collateral if sale proceeds do not fully repay the debt.
A recourse loan is a loan structure that allows the lender to pursue the borrower for any unpaid balance that remains after the collateral is liquidated.
Recourse matters because losing the collateral does not necessarily end the borrower’s liability. That distinction drives risk in mortgages, commercial loans, and other secured lending where collateral value may fall short of the debt balance.
The lender first applies the collateral proceeds against the unpaid loan balance. If a shortfall remains and the loan is recourse, the lender may use other legal remedies against the borrower, subject to the contract and governing law.
| Loan structure | Lender recovery after collateral sale | Borrower exposure |
| — | — | — |
| Recourse loan | Collateral plus possible claim against borrower | Borrower may still owe the shortfall |
| Non-recourse loan | Collateral only, except limited carve-outs | Borrower is usually protected beyond the collateral |
Recourse can be full or limited. Some agreements give the lender broad rights against the borrower, while others allow only specific additional claims.
A borrower owes $300,000 on a secured property loan. The lender forecloses and recovers only $255,000 after sale costs. If the loan is recourse and local law allows it, the lender may still pursue the borrower for the remaining deficiency instead of absorbing the full loss.
Many recourse loans are secured by collateral, but the important extra feature is that the lender may go beyond the collateral if the sale does not fully cover the debt.
Actual recovery still depends on the loan documents, anti-deficiency rules, bankruptcy limits, and whether the borrower has reachable assets or income.
Non-Recourse Loan: Contrasting structure where recovery is generally limited to the collateral.
Deficiency Judgment: Court mechanism often used to pursue the unpaid shortfall on a recourse loan.
Collateral: Asset pledged to secure the loan before any broader borrower claim is considered.
Default: Contract breach that can trigger lender enforcement rights.