Browse Credit and Lending

Recovery Rate

Percentage of a defaulted exposure that is ultimately recovered through collections, collateral proceeds, restructuring, or other workout actions.

The recovery rate is the percentage of a defaulted loan or other credit exposure that is ultimately recovered. It measures how much value a lender, investor, or workout process manages to recapture after a borrower has already failed to perform.

Why It Matters

Recovery rate matters because credit loss is not only about whether a borrower defaults. It also depends on how much can still be recovered afterward through collections, collateral liquidation, restructuring, or other workout actions.

How It Works in Finance Practice

The basic logic is:

$$ \text{Recovery Rate} = \frac{\text{Recovered Amount}}{\text{Defaulted Amount}} $$

Higher recovery rates reduce realized loss severity. Lower recovery rates mean more of the defaulted exposure turns into economic loss.

| Metric | What it captures |

| — | — |

| Default Rate | How much of a portfolio enters default |

| Recovery Rate | How much value is recovered after default |

| Net Charge-Off | Realized loss amount after recoveries are considered |

Practical Example

A lender has a $100,000 defaulted loan and eventually recovers $40,000 through collections and collateral proceeds. The recovery rate is 40%. The remaining unpaid portion contributes to realized credit loss.

Recovery rate is not the same as cure rate

A cure rate focuses on loans returning to current status before full failure. Recovery rate focuses on value recaptured after default or severe nonperformance has already occurred.

Recovery rate and loss severity move in opposite directions

If recovery rate goes up, realized loss severity usually goes down, all else equal.

  • Default Rate: Measures how much of the portfolio has entered default.

  • Net Charge-Off: Dollar-loss measure after recoveries are netted against charge-offs.

  • Charge-Off Rate: Portfolio-loss metric often analyzed alongside recovery performance.

  • Debt Recovery: Collection and workout activity that can improve recovery results.

FAQs

Why can two lenders have the same default rate but different outcomes?

Because recovery rates can differ sharply depending on collateral quality, legal process, servicing effectiveness, and workout strategy.

Does a high recovery rate mean there was no credit problem?

No. It only means a larger share of value was recovered after default. The default still happened.

What usually drives recovery rate higher?

Stronger collateral, faster resolution, better documentation, and more effective workout or collection processes usually support higher recovery rates.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026