Mortgage borrower who grants a security interest in property and remains responsible for repayment, maintenance, taxes, and other loan obligations.
A mortgagor is the borrower in a mortgage transaction. The mortgagor receives the loan proceeds and grants a security interest in the property to support repayment.
The term matters because mortgage documents often use mortgagor instead of simply saying borrower or homeowner. If a reader does not map the role correctly, the legal and financial obligations in the mortgage can become confusing.
The mortgagor keeps possession and economic use of the property while the loan is performing, but does so subject to the mortgage obligations.
| Role | What the party typically does |
| — | — |
| Mortgagor | Borrows the money, grants the mortgage interest, makes payments, maintains the property |
| Mortgagee | Provides or holds the secured loan claim and may enforce the mortgage after default |
The mortgagor usually remains responsible for repayment, property taxes, insurance, and maintenance standards required by the loan documents.
A homebuyer borrows money to purchase a house and signs a mortgage agreement. In that contract, the buyer is the mortgagor because the buyer is the party granting the mortgage interest in the home as collateral.
The similar wording causes confusion. The mortgagor is the borrower. The Mortgagee is the lender or secured party.
The mortgagor typically retains ownership and use rights while the loan is current, subject to the mortgage terms and lien structure.
Mortgagee: The lender or secured party on the other side of the mortgage.
Foreclosure: Key enforcement process if the mortgagor defaults.
Collateral: The property interest supporting the debt.
Equity: The mortgagor’s residual ownership value after debt is considered.
Mortgage Debt: The liability the mortgagor is trying to repay.