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By Nashville Indiana Title Company
Indiana Uses Mortgages, Not Deeds of Trust TL;DR: Indiana is a mortgage state, not a deed of trust state. If you're buying property in Brown County, you...
TL;DR: Indiana is a mortgage state, not a deed of trust state. If you're buying property in Brown County, your lender will use a mortgage — and that distinction affects how foreclosure works, who holds the title, and what your closing documents look like.
Every state chooses how to secure a home loan against real property, and the two main options are a mortgage or a deed of trust. They both do roughly the same thing: they give the lender a security interest in your property so that if you stop making payments, they have a legal path to recover their investment.
Indiana uses mortgages. If you're closing on a cabin outside Nashville or a wooded parcel near Bean Blossom this spring, you'll sign a mortgage — not a deed of trust.
The difference matters more than you'd think.
A mortgage is a two-party agreement. You (the borrower) and the lender. You sign a promissory note agreeing to repay the loan, and you sign a mortgage that pledges your property as collateral. Both documents get recorded — here in Brown County, that happens at the Recorder's Office right in the courthouse.
You hold the title to your property from the moment of closing. The lender has a lien on it, but the title is yours. That lien shows up during any future title search, and it stays there until you pay off the loan and the lender files a satisfaction of mortgage.
If something goes wrong and the lender needs to foreclose, Indiana requires judicial foreclosure. That means the lender has to file a lawsuit, go through the court system, and get a judge's approval. It's a longer process than what happens in deed-of-trust states, and it gives borrowers more legal protection along the way.
A deed of trust involves three parties: the borrower, the lender, and a neutral third party called a trustee. Instead of holding the title yourself, you technically transfer it to the trustee, who holds it until the loan is paid off.
The big practical difference? In deed-of-trust states, if a borrower defaults, the trustee can sell the property through a non-judicial foreclosure — no courtroom required. It's faster and less expensive for the lender.
States like California, Texas, and Tennessee use deeds of trust. Indiana doesn't. If you're relocating from one of those states to Brown County, your closing paperwork will look a little different from what you signed last time. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's mortgage guide is a solid resource if you want to dig deeper into how these instruments work at the federal level.
When you sit down to close on a property here — whether it's a cottage on South Van Buren or twenty acres of rolling hills past Gnaw Bone — you'll sign a mortgage document instead of a deed of trust. A few practical things flow from that:
You hold title immediately. From the moment your deed is recorded with the Brown County Recorder, the property is legally yours. The lender's mortgage creates a lien, not an ownership claim.
Foreclosure goes through the courts. If financial hardship ever hits, Indiana's judicial foreclosure process gives you time and legal recourse. A judge reviews everything before any sale can happen.
Your closing documents will include a mortgage (not a deed of trust). If you've bought property in a deed-of-trust state before, don't be confused when the paperwork looks different. Same concept, different legal vehicle.
The mortgage gets recorded publicly. Anyone doing a title search on your property in the future will see the lender's lien. When you pay off the loan, the lender files a release, and that gets recorded too.
A lot of people buying in Brown County are coming from Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Chicago — or sometimes from deed-of-trust states farther away. Remote workers choosing a quieter life near the state park. Retirees who fell in love with the fall colors and decided to stay permanently.
When they've bought property before in Texas or Colorado, they remember signing a deed of trust. So when they see "mortgage" on their Indiana closing documents, they wonder if something changed or if something's wrong.
Nothing's wrong. Indiana has been a mortgage state for a long time. Your lender and your title company both know what documents to prepare. It's just a different legal framework — one that, frankly, offers borrowers a bit more protection in a worst-case scenario.
Some states actually allow both instruments. Indiana keeps it straightforward — mortgages only. That simplicity is helpful when we're doing title searches on Brown County properties, especially older ones. We're looking at recorded mortgages, satisfactions, and releases going back through the chain of title. No confusion about whether a trustee deed was properly reconveyed or whether a deed of trust was released correctly.
For properties that have been in families for decades — and we see plenty of those in the hills around here — a clean, consistent recording system makes our job easier and your ownership clearer. When you close with us in Nashville, every lien, every mortgage, every satisfaction gets traced and verified before you ever pick up a pen.