If you’re a real estate investor—whether you own one vacation rental or a growing portfolio—the due-on-sale clause is something you need to understand. It lives in nearly every conventional mortgage, and while it rarely causes problems, misunderstanding it can create expensive surprises.
This guide covers what the clause actually says, when lenders enforce it, and how it specifically applies to short-term rental investors.
What Is the Due-on-Sale Clause?
A due-on-sale clause (sometimes called an acceleration clause) is standard language in most residential mortgage agreements. It gives the lender the right to demand immediate, full repayment of the outstanding loan balance if the property is sold, transferred, or conveyed without the lender’s written consent.
The clause exists to protect lenders. When they underwrite a loan, they evaluate the borrower’s creditworthiness, the property’s condition, and its intended use. If any of those fundamentals change—especially if the property changes hands—the lender wants the option to reassess or call the loan.
Here’s the key nuance: the clause gives the lender the right to accelerate the loan. It doesn’t mean they will. Whether a lender actually enforces the clause depends on the specific situation, current market conditions, and the lender’s policies.
The Garn-St. Germain Act: Important Protections
The Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 provides federal exemptions that prevent lenders from enforcing the due-on-sale clause in certain situations. These protected transfers include:
Transfers to a spouse or children — you can transfer property to a spouse (including through divorce) or to your children without triggering the clause.
Transfers to a living trust — you can transfer property to a revocable living trust where you remain the beneficiary. This is the most common estate planning structure for rental property owners.
Death of the borrower — if a property is inherited, the lender cannot enforce the due-on-sale clause against the heir.
Transfers resulting from divorce — property transfers as part of a divorce settlement are protected.
What’s not explicitly protected: transfers to an LLC, transfers to a business partner, or sales through a land contract where you retain the mortgage.
How Does This Affect Vacation Rental Investors?
Converting Your Property to a Short-Term Rental
Good news: simply converting a property you own from a primary residence or long-term rental to a vacation rental does not trigger the due-on-sale clause. You’re not selling or transferring the property—you’re changing how you use it.
However, some loan agreements include occupancy requirements or use restrictions. A conventional mortgage underwritten as a “primary residence” may have terms requiring owner occupancy for a specified period (typically one year). Converting to a full-time STR before that period ends could create a compliance issue separate from the due-on-sale clause.
Action step: Review your mortgage note’s occupancy clause, not just the due-on-sale clause. If your loan was written as a primary residence, understand the occupancy requirements before converting to an STR.
Transferring to an LLC
Many vacation rental owners want to hold their properties in an LLC for liability protection. This is where the due-on-sale clause becomes relevant.
Transferring property from your personal name to an LLC is technically a change in ownership—even if you’re the sole member. The Garn-St. Germain Act does not explicitly protect LLC transfers the way it protects trust transfers.
In practice, most lenders for 1-4 unit residential properties don’t actively monitor for or enforce the clause on LLC transfers. The property’s mortgage is still being paid, the property is still being maintained, and calling the loan would cost the lender money for minimal benefit. But “they probably won’t enforce it” is different from “they can’t enforce it.”
If you want to hold your vacation rental in an LLC, talk to a real estate attorney about:
- Using a land trust as an intermediary (transfer to trust, then assign beneficial interest to LLC)
- Commercial lending products that don’t have the same restrictions
- Your specific lender’s policies on entity transfers
Buying Investment Property with Conventional Financing
When you purchase a property specifically as a vacation rental investment, your lender will underwrite it as an investment property from the start. The due-on-sale clause still exists in the mortgage, but since the property was always intended as a rental, the use isn’t changing.
The clause becomes relevant if you later want to sell the property via owner financing, do a subject-to deal, or transfer it to a partner or business entity.
Subject-To Deals and Seller Financing
This is where the due-on-sale clause matters most for real estate investors. A “subject-to” deal—where you take over payments on the seller’s existing mortgage without formally assuming the loan—is a direct trigger for the clause. If the lender discovers the ownership transfer, they can call the loan.
Some investors do subject-to deals regularly and never have the clause enforced. Others have lost properties when lenders discovered the transfer. The risk is real, and the consequences can be severe. This isn’t an area to take shortcuts.
When Do Lenders Actually Enforce It?
Lenders are most likely to enforce the due-on-sale clause when:
Interest rates have risen significantly — if your mortgage is at 3.5% and current rates are 7%, calling the loan forces you to refinance at a much higher rate (or pay cash). The lender benefits from redeploying that capital at higher rates.
The property’s condition or use has deteriorated — if a transfer results in deferred maintenance, code violations, or use that increases risk (like converting a residential property to an illegal commercial operation), the lender has strong motivation to enforce.
Payments are missed or late — if the new owner (or the borrower in a subject-to deal) misses payments, the lender will investigate and may discover the unauthorized transfer, compounding the problem.
The transfer is discovered through a title search — lenders may find out about transfers when they review title documents, often triggered by insurance claims or property tax changes.
The Bottom Line for Vacation Rental Investors
For most vacation rental owners, the due-on-sale clause is something to be aware of but not something to lose sleep over. Converting your property to an STR doesn’t trigger it, and even LLC transfers rarely result in enforcement.
Where it matters: subject-to deals, seller financing arrangements, and any situation where the property changes hands without the lender’s knowledge. In those cases, understand the risk before proceeding and get legal advice specific to your situation.
If you’re evaluating whether a property makes sense as a vacation rental investment, the financing structure is just one piece of the puzzle. You also need to understand the local market, realistic revenue projections, and what professional management costs. Get a free income projection for any property to see the numbers before you commit.
Disclaimer: This article provides general educational information about real estate financing concepts. It is not legal or financial advice. Consult with a qualified real estate attorney and financial advisor for guidance specific to your situation.