What to Do If Your Mortgage Lender Seems Suspicious

Review Carefully
Review Carefully

What to Do If Your Mortgage Lender Seems Suspicious

If your mortgage lender seems suspicious, don’t send any more documents and for sure don’t send them any money. You can verify their license through the NMLS Consumer Access database, and contact them only through phone numbers or emails you find independently — not ones they gave you. If anything still feels wrong, report it to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the state’s mortgage regulator before taking any further action.

Common Warning Signs of a Suspicious Lender

Most mortgage fraud shares a few recognizable patterns. Trust your instincts if a lender does any of the following.

  • Pressures you to sign documents quickly or “before the deal expires”
  • Asks for upfront fees before a loan modification is finalized (illegal under federal law for foreclosure rescue services)
  • Contacts you only through personal email, text, or a number that doesn’t match their official listing
  • Requests payment via wire transfer, gift cards, or cryptocurrency
  • Offers guarantees no legitimate lender can make, like “100% approval” or “we can stop your foreclosure today”
  • Has no verifiable address, or their license doesn’t match the company name on your paperwork

Verify Before You Panic

A suspicious feeling isn’t the same as confirmed fraud. Before you escalate, take ten minutes to check the basics.

Confirm Their License

Every legitimate mortgage originator has a Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (NMLS) number. Search it on NMLS Consumer Access — if the name, address, or license status doesn’t match what you were told, that’s a real red flag, not a hunch.

Reach Out Independently

Never call the number on a suspicious email or text. Instead, look up your original loan documents or your servicer’s listing on the CFPB’s mortgage tools page and call that number directly to confirm whether the contact was legitimate.

The V.O.I.C.E. Check: A Quick Framework

When something about a lender interaction feels off, run it through this five-point filter before responding:

Letter

Question to Ask

Why It Matters

Verify

Does their license/NMLS number check out?

Confirms they’re who they say they are

Originate

Did you initiate contact, or did they reach out first?

Unsolicited outreach is the #1 fraud predictor

Insist

Are they pressuring urgency or secrecy?

Real lenders never demand instant decisions

Channel

Are they asking for wires, gift cards, or crypto?

No legitimate mortgage payment uses these

Escalate

If two or more flags trip, stop and report

Don’t wait for “proof” — patterns are enough

This isn’t an official industry term — it’s a simple mental checklist worth keeping handy, since fraud investigators consistently note that unsolicited contact combined with urgency is present in the overwhelming majority of mortgage scam cases.

Steps to Take Right Now

If you suspect something is wrong, work through these steps in order:

  1. Stop all payments and paperwork until you’ve verified the lender independently.
  2. Document everything — save emails, texts, call logs, and screenshots with dates and times.
  3. Contact your actual servicer using a number from a past statement, not from the suspicious contact.
  4. Freeze further action on any loan modification or refinance offer until verified.
  5. Report it to the appropriate agency (see table below).

Short version: don’t sign, don’t pay, don’t wire — verify first, escalate second.

Who to Report To

Different problems go to different agencies. Reporting to the wrong one just slows things down, so use this table to route your complaint correctly.

Situation

Where to Report

Contact

General lender/servicer complaint

CFPB

consumerfinance.gov or (855) 411-CFPB

Suspected scam or fraud

Local police + state Attorney General

Contact your local police or sheriff’s office and your state attorney general

Foreclosure rescue scam

State AG or HUD-approved counselor

Cut off communication with the scammer and file a complaint

Need help avoiding foreclosure

HOPE Hotline

(888) 995-HOPE, available 24/7

Elderly or disabled victim

Adult Protective Services

Contact your local adult protective services agency

State-licensed lender/broker issue

State mortgage regulator

Varies by state — check your state’s licensing agency

Before filing with the CFPB, it’s worth trying the lender directly first: the agency generally recommends contacting the company first, and escalates to a formal complaint only if the company is unresponsive or uncooperative. If you’ve already tried that and hit a wall, filing takes roughly 7–10 minutes online, or about 25–30 minutes by phone.

A Real-World Pattern to Watch For

One recurring scheme investigators flag repeatedly: a homeowner nearing foreclosure gets a call from a “loan modification specialist” who already seems to know details about their mortgage. The caller requests an upfront fee to “start the process” and tells the homeowner to stop talking to their actual servicer.

This exact combination — advance knowledge, upfront payment, and instructions to go silent — is illegal under federal mortgage assistance relief rules, since providers are barred from collecting fees for mortgage assistance before a modification agreement is actually finalized with the lender or servicer. If you hear anything resembling this script, it’s a scam, not a shortcut.

When to Bring in a Lawyer

Not every suspicious interaction needs an attorney, but a few situations warrant one immediately:

  • You’ve already signed documents you don’t fully understand
  • You’re facing imminent foreclosure or legal papers have been served
  • Money has already changed hands
  • A HUD-approved housing counselor tells you the issue is beyond their scope

Consulting an attorney or a HUD-approved housing counselor is a reasonable move any time you’re unsure whether an offer is legitimate — it costs little and can prevent a costly mistake.

The Bottom Line

Suspicion is a signal to slow down, not panic. Verify the lender’s identity independently, refuse pressure tactics and unusual payment requests, and route your complaint to the right agency — the CFPB for general issues, your state AG for suspected fraud, and HUD counselors if foreclosure is looming. Most mortgage fraud relies on speed and isolation; taking twenty minutes to check credentials defeats it almost every time.

This article provides general consumer information and is not legal advice.