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Home > Real Estate Glossary > The Transaction Process > Cancellation of Mortgage

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Cancellation of Mortgage

Last updated: 2025-09-23
  • The Transaction Process

A Cancellation of Mortgage is a legal document issued by a lender (like a bank or Pag-IBIG Fund) which officially declares that a mortgage loan has been paid in full. Its primary purpose is to formally extinguish the lender’s legal claim (lien) on your property, allowing you to remove the mortgage annotation from your title and prove to the world that you own your home free and clear.


How to Cancel a Real Estate Mortgage in the Philippines

To “cancel a mortgage” means to successfully complete the legal process of clearing your title after fully paying your home loan. Here is the step-by-step guide on how to remove a mortgage from your title in the Philippines:

  1. Complete Your Loan Payments: The process begins after you have made your final amortization payment.
  2. Secure Documents from Your Lender: Contact your bank or Pag-IBIG Fund and inform them that you have completed your payments. They will process your account closure and prepare the necessary documents. This is the main requirement for the cancellation. You will receive:
    • The original, notarized Deed of Cancellation of Real Estate Mortgage.
    • A Certificate of Full Payment.
    • The original Owner’s Duplicate Copy of your Title (TCT or CCT), which they have kept in their vault for the entire loan term.
  3. Go to the Registry of Deeds (RD): Take all the documents provided by your lender, along with your latest Real Property Tax Clearance and valid IDs, to the Registry of Deeds office that has jurisdiction over your property.
  4. Pay the Registration Fees: The RD will assess the fees required to process the cancellation.
  5. Receive Your Clean Title: After processing, which can take a few weeks, the RD will release your Owner’s Duplicate Title with the mortgage annotation officially cancelled. You are now the full, unencumbered owner of your property.

Why a Cancellation of Mortgage is Important

This document represents the ultimate freedom for a property owner and is vital for your investment.

It Gives You a “Clean Title”

A clean title, free from any liens or encumbrances like a mortgage annotation, is the most powerful proof of ownership. It proves to the world that you own your property outright and that no financial institution has any claim to it.

It Provides Full Control and Freedom

With the mortgage cancelled, you have absolute freedom to do what you want with your property. You can sell it, use it as collateral for a different purpose, or transfer it to your heirs without needing any approval from your former lender.

It is Essential for Future Sale

You cannot sell your property without first cancelling the mortgage. No buyer or their financing bank will proceed with a sale if the title still shows a lien from your original lender. Securing the Cancellation of Mortgage is a non-negotiable step to realize the full market value of your home in a future transaction.


How Much Does the Cancellation of Mortgage Cost?

While you’ve just finished paying a multi-million peso loan, there is one final set of costs to settle.

  • Registry of Deeds Fees: This is the primary cost. The fee for the cancellation of a mortgage at the Registry of Deeds in the Philippines is not a huge amount. It’s based on a graduated fee schedule, but for most standard residential properties, you can expect to pay between ₱1,000 to ₱5,000.
  • Miscellaneous Costs: You may need to pay for a new Tax Clearance (₱100-₱300) and other minor administrative fees.

It’s important to distinguish this from a car loan. The process for cancellation of a car mortgage is similar but is done at the Chattel Mortgage Registry and the fees are generally lower.


A Local Perspective in the Philippines

The cancellation of mortgage is a legal process handled by the Registry of Deeds (RD), a government office under the Land Registration Authority (LRA). This is a standard procedure nationwide.

For a homeowner who has just made their final loan payment here in Balagtas, Bulacan, their next step is a trip to the Registry of Deeds for Bulacan, located in Guiguinto. As of this afternoon, Tuesday, September 23, 2025, at 1:09 PM, they would join other homeowners in that office, submitting the documents from their bank to finally liberate their property title from its long-held encumbrance. It is a final, satisfying step in the homeownership journey.


Common Misconceptions

The biggest misconception is that the cancellation process is automatic after the final payment. This is not true. The lender will issue the documents, but it is typically the homeowner’s responsibility to take them to the Registry of Deeds and pay the fees to get the title cleaned. If you just keep the documents at home, the mortgage annotation will remain on your title indefinitely.

Another mistake is thinking there are no more costs involved. You will have to pay registration fees at the Registry of Deeds to process the cancellation. While not a huge amount, it is an expense you should budget for as you approach the end of your loan term.


Practical Tip from an Expert

Once you receive the cancellation documents and your original title from the bank or Pag-ibig, make high-quality photocopies or scanned copies of everything for your personal file before submitting the original documents to the Registry of Deeds. While the RD is a secure government agency, having your own copies provides a valuable backup and peace of mind during the processing period.

Real-World Example

The Reyes family has just made the final payment on their 20-year housing loan for their home in Balagtas, Bulacan. Their bank releases the original Owner’s Duplicate TCT and a signed Deed of Cancellation of Mortgage. Mr. Reyes takes these documents to the Registry of Deeds for Bulacan. He pays the registration fee of ₱2,200. Four weeks later, he receives a text message that his title is ready. When he gets it, he sees that the original mortgage annotation from 20 years ago has been stamped “CANCELLED,” and his family is finally the undisputed, debt-free owner of their home.

Related Terms
  • Real Estate Mortgage (REM): The original agreement that placed a lien on the property.
  • Registry of Deeds (RD): The government office where the cancellation is officially registered.
  • Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT): The legal document of ownership on which the mortgage was annotated and is now cancelled.
  • Annotation: The specific entry on the title that notes the mortgage; this is what gets cancelled.
  • Lien: A legal claim on a property, which is removed by the cancellation.

Internal Links:

  1. Registry of Deeds (RD): Link to any article defining the RD or LGU.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is the purpose of a cancellation of mortgage?

Its purpose is to legally and officially remove the lender’s claim (lien) on your property title after you have fully paid your home loan. This results in a “clean title.”

What does it mean to cancel a mortgage?

It means completing the formal process of paying off your home loan and having the mortgage annotation legally removed from your property title at the Registry of Deeds.

What is required for cancellation of a mortgage in the Philippines?

You will primarily need the notarized Deed of Cancellation of Mortgage and the Certificate of Full Payment from your lender, your original Owner’s Duplicate Title, and a current Real Property Tax Clearance.

What happens if you cancel a mortgage?

When you successfully cancel your mortgage, you become the full, unencumbered owner of your property. You have a “clean title,” which gives you the freedom to sell, transfer, or use the property as you wish without any bank involvement.

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