Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 23— - FARM CREDIT SYSTEM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO TWO OR MORE CLASSES OF INSTITUTIONS OF THE SYSTEM › Part Part C— - Rights of Borrowers; Loan Restructuring › § 2202a
Requires qualified lenders who make farm or aquatic loans to offer and consider ways to change loan terms when a borrower can’t pay. An application for restructuring is a written request on the lender’s form with a plan and supporting financial information. “Cost of foreclosure” means the lender’s losses and costs if it tries to seize and sell collateral instead of working with the borrower. A “distressed loan” is one the borrower can’t pay and shows bad financial signs, missed payments, or weak collateral. A “foreclosure proceeding” is any legal step to take collateral to collect a nonperforming loan. “Loan” means loans for farmers, ranchers, and aquatic producers, but loans marked for sale to a secondary market after February 10, 1996 are excluded unless they aren’t sold within 180 days. “Qualified lender” is the Farm Credit System institutions that make these loans. “Restructure” means changing payment schedules, deferring payments, forgiving some debt, or similar changes to make the borrower viable. When a lender finds a loan is distressed, it must tell the borrower in writing that restructuring may be an option and give the lender’s policy and forms. The lender must also offer a chance to meet in person. At least 45 days before starting foreclosure, the lender must notify the borrower and review the loan for restructuring. The lender cannot foreclose while it is still considering a restructuring request. The choice to restructure must weigh whether restructuring would cost the lender no more than foreclosure and whether the borrower can repay under new terms. If restructuring costs no more than foreclosure, the lender must follow the plan. If there are multiple options, the lender must pick the one that costs least. Each bank board had to adopt a policy within 60 days after January 6, 1988 and send it to the Farm Credit Administration, which can order compliance. Lenders may still act quickly if collateral is in danger. Loans distressed before January 6, 1988 that are already being negotiated are not subject to the 45-day and meeting rules. Farm Credit Banks may help associations with restructurings on request.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
12 U.S.C. § 2202a
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73