Can a 2nd Trust Deed Be Stripped in Bankruptcy? The Facts

Not Legal Advice: This is educational information about how bankruptcy law treats 2nd trust deeds. We’re not bankruptcy attorneys. If you’re considering bankruptcy or facing foreclosure, consult a licensed bankruptcy attorney in California for advice specific to your situation.

Understanding how 2nd trust deeds are treated in bankruptcy matters — both for borrowers considering bankruptcy and for lenders weighing the risk of subordinate liens.

The short answer: Yes, a 2nd trust deed can sometimes be stripped in Chapter 13. No, it cannot be stripped in Chapter 7. And specific conditions must be met for Chapter 13 lien stripping to apply.

What “Lien Stripping” Means

Lien stripping is a bankruptcy procedure where a court removes a junior lien (like a 2nd trust deed) from a property, converting it from secured debt to unsecured debt. The lender loses claim to the property and becomes an unsecured creditor.

If you owe $100K on a 2nd TD and the court strips the lien, the debt doesn’t disappear — it becomes unsecured. In Chapter 13, that unsecured portion gets paid through your repayment plan at whatever rate the court determines (often pennies on the dollar). In Chapter 7, most unsecured debt gets discharged entirely.

For the 2nd TD lender, this is catastrophic. They go from secured (backed by real estate) to unsecured (backed by nothing). Recovery drops from high probability to near zero.

When a 2nd Trust Deed Can Be Stripped

Chapter 13 is reorganization bankruptcy with a 3–5 year repayment plan. Under the “cramdown” doctrine, a trustee can propose removing junior liens if they’re not supported by equity.

The Strip Scenario

Home worth $400,000. First mortgage $380,000. 2nd trust deed $100,000. Combined liens ($480K) exceed property value ($400K). The 2nd TD is completely underwater — zero equity to support it. In Chapter 13, the court can strip the lien entirely.

Three conditions must all be met:

Primary Residence
Owner-occupied home only. Investment properties and second homes are excluded — federal law restriction.
Wholly Unsecured
Property value must be less than the first mortgage balance. Zero equity for the junior lien to attach to.
Court Approval
The debtor proposes the plan including the lien strip. Bankruptcy judge must agree it’s lawful use of Chapter 13.

The Reality of Lien Stripping

When do 2nd trust deeds actually get stripped? Typically in two situations:

2008 Aftermath

When property values crashed, many homeowners went deeply underwater. A $500K home from 2006 was worth $350K in 2009. First mortgage $400K still owed. 2nd TD of $50K–$100K became unsecured. Lien stripping became common — a lifeline for distressed homeowners.

San Diego experienced this acutely. The 2008–2012 downturn wiped out billions in home equity.

First Mortgage Exceeds Value

Even in normal markets: home purchased at $600K, drops to $550K (market shift, defects), first mortgage stays $580K. A new 2nd TD of $50K would be wholly unsecured. If the owner files Chapter 13, that 2nd TD can be stripped.

In today’s 2026 San Diego market, this is less common because values have appreciated. Most properties have positive equity. But it’s still legally possible.

Primary Residence Only

Lien stripping in Chapter 13 only applies to primary residences. If the property is an investment property or second home, lien stripping is not available — even if the lien is wholly unsecured.

This is a federal law protection enacted in 2005, designed to protect residential debtors while limiting Chapter 13 lien stripping abuse on investment properties.

For private lenders: a 2nd trust deed on a rental property cannot be stripped via Chapter 13. The property is investment-grade, so the bankruptcy court doesn’t have jurisdiction to modify the lien. This is why many private lenders prefer investment property 2nd trust deeds.

Why Liquidation Bankruptcy Doesn’t Strip Liens

Chapter 7 is liquidation bankruptcy. The trustee sells your assets to pay creditors. Unsecured debts (credit cards, medical bills) are discharged. Secured debts are handled differently.

If you file Chapter 7 and have a 2nd trust deed on your primary residence, the lien cannot be stripped. It survives the bankruptcy. The 2nd TD holder’s lien remains valid and enforceable. If you retain the property after discharge, you’re still liable for the 2nd TD.

The only way a junior lien gets eliminated in Chapter 7 is if the property is sold and proceeds don’t cover it — that’s economics, not lien stripping. For 2nd trust deed lenders, this is actually protective: a Chapter 7 filing doesn’t eliminate the lien. Collateral remains.

What This Means in Practice

ScenarioChapter 7Chapter 13
Primary Residence, Equity Above FirstLien survivesLien survives
Primary Residence, Wholly UnderwaterLien survivesLien may be stripped
Investment Property, Any Equity LevelLien survivesLien survives
Second Home, Any Equity LevelLien survivesLien survives

If You’re Considering Bankruptcy

Chapter 13 Possibility

If your primary residence is underwater (property value below first mortgage), Chapter 13 may allow lien stripping. Propose a plan eliminating the 2nd TD and repay what you can afford over 3–5 years.

Chapter 7 Reality

Won’t eliminate the lien. The 2nd TD survives and can be enforced after bankruptcy discharge.

Investment Property

Neither Chapter 7 nor Chapter 13 strips the lien on investment properties. Those liens stay regardless of bankruptcy type.

Talk to a Pro

Consult a bankruptcy attorney to evaluate your specific situation. Don’t assume a 2nd TD will be eliminated — it might not be.

Managing Lien Stripping Risk

At EZ Loans, we’re aware of lien stripping risk and price for it. We analyze property values conservatively. We focus on properties with substantial equity — typically 50%+ cushion above the first mortgage. This protects us even if a borrower files Chapter 13 and the property declines.

We also prefer investment properties because lien stripping doesn’t apply. A borrower filing bankruptcy is less likely to own rental properties — those are typically owned by people with stronger financial positions.

For lenders, understanding bankruptcy lien stripping is critical. It’s a real risk, but manageable through conservative underwriting and strong equity positions.

Have Questions About Your Situation?

A 15-minute conversation can clarify whether a 2nd trust deed is the right tool for your goals.

Talk to Erik