Right to Cure a Default in Idaho
In Idaho, borrowers facing default on a mortgage, vehicle loan, or retail installment contract may have statutory rights to cure -- bring the account current and stop acceleration or repossession -- before the creditor can complete foreclosure or sale.
This page covers four distinct cure regimes that apply in Idaho:
- Mortgage cure / reinstatement under Idaho real property law.
- Retail installment contract cure (vehicles, appliances, furniture).
- UCC Article 9 default and cure for personal-property-secured loans.
- Bankruptcy cure under 11 U.S.C. Section 1322(b)(5), which overrides state-law cure limits in Chapter 13.
Idaho Mortgage Reinstatement and Cure
Idaho Code Section 45-1506 permits reinstatement up to 115 days after notice of default by paying arrearages.
Mortgage cure typically requires the borrower to pay:
- All past-due principal and interest (arrearages).
- Late fees and, where allowed, attorney fees and foreclosure costs.
- Corporate advances (force-placed insurance, escrow advances).
Cure amounts must be detailed in a reinstatement quote. Under federal Regulation X (12 CFR Section 1024.36), a borrower can request this information in writing and must receive a response within 30 business days.
See mortgage cure rights for the full framework.
Idaho Retail Installment Cure
Idaho Code Section 28-43-303 governs retail installment cure.
Retail installment contracts cover:
- Motor vehicle purchases (most common).
- Furniture and appliance purchases.
- Cosmetic, dental, and elective medical financing.
- Solar and home-improvement financed purchases.
Where Idaho law requires a cure notice, acceleration or repossession before that notice is issued (or before the cure window expires) creates a wrongful-repossession or UDAP claim. Damages can include the return of the collateral, statutory damages, and attorney fees.
Idaho UCC Article 9 Default and Cure
Idaho Code Title 28 codifies UCC-9.
UCC Article 9 sets the default-and-disposition rules for personal-property-secured loans (vehicles, equipment, inventory). Under UCC 9-611 through 9-614:
- The secured party must send reasonable notice of disposition before selling repossessed collateral.
- The notice must give the debtor an opportunity to redeem the collateral (UCC 9-623) by paying the full balance (not just arrears) plus costs.
- Any post-sale deficiency calculation depends on whether the disposition was commercially reasonable.
In consumer transactions, UCC 9-625 provides statutory damages for a non-compliant disposition equal to the credit service charge plus 10% of the principal. Many Idaho consumer defense strategies center on proving non-compliance with Article 9 to eliminate deficiency judgments.
Section 1322(b)(5) Mortgage Cure in Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
Where Idaho state-law cure fails -- because the acceleration has already occurred, the sale date is too close, or the creditor will not accept a reinstatement quote -- federal bankruptcy law provides a second path under 11 U.S.C. Section 1322(b)(5).
Under 1322(b)(5), a Chapter 13 plan may:
- Cure any default on a long-term debt (typically a mortgage) within a reasonable time.
- Maintain contractual payments on the debt going forward while the arrears are cured through the plan.
- Preserve the original maturity of the loan.
The 1322(c) proviso gives the Idaho debtor the right to cure a mortgage default "until such residence is sold at a foreclosure sale that is conducted in accordance with applicable nonbankruptcy law." This means that, as long as the Chapter 13 petition is filed before the foreclosure sale is completed under Idaho law, the plan can cure the default and reinstate the mortgage.
Cure Timeline in Idaho
The practical cure window in Idaho depends on the collateral:
- Mortgage: from first missed payment through foreclosure sale; state cure notice (if any) plus 1322(c) bankruptcy-cure window.
- Vehicle: state retail installment notice period (typically 14-30 days) plus pre-sale UCC 9-614 notice.
- Other secured: UCC Article 9 pre-disposition notice (typically 10 days of notification before sale).
Timing matters: once the state-law sale is complete, the cure right is gone. For mortgages, chapter 13 filing before the foreclosure sale is the last-ditch option.
See cure timeline.
Notice Requirements
Idaho cure notices must typically:
- Identify the amount required to cure (or a calculation).
- State the cure period (e.g., 20 days).
- State the consequences of failure to cure (acceleration, repossession, foreclosure).
- Be sent in writing, usually by certified mail to the borrower's last known address.
A deficient notice is a defense. See notice requirements.
Reinstatement vs. Cure
Idaho practice distinguishes reinstatement from cure:
- Reinstatement - bringing the account current and restoring it to non-default status. Typical in mortgage context.
- Cure - a broader statutory or contractual right to correct default, sometimes with a specific window and notice.
- Redemption - paying the full balance (not arrears) to prevent sale. A fallback if reinstatement is unavailable.
After-Cure Default in Idaho
If the Idaho borrower cures but defaults again, creditor's treatment depends on contract and state law:
- Mortgage: typically subject to new notice cycle, unless a prior court order bars subsequent cure.
- Vehicle RISA: under some state statutes, the borrower has only one statutory cure per contract year.
- UCC-9: no statutory limit on cure attempts, but practical leverage erodes.
See after-cure default.