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If the loan you requested is authorized by the lender, on the terms you asked for, a Loan Estimate must be returned to you in 3 business days. However, if the lender decides that the loan is not approved, they do not need to supply the Loan Estimate form. In addition, if you withdraw the mortgage application within the 3-day period, they do not have to supply the Loan Estimate. Bottom line — if a loan is approved and the lender does not provide the Loan Estimate in 3 business days, the lender is not remaining compliant with TRID Regulation Z.
Regulations and disclosures for home mortgages and most other real-estate related loans do not apply to reverse mortgages, home-equity line of credit loans (HELOCs), or mobile home loans. Disclosures for these loan types require lenders to continue use of the Good Faith Estimate, Truth-In-Lending Disclosure and the HUD-1 form. In addition, the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure forms used for home mortgages are not required for housing assistance loans. These have separate regulations and forms; ask your lender for regulations, declarations and explanatory material.
Laws set under the TILA- RESPA Integrated Disclosure Act - TRID - specify the details that lenders MUST supply to customers making an application for a real estate loan. Since Oct 1, 2015 loan providers are required to return two disclosures - the Loan Estimate and the Closing Disclosure. The Loan Estimate is, as the title suggests, an estimate that covers the key costs, risks and features of the proposed loan. When the lender approves a loan, the Loan Estimate must be returned to the consumer in three business days. (See related Video-Genius video on how business days are defined.) The Closing Disclosure applies if the loan process moves forward. This form covers the key costs of the loan transaction. It must be provide to the borrower a minimum of 3 business days prior to the final loan consummation.