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The mortgage Loan Estimate includes two lists of services involved in the loan process: services you CANNOT shop, and services you CAN shop. See the other video in this series on "can shop." The Cannot Shop list covers fees and costs for outside parties (not the lender themselves). This list may include: Tax status research on the property Tax monitoring on property-tax payments Appraisal, which gives the lender a reliable value for the property Credit Reporting on the borrower. Flood Risk fees Flood Zone Monitoring Fees for these services in the Loan Estimate and in the final Loan Disclosure must match. There is ZERO tolerance for change on these items under lender compliance regulations.
This video explains the Loan Costs section of the mortgage Loan Estimate form. Key terms for which figures are provided include: Closing Costs: the set of fees involved in transferring title of the property to the buyer. Origination Charges: fees the lender collects for the mortgage process. These may include fees for handling the application itself, as well as "Origination Fees" — paid by the lender to a party that originates your loan, such as a mortgage broker. Points: essentially, a form of prepaid interest. Points are paid at time of the loan to lower the interest rate of the loan. Points may be tax deductible. Underwriting: fees charged by the lender to evaluate loan risks, based on the transaction and the borrowers financial attributes. The Loan Costs section is usually found on Page 2 of the Loan Estimate.
Lenders provide a Loan Estimate form within 3 business days of application for an approved loan. This form documents the terms, projected payment, costs and other details. These definitions may be helpful in interpretation: Loan Amount: total dollars borrowed, which is not the same as total borrowing cost. Interest Rate: cost you will pay each year to borrow, converted to a percentage rate. Not quite the same thing as: APR (Annual Percentage Rate): this includes interest rate, points (if used), mortgage broker fees, and other charges you pay to get the loan. Monthly Principal & Interest: payment amounts that go to reducing loan principal, and to paying interest, each month. (Mortgage insurance and escrow payments are not included here.) Projected Payments: approximate payment amounts over the years, with the major components such as principal, interest, mortgage insurance, escrow and assessment broken out. Estimated Closing Costs: specific costs to close, detailed. These are directly loan-related costs. Estimated Cash to Close: sum of estimate, plus any other known costs, to provide the total cash needed at loan close.
A mortgage Loan Estimate is just that — an estimate. Your actual loan costs might be higher or lower than the estimate, within certain legally-specified limits for some items, and without defined limits for others. Items with a 10% change limit include: Charges for recording services 3rd-party services on the list provided by the lender Items which might change without legally-defined tolerances: Prepaid Interest Property Insurance Premiums Escrow or Reserve Deposits Items with ZERO tolerance, that should not change: Transfer taxes Fees paid to the lender Fees paid to a mortgage broker, or to affiliates of the lender or the broker. Fees paid to any 3rd parties on the "CAN NOT SHOP" list provided on the Loan Estimate. Compare the Loan Estimate and the Closing Disclosure before loan consummation.