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You may have recently closed your real estate transaction and now
receive a
package of disclosure documents from your lender. What should you do
with
these documents? Do you need to sign them and return them to the
lender?
In most cases, these documents are duplicates of those forms which you
already received at your closing. Lenders may be required to send you
a
duplicate set of some disclosure documents after the closing, just to
be
certain that you have received all the disclosures required by law.
You may
receive several disclosure documents such as an "Appraisal Notice," a
"Private Mortgage Insurance Disclosure," a "Transfer of Servicing
Disclosure
Statement," a final "Truth in Lending Disclosure Statement," and a
final
"Good Faith Estimate of Settlement Costs."
The "Appraisal Notice" will notify you that you have the right to
receive a
copy of the appraisal report. The "Private Mortgage Insurance
Disclosure"
will explain to you the benefits of private mortgage insurance, which
typically allows the lender to offer you loan programs which require a
lower
down payment than would otherwise be required. This disclosure will
explain
to you the difference between "Traditional Mortgage Insurance" (MI)
and
"Lender Paid Mortgage Insurance." The "Transfer of Servicing
Disclosure
Statement" will explain that your lender may have the right to
transfer your
loan payments to another lender. The transfer practices and
requirements
will be explained in this notice.
A final "Truth In Lending Disclosure Statement" may be sent to you,
which
will state the annual percentage rate of your loan, the finance
charge, the
amount finances, and the total of payments. The final "Good Faith
Estimate
of Settlement Costs" will list the final closing expenses and
settlement
charge which you incurred in your loan and property purchase. These
will
include the appraisal fee, the credit report fee, tax related service
fees,
underwriting fee, yield spread premium to the mortgage broker, courier
fee,
flood certification fee, processing fee, wiring fee, prorated
interest,
mortgage insurance premium, hazard insurance premium, city tax escrow
fee,
settlement or closing fees, document preparation fee, title insurance
fee,
lenders title insurance fee, recording fee, city and tax stamps, if
applicable.
Compare these documents with the disclosure documents you received at
the
closing. Note which documents contain the final closing figures. Be
sure to
ask any questions you might have and be sure you are clear as to your
payment
due dates.
Keep these documents in a safe place. You will need to refer to them
when
preparing your tax returns or in correspondence with your lender or
insurance
agent. |
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