Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Mortgage Good Faith Estimates - Explained

by Ben Afzal

How to understand these, and save money (sometimes enough to buy a car!)

A Good Faith Estimate (GFE) is something that you are to receive within 3 days of a mortgage application. These are standard forms, so they are intended to be used to compare different offers (or quotes) from different lenders or brokers.

The good faith estimate lists an estimate of what the total closing costs will be to get your mortgage. It is a long list, and the charges can be confusing.

The key thing to remember is that it is only an estimate. Your final closing costs may be different - sometimes very different.

These quick explanations will help you understand many of these closing costs, and how you can save on them. Keep in mind that some lenders or brokers add their own custom fees to the good faith estimate.

The fees on a good faith mortgage estimate come in these basic categories:

Loan fees Fees to be paid in advance Reserves Title charges Government charges Additional charges The following is a list of the typical charges, with advice on how to lower this if you can. Each charge starts with a number - the same number is the number of the charge on your good faith estimate. This makes it easier to find the charges you are looking for on your good faith estimate.

ITEMS PAYABLE IN CONNECTION WITH LOAN:

801 - Loan Origination Fee This fee is a charge for originating or creating the loan

802 - Loan Discount This is an upfront charge paid to the lender to get a lower mortgage rate - same as "buying the rate down"

803 - Appraisal Fee This is the cost of the independent appraisal. It is usually paid by the buyer

804 - Credit Report This is the cost of the credit report

805 - Lender's Inspection Fee This is the lender's cost of inspecting a property - some may double check the appraisal provided by an independent appraiser

808 - Mortgage Broker Fee This is the upfront charge that a mortgage broker charges. Brokers can also earn a "rebate" from the lender which is not listed here

809 - Tax Related Service Fee Lender fee, usually small, for handling tax related matters

810 - Processing Fee This is the charge for processing the loan - collecting your application, running credit, collecting pay stubs, bank statements, ordering appraisal, title, etc.

811 - Underwriting Fee This is the cost of the loan underwriter (approver)

812 - Wire Transfer Fee This is the cost of wiring the money around, which is usually done by escrow ITEMS REQUIRED BY LENDER TO BE PAID IN ADVANCE

901 - Interest for days X $ per day This is your prepaid interest for your mortgage loan

902 - Mortgage Insurance Premium This is the prepaid mortgage insurance premium, if you have one. This is the insurance premium some lenders charge for loans with little equity

903 - Hazard Insurance Premium This is your home's hazard insurance being prepaid

905 - VA Funding Fee This is the Veterans Administration funding fee, which is something you will not incur unless you go through a VA program RESERVES DEPOSITED WITH LENDER

1001 - Hazard Insurance Premiums months @ $ per month This is any prepayment of your future hazard insurance expense

1002 - Mortgage Ins. Premium Reserves months @ $ per month This is any prepayment of your future mortgage insurance expense

1003 - School Tax months @ $ per month This is any prepayment of your future school tax expense

1004 - Taxes and Assessment Reserves months @ $ per month This is any prepayment of your future tax expenses, such as property taxes

1005 - Flood Insurance Reserves months @ $ per month months This is any prepayment of your future flood insurance expense TITLE CHARGES:

1101 - Closing or Escrow Fee This is the cost of escrow. This is the service of a neutral party that actually handles the money between all the different parties in a real estate transaction, including: the lender, the buyer, the seller, the agents, notary, etc. This is often times done by the "Title Company" - a related entity in the same office that provides title insurance

1105 - Document Preparation Fee This is the charge for preparing the loan documents. Lenders often email the loan documents to the escrow company, which in turn prints them out and reviews them before signing

1106 - Notary Fees This is the cost of the notary. This is to have all of the legal documents surrounding this transaction notarized

1107 - Attorney Fees Any legal charges

1108 - Title Insurance This is the cost of insuring the title of the property. If there is a question about title (who really owned the property), after the transaction is done then this insurance protects the lender from future problems 1200 GOVERNMENT RECORDING & TRANSFER CHARGES

1201 - Recording Fees This is the cost of updating relevant government records

1202 - City/County Tax/Stamps Unavoidable government charge

1203 - State Tax/Stamps Unavoidable government charge 1300 ADDITIONAL SETTLEMENT CHARGES:

1302 - Pest Inspection This is the cost of the pest inspector. Their purpose is to document the state of the property that the lender is making the loan on

Others charges These can be additional charges that change within different loan sources

Pay particular attention to these charges, but they can also be listed in other sections Saving on your expenses

The good faith mortgage estimate expenses are in three different categories:

Fixed - government charges Slightly variable but small - escrow, notary, pest inspector, appraiser Highly variable - loan fees The biggest expenses are usually in the loan fee section. This is where you need to focus to try to get a good deal.

Compare the good faith estimates you receive from different lenders. Keep in mind that these good faith estimate's are only estimates. They can change, and sometimes become unpleasant last minute surprises.

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