Good Faith Estimate
Good Faith Estimate - A document detailing a list of charges that the
borrower will likely be required to pay at closing. The lender must
supply this estimate within three days after application is made.
The reason it's called a good faith estimate is
because it exactly that - an estimate of the charges that will be on
the settlement statement when you close. Although its an estimate a
good broker will be pretty close providing there are not last minute
collections or anything else that might show up on your credit report
that need to be paid off.
Fees checked as Pre Paid Finaces Charges (PFC)
will affect the final APR on your mortgage.
Many consumers get confused and believe that the
Good Faith Estimate is an actual approval. This estimate is one of the
very first steps in the process and is not an approval from your lender.
When comparing several Good Faith Estimates from
different lenders, pay close attention to items with extraordinary high
or exceptionally low estimate amounts. Some unscrupulous loan officers
purposely omit certain costs to entice home buyers.
The Good Faith Estimate or GFE is accompanied
inmostcases by the Truth in Lending statement, or TIL, which estimates
the APR.
It is important to note that Final Settlemet Costs
are not knownwith certainty until the closing, upon receipt of the fial
HUD-1
It is a federal law that your Good Faith Estimate
is sent to you within 3 days of applying for a loan. This only means it
has to be sent within 3 days, not received.
The rate and charges on GFE may very from lender
to lender, it is often a good idea to review the GFE along with the
Truth N Lendings. One lenders name for a fee may not be the same.
Good faith estimate - An estimate of all closing
fees including pre-paid and escrow items as well as lender charges;
must be given to the borrower within three days after submission of a
loan application.
The lined items on the GFE have numbers
corresponding to the items on the HUD1 Settlement Statements, which is
completed by the closing agent at the settlement. A copy of the HUD1
and HUD1A are provided for both the buyer and the seller. The costs on
the HUD-1 are actual costs, since the actual figures are now available,
as oppose to the estimated costs on the Good Faith Estimate provided by
the broker in the initial stage of the loan application.
When you do compare Good Faith Estimates with
other offers you have received it is important to compare items that
the broker/lender has influence and control over. Line items 900 thru
1200 are often not known in fact until a title company has ordered
title history on the property and all interest, insurance, and taxes
are thoroughly researched. The loan officer will often attempt to get
an estimate of these items generically, but the final itemization of
these fees will differ at the closing table.
A good faith estimate will have 4 columns after
the dollar amounts listed for each item. The first column is PFC. This
means Prepaid Finance Charges and these items affect APR. The next
column is an S which means Seller paid (the seller is paying for these
items). The next column is an F which means FHA allowable. The last
column is POC which stands for Paid Outside of Close. This simply means
that the item has already been paid for before closing. An appraisal
fee and homeowners insurance premium are 2 typical fees that are paid
for upfront outside of close.
Line 911 is the pre-paid interest charge. This
number varies on the time of month your loan actually funds. Then it
charges interest on your loan from the day it funds until the last day
in the month.
The Good Faith Estimate is designed to give you
the ability to shop and compare the fees of one loan to the fees of the
next, so you can make an informed decision based on the cost of the
loan.
Required by federal law, a Good Faith Estimate
(GFE) is a written list of the estimated closing costs associated with
a mortgage transaction, including the lender's charges along with the
local closing agent's charges and fees. It also includes estimated
amounts for real estate property tax and homeowner's insurance.
The GFE by itself is not the best way to compare
loan programs. You will need to look at the TIL or Truth in Lending to
make a good comparison of the different loan programs you are looking
into. The TIL calculates the true cost of your loan because it factors
in other fees along with the interest rate.
The line item numbers on the good faith estimate
should correspond woth with the item numbers on the Hud1 settlement
statement you receive at closing.
Always be sure to get a copy of the good faith
estimate before you proceed with the mortgage professional you have
chosen.
Fees for some standard items, such as appraisal,
credit report and title insurance should be almost the same at every
lender. The same goes for payments to local governments, such as
documentation stamps and recording fees.
A bank or mortgage company may be willing to drop some of the fees if
you opt out of a service. For instance, they may overnight documents
back and forth for faster approval. If you are not in a hurry, you can
ask that the documents be sent by regular mail and the overnight
charges be dropped.
Watch out for "junk fees" or additional charges. Most mortgage programs
include them, but you should be able to negotiate them down or
eliminate them.
Certain fees listed on a Good Faith Estimate are
used to calculate your Annual Percentage Rate(APR). These fees are
added with the regular interest payments to come up with a total cost.
This total is then converted to a percentage(APR) and is considered to
be the true cost of borrowing money to purchase or refinance a home.
Be sure to question any loan agent who lists very
few fees on the Good Faith Estimate. Some less than ethical loan agents
will not show many fees on the initial Good Faith Estimate. Borrowers
think they are getting a loan with very few fees only to be surprised
when they see the final closing statement.
Understanding good faith estimates
When you apply for a mortgage, the lender is required to give you a
standard form called the good faith estimate of closing costs, the
operative word being "estimate."
The good faith estimate is divided into sections of similar fees, each
denoted by a range of numbers: the 800s, 900s, 1000s, 1100s, 1200s and
1300s. For comparison-shopping, the most important fees are the ones
listed in the 800s. Most of these items are controlled by the lender or
broker, so the estimates should be accurate. A few of the items in the
800 series are charged by third parties, and the lender shouldn't be
far off in those estimates.
The lender or broker has direct control over origination and discount
points and fees (801 and 802) and administrative, underwriting,
processing, funding, document prep, wire transfer and other fees (810
and higher).
Third-party fees in the 800s include the appraisal, credit report,
inspection, mortgage insurance application, assumption, tax service and
flood certification. These fees are supposed to be passed along to you
without markup. Some national mortgage lenders own subsidiaries that
perform these functions, so they have a good handle on what the costs
will be. You should expect smaller lenders and brokers to estimate
these fees fairly accurately, even though they don't own subsidiaries
that offer the services.
Fees in the 1300 series -- for surveys and pest inspections -- should
be easy for lenders to estimate accurately, too.
The 900s and 1000s cover prepaid items -- mortgage, hazard and flood
insurance premiums, mortgage interest and taxes that must be paid up
front or deposited in an escrow account.
The 1100s comprise title charges: title insurance premiums, settlement
or escrow fees, attorney and notary fees.
Items in the 1200 series consist of government charges such as city and
county tax stamps and recording fees.
All the charges from the 900 series to the 1200 series are difficult to
estimate. Some of the prepaid amounts vary depending on the date of
closing: You would have to prepay a full month's interest if you closed
on the first of the month, but not if you closed on the last day of the
month.
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