New closing forms are designed to make home-buying less confusing and better protect home buyers.
Here’s what you need to know as a prospective homeowner from the new “Know Before You Owe” rule on October 3, 2015.
According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the U.S. government’s agency responsible for consumer protection related to the financial sector:
The most critical component of the new rule is an easier-to-understand closing document, known simply as the Closing Disclosure.
Under the new rule, home buyers will be given three business days before closing to review this critical document.
This added time will give you additional time to get all questions answered and better understand the mortgage terms and the costs involved.
Targeting Consumer Concerns
The new rule is designed to address several problems consumers have identified as hindering the closing process:
Inadequate document review time.
Gone will be the days when consumers first saw closing documents at the closing table and were expected to rush through the paperwork and sign without always understanding what they were signing.
Mistakes in closing documents.
In the past, errors found in documents at the closing table, even simple misspellings of names or forgetting to add spouses, have caused closing delays while the entire package was redone.
Under the new rule, these mistakes can be caught before the closing date.
Too much paperwork all at once.
A popular consumer complaint is that being bombarded by too much paperwork at the closing table leaves them feeling like they could have overlooked something important in the rush to sign.
Difficult to understand.
The new rule will allow consumers time to consult with experts to clarify terms to ensure a thorough understanding before the closing date. New documents will also be more straightforward.
Rule Not Designed to Delay Closing
Naturally, anything that provides additional time for review or revision raises the question of whether the home-buying process will cause a closing date to be put off.
In most cases, you won’t need to worry about delays.
The new rule, while offering additional protection, will only impact your closing date if there is a change to any of three particular items related to your closing disclosure.
In those cases, your lender must allow you to take an additional three business days to review an updated version of the disclosure documents.
This could impact your closing date depending on how early you receive your disclosure documents and whether you take your full three days each time.
Those three changes that will allow an additional review period include:
- An annual percentage rate (APR) increases by greater than 1/8 of a percentage point for a fixed-rate loan or 1/4 of a percentage point for an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM). Remember that interest rate or fee decreases won’t cause a delay.
- Addition of a prepayment penalty.
- Significant changes in your loan product include moving from a fixed-rate mortgage to an adjustable-rate loan.
Other changes in your disclosure documents, such as typos or minor wording errors, issues discovered during a final walk-through, or even payments unrelated to the above scenarios, will not affect your initial three-day review or delay your closing.
This includes changes resulting in additional seller credits.
That’s not to say that one or both parties might not agree to delay a closing for other reasons unrelated to changes in your disclosure documents.