Know Before You Owe: Mortgages | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (2024)

The CFPB’s mortgage initiative is designed to help consumers understand their loan options, shop for the mortgage that’s best for them, and avoid costly surprises at the closing table.

Know Before You Owe: Mortgages | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (1)

Making the mortgage process easier

The Know Before You Owe mortgage disclosure rule replaces four disclosure forms with two new ones, the Loan Estimate and the Closing Disclosure. The new forms are easier to understand and easier to use. The rule also requires that you get three business days to review your Closing Disclosure and ask questions before you close on a mortgage.

Tools and resources

Mortgages can be complex and confusing. To supplement the rule, we’ve created several resources to help you as you navigate the mortgage process.

Sample Loan Estimate

The Loan Estimate makes it easier to shop around and compare loan offers from multiple lenders. Our interactive sample form will help you double check the details and get definitions for terms used on the Loan Estimate.

  • Explore a sample Loan Estimate

Sample Closing Disclosure

The Closing Disclosure helps you avoid costly surprises at the closing table. Use our interactive sample form to help you compare your Loan Estimate to the Closing Disclosure and make sure that you understand the reason for any differences.

  • Explore a sample Closing Disclosure

Buying a House

This suite of tools and resources guides you through the process of getting a mortgage. It will help you explore interest rates in your area, understand loan options, and prepare you for closing.

  • Visit Buying a House

Your Home Loan Toolkit

This booklet takes you from budgeting to closing with worksheets, checklists, and conversation starters. You’ll get a copy when you apply for a home purchase mortgage, but you can also download a copy now.

  • Download the toolkit

Resources for professionals

Mortgages can be complex and confusing. To supplement the rule, we’ve created several resources to help you as you navigate the mortgage process.

Mortgage professionals

Since 2013, we have been working with lenders, creditors, compliance officers, software companies, and other groups to prepare for implementation of the rule.

  • Visit the Regulatory Implementation page

Housing counselors

Assist consumers as they navigate through the new mortgage process. Educate your clients on the new disclosures and timing requirements with our tools and resources.

Media

We have created resources to help you understand and tell the story of the CFPB’s Know Before You Owe mortgage initiative, which has been a focal point of the Bureau since its start.

  • Read the press release and download a press kit

Creating new mortgage disclosures

Why we created new disclosures

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is a government agency built to protect consumers. We help keep banks and other financial service providers consumers depend on every day operating fairly.

After the housing crisis, Congress directed us to combine existing federal mortgage disclosures: the initial Truth–in-Lending disclosure with the Good Faith Estimate and the final Truth-in-Lending disclosure with the HUD-1 Settlement Statement. These disclosures had overlapping information and complicated terms, which made them hard for borrowers to understand and for lenders to explain.

  • Compare the new disclosures to the old ones

How we created new disclosures

We involved the people who will actually use the new forms—consumers, lenders, mortgage brokers, settlement agents—in helping to combine and improve them. After several rounds of qualitative testing, we found that users were able to see the difference between prices on their Loan Estimate to those quoted on the Closing Disclosure and they were able to identify costs they could shop for, among other findings.

To be sure that the Loan Estimate and the Closing Disclosure are easier to use and understand than the existing forms, we tested them in a quantitative validation study. Participants provided more correct answers about a sample mortgage using the new forms than they did using the previous forms.

  • Review testing results

Timeline

Read the timeline to understand the process of how this rule and our work around it has developed since the CFPB’s beginnings.

Reports

  • Leveraging technology to empower mortgage consumers at closing
  • Consumers’ mortgage shopping experience
  • A report on our discussions with small businesses
  • Learn more about the research we did to develop the new forms

Related links

  • Download a blank Loan Estimate form
  • Download a blank Closing Disclosure form

Legal disclaimer

The content on this page provides general consumer information. It is not legal advice or regulatory guidance. The CFPB updates this information periodically. This information may include links or references to third-party resources or content. We do not endorse the third-party or guarantee the accuracy of this third-party information. There may be other resources that also serve your needs.

Know Before You Owe: Mortgages | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (2024)

FAQs

What is the know before you owe rule? ›

The Know Before You Owe rule is intended to make mortgage disclosure forms clearer, simpler and easier to understand for homebuyers by combining several forms and statutory disclosure requirements into two forms – the Loan Estimate form and the Closing Disclosure.

What is the purpose of the know before you owe special initiative? ›

The objective is to improve consumer understanding of the mortgage process, aid comparison shopping, and help prevent surprises during loan closings.

What does the Know before you owe act require lenders to provide to borrowers? ›

Comprehensive and understandable loan information. What does the Know Before You Owe Act require lenders to provide to borrowers? Access to government - funded housing counseling services. A guarantee of property value appreciation over time.

What is the know before you owe a booklet? ›

Making the mortgage process easier

The Know Before You Owe mortgage disclosure rule replaces four disclosure forms with two new ones, the Loan Estimate and the Closing Disclosure. The new forms are easier to understand and easier to use.

What is the know before you owe bill? ›

Introduced in House (02/27/2023) This bill expands lender disclosure requirements and revises loan counseling requirements. First, the bill requires a lender to provide a quarterly statement to a Federal Family Education Loan or Direct Loan borrower during a period when loan payments are not required.

What is the new federal rule on mortgages? ›

Under a new rule from the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which took effect on May 1st, borrowers with lower credit ratings and less money for a down payment will qualify for better mortgage rates, while those with higher ratings will pay increased fees.

Who enforces TILA and trid? ›

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) continues to assess the rule's effect on consumers and industry professionals. Both NAR and CFPB have created resources to help professionals understand and comply with TRID rules.

What is the consumer financial protection bureau closing disclosure? ›

Our Closing Disclosure is the official government form that lists all the final details about your mortgage loan. Our interactive sample Closing Disclosure helps you double-check the details and get definitions for terms used on the form.

What are the requirements for Trid? ›

Under TRID rules, a mortgage lender must provide, you, a borrower with the loan estimate within three days of completing a loan application and the closing disclosure three days prior to closing on the property.

Which two pieces of information must lenders disclose to borrowers under the Truth in Lending Act? ›

TILA disclosures include the number of payments, the monthly payment, late fees, whether a borrower can prepay the loan without penalty and other important terms.

What does the Truth in Lending Act require borrowers? ›

The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) protects you against inaccurate and unfair credit billing and credit card practices. It requires lenders to provide you with loan cost information so that you can comparison shop for certain types of loans.

What is the act requiring mortgage lenders to give borrowers? ›

The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974 (RESPA) (12 U.S.C. § 2601, et seq.) became effective on June 20, 1975. It requires lenders, mortgage brokers, or servicers of home loans to provide borrowers with pertinent and timely disclosures about the nature and costs of the real estate settlement process.

What is the mailbox rule in mortgage? ›

“Mailbox” delivery rule: states that the CD must be mailed to consumer at least 6 business days prior to consummation.

What counts as a booklet? ›

A booklet is small, with no more than a few dozen pages, and usually has a paper cover. So, the basic difference between a book and a booklet is the number of pages.

Can a closing disclosure be sent the same day as a loan estimate? ›

The consumer must receive the corrected Loan Estimate no later than 4 (four) business days before consummation. Note: There must be at least 1 (one) business day between the disclosure of the most recent Loan Estimate and the issuance of the Closing Disclosure (§1026.19 (e)(4)(ii)-1).

What is the debt rule? ›

A household should spend a maximum of 28% of its gross monthly income on total housing expenses according to this rule, and no more than 36% on total debt service. This includes housing and other debt such as car loans and credit cards. Lenders often use this rule to assess whether to extend credit to borrowers.

What is the disclosure rule? ›

In the federal courts, disclosure requires parties to automatically share routine evidentiary information that would otherwise be available during discovery. Disclosure comes in three stages. First, at the beginning of the suit, each party must disclose: Basic information about each witness the party plans to call.

What is the House debt rule? ›

According to the 28/36 rule, you should spend no more than 28% of your gross monthly income on housing and no more than 36% on all debts.

What is the rule of 78 dictates that a borrower pays? ›

The Rule of 78 holds that the borrower must pay a greater portion of the interest rate in the earlier part of the loan cycle, which means the borrower will pay more than they would with a regular loan.

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