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Your Rights and the
Responsibilities of the Mortgage Servicer
When you apply for a home mortgage, you may think that the lender, or
loan originator, will service the loan until it is paid off or your house
is sold. However, in today's market mortgage servicing rights often are
bought and sold. The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) is
a consumer protection statute. Sections 6 and 10 of RESPA provide you
with certain rights regarding the servicing of your mortgage and escrow
account. Please read this important information concerning your rights
and the responsibility of your loan servicer.
Duty of Loan Servicer to Respond to Complaints. If you have questions
or problems with the servicing of your loan, the servicer is required
to respond to you. Write to your servicer and call it a "qualified
written request under Section 6 of RESPA." It should be a separate
letter and not mailed with your payment. The mortgage servicer must respond
to you within 60 business days of receipt. (See Sample Written Complaint
to Lender.)
Loan Transferred to New Servicer. Your loan servicer is required to notify
you in writing at least 15 days before the servicing of your loan is transferred
to a new servicer. The notice must include the following information:
The effective date of the transfer, the date your current servicer will
stop accepting payments and the date the new servicer will begin accepting
them.
The name, address, and toll-free or collect call telephone number for
the new servicer.
Information that tells whether you can continue any optional insurance,
such as mortgage life or disability insurance, and what action, if any,
you must take to maintain coverage.
A statement that the transfer of servicing does not affect any term or
condition of your mortgage documents other than the terms directly related
to the servicing of the loan.
Treatment of Payments During Transfer Period. During the 60-day period
beginning on the effective date of the transfer, the payment may not be
treated as late if you mistakenly send it to the old mortgage servicer
instead of the new one.
Escrow Account. RESPA does not require that you maintain an escrow account
for the purpose of paying property taxes, hazard insurance, etc. Nor does
RESPA have any jurisdiction over the decision of the lender or servicer
to require or terminate an escrow account. RESPA does, however, provide
you with the following protections with regard to the escrow account:
If your lender or mortgage servicer requires you to maintain an escrow
account for the purpose of paying property taxes, hazard insurance, etc.,
RESPA requires that the servicer pay such items by the dates due to avoid
a penalty or late charge.
RESPA sets limits on the maximum amount of money the servicer may require
you to maintain and pay in the escrow account. (More information about
escrow accounts, including how to calculate the maximum amount RESPA allows
the lender to require in the escrow account.)
PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance). RESPA has no jurisdiction over the lender's
decision to require PMI. Nor does it have any jurisdiction over the lender's
decision to cancel PMI. (The PMI Act provides information regarding cancellation
of PMI.)
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