Prequalification
Prequalification occurs before the loan process actually begins. The
lender gathers information about your income and debts, and makes a
financial determination about how much house you may be able to afford.
It's a good idea to know how
expensive a home you can afford before you start shopping for one! If you
are refinancing the loan on your existing home, then the prequalification
process should help you decide whether refinancing is a good idea for you.
Application
The application is the beginning of the loan process and either occurs
after you have found a property you want to buy or have determined that
you wish to refinance the loan on your existing home. You complete a
mortgage application for a particular loan program and, supply all of the
required documentation for processing. Various fees and down payment
options are discussed at this time. The loan officer will deliver a Good
Faith Estimate (GFE) and a Truth-In-Lending Disclosure (TIL) within three
days that itemize the rates and estimated costs for obtaining the loan.
Processing of your Estimated Loan
The lender will typically submit the application package to an automated
underwriting system that will provide the lender with the necessary
documentation needed for loan approval. In some cases, the lender may also
manually underwrite an application package.
The lender's processor reviews the credit reports and documentation to
verify your employment, debts, and payment histories. If there are
unacceptable late payments, collections, judgments, etc., the processor
requests a written explanation from you. The processor also reviews the
appraisal and survey and checks for property issues that may affect final
loan approval. The processor's job is to put together an entire
application package for the lender's underwriter.
Underwriting
The lender's underwriter is responsible for determining whether the
application package prepared by the processor meets all the lender's
criteria. If more information is needed, the loan is put into "suspense"
and you will be contacted to supply more documentation.
If the underwriter approves the loan, the lender issues a conditional
commitment to lend, orders title insurance, works with you to clear all
conditions to its commitment to lend, and then schedules a closing time.
Conditions to the lender's commitment may include issues with credit,
income, or the property that may arise during the processing and
underwriting process.
Closing
The closing will occur after all conditions are cleared and the lender
issues a full loan approval. At the closing, the lender "funds" the loan
with a cashier's check, draft or wire to the closing agent, who disburses
funds, in exchange for the title transfer to the property. This is the
point at which you finish the loan process and actually refinance or buy
the house, subject to the lender's loan. Closings occur at different
places in different states. For instance, some states require that the
closing take place at a closing attorney's office, while others use a
title or escrow company. You may also be able to close at your home.
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