DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN
DEVELOPMENT
Buying
Your Home Settlement Costs and Helpful Information
June 1997 Disclaimer
Processing
Your Loan Application
There are several federal laws which provide you
with protection during the processing of your loan. The Equal Credit
Opportunity Act ("ECOA"), the Fair Housing Act, and the Fair
Credit Reporting Act ("FCRA") prohibit discrimination and
provide you with the right to certain credit information.
No Discrimination. ECOA
prohibits lenders from discriminating against credit applicants on the
basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status,
age, the fact that all or part of the applicant's income comes from
any public assistance program, or the fact that the applicant has exercised
any right under any federal consumer credit protection law. To help
government agencies monitor ECOA compliance, your lender or mortgage
broker must request certain information regarding your race, sex, marital
status and age when taking your loan application.
The Fair Housing Act also prohibits discrimination
in residential real estate transactions on the basis of race, color,
religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin. This prohibition
applies to both the sale of a home to you and the decision by a lender
to give you a loan to help pay for that home. Finally, your locality
or state may also have a law which prohibits discrimination.
Frequently, there are differences in the types and
amounts of settlement costs charged to the borrower -- for example,
some borrowers are charged greater fees for mortgages depending on their
credit worthiness. These differences may be justified or they may be
unlawfully discriminatory. It is important that you examine your settlement
documents closely, especially lines 808-811 on the HUD-1 settlement
statement, and do not hesitate to compare your settlement costs with
those of your friends and neighbors.
If you feel you have been discriminated against
by a lender or anyone else in the home buying process, you may file
a private legal action against that person or complain to a state, local
or federal administrative agency. You may want to talk to an attorney;
or you may want to ask the federal agency that enforces ECOA (the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System) or the Fair Housing Act
(HUD) about your rights under these laws.
Prompt Action/Notification of Action
Taken. Your lender or mortgage broker must act on your
application and inform you of the action taken no later than 30 days
after it receives your completed application. Your application
will not be considered complete, and the 30 day period will not begin,
until you provide to your lender or mortgage broker all of the material
and information requested.
Statement of Reasons for Denial.
If your application is denied, ECOA requires your lender or mortgage
broker to give you a statement of the specific reasons why it denied
your application or tell you how you can obtain such a statement. The
notice will also tell you which federal agency to contact if you think
the lender or mortgage broker has illegally discriminated against you.
Obtaining Your Credit Report.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act ("FCRA") requires a lender or
mortgage broker that denies your loan application to tell you whether
it based its decision on information contained in your credit report.
If that information was a reason for the denial, the notice will tell
you where you can get a free copy of the credit report. You have the
right to dispute the accuracy or completeness of any information in
your credit report. If you dispute any information, the credit reporting
agency that prepared the report must investigate free of charge and
notify you of the results of the investigation.
Obtaining Your Appraisal.
The lender needs to know if the value of your home is enough to secure
the loan. To get this information, the lender typically hires an appraiser,
who gives a professional opinion about the value of your home. ECOA
requires your lender or mortgage broker to tell you that you have a
right to get a copy of the appraisal report. The notice will also tell
you how and when you can ask for a copy.
THE TEXT ABOVE IS PUBLIC DOMAIN MATERIAL
AUTHORED BY AN AGENCY OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT AND NOT COPYRIGHTED
BY THIS WEBSITE. To locate the original material (which may have been
updated) click
here.
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