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THE LOAN ESTIMATE vs Closing Disclosure
This guide, created for GCA Forums MLO Training eLearning, helps new loan officers understand key documents, keep track of deadlines, spot allowed changes, and check files with confidence before borrowers close on their loans.
<hr>Loan Estimate vs. Closing Disclosure
A Complete Guide for Mortgage Loan Officers
GCA Forums MLO Training eLearning
The Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure are two key documents in the mortgage process. When loan officers understand these forms, they can explain costs to borrowers, comply with federal rules, and keep closings on track.
This guide teaches mortgage loan officers how to distinguish these documents, understand timing rules, manage fee limits, and spot common problems before they arise.
New officers often wonder how these documents differ. Both show loan terms and closing costs, but each serves a unique legal purpose and is given at a different stage in the process.
When This Lesson is Complete, You Should Be Able To:
- Describe a Loan Estimate
- Describe a Closing Disclosure
- Describe a thing or explain something based on its TRID timing. may or will change.
- Describe conditions or situations that will warrant a revised Loan Estimate.
- Describe conditions or situations that will initiate a new Closing Disclosure waiting period.
- Describe action steps that will mitigate or eliminate a Closing Delay.
<hr>What is a Loan Estimate
Simply Put, the Loan Estimate (LE) is the First Required Disclosure Under the TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure (TRID) Rule. Borrowers Understand:
- The size of the Loan
- Interest Cost
- the amount of the loan payment
- the estimated tax and insurance costs
- The estimated Closing Cost
- The cash required at the Closing
- the details of the loan,
- the estimated APR.
You can think of the Loan Estimate as a first draft. It gives early numbers, but these amounts might change later.
The Loan Estimate only shows preliminary numbers, so it should not be considered final.
<hr>Loan Estimate Delivery Requirements
The Law Requires That the Loan Estimate Be Given Within:
- three business days following the receipt of a completed mortgage application.
For TRID, a Mortgage Application is Considered Made When These Six Pieces of Information Are Received:
- the Borrower’s name
- the Borrower’s income
- the Borrower’s Social Security Number
- The property address
- The estimated value of the Property
- Once you have these six pieces of information, you must begin the process of delivering the Loan Estimate.
The Seven-Day Waiting Rule
- A loan cannot close until at least seven business days after the Loan Estimate is given.
- This gives borrowers time to review and think about their loan terms.
- This rule lets the borrower review the loan terms before closing.
<hr>What is the Closing Disclosure?
The Closing Disclosure (CD) is the last disclosure prior to settlement.
The Closing Disclosure, unlike the Loan Estimate, provides the final, exact numbers the borrower will use at closing.
The CD Will Have the Following:
- Final Interest Rate
- Final Monthly Payment
- Closing Costs
- Prepaid Expenses
- Escrow Deposits
- Cash to Close
- Seller Credits
- Lender Credits
- Final Loan Terms
Borrowers sign the Closing Disclosure before closing, but this does not mean they are committed to the loan. They are only committed once they sign the final papers at closing.
The Borrower Must Receive the Closing Disclosure:
The borrower must receive the Closing Disclosure at least three business days before closing. This waiting period gives them time to review the final terms before signing the loan documents.
Loan Estimate Vs Closing Disclosure
- Loan Estimate
- Closing Disclosure
- Initial estimate
- Final figures
- Within 3 business days of an application
- At least 3 business days prior to closing
- Estimated costs
- Actual costs
- Can be revised
- Final, approved terms
- Assists the borrower in shopping for mortgages
- Assists the borrower in preparing for the closing
Reasons Why Numbers ChangeBorrowers Often Ask This Question:
- “Why is there a difference between closing costs and the Loan Estimate?”
- There are many valid reasons for this, such as changes in property taxes.
- Changes in the homeowners’ insurance premiums
- Changes in seller concessions
- Changes in the appraisal
- Changes in the escrow amounts
- Changes in the interest rate lock
- Changes in the loan amount
- Changes requested by the borrower
- Any changes that are discovered in the underwriting process
- Not all changes are allowed under TRID limits.
Understanding Fee Limits
- TRID sets limits on how much certain fees can increase. These are called tolerance fees.
- These fees can never go up.
Examples of These Fees Include
- Lender Fees
- Transfer Taxes
- Provider fees
- 10% Cumulative Tolerance
These Fees Can Increase by no More Than 10%. Examples Include:
- Recording Fees
- Certain settlement services are provided by the lender’s list of available providers.
Unlimited Tolerance Fees Can Increase by any Amount. Examples Include:
- Homeowners insurance
- Property taxes
- Prepaid interest
- Escrow deposits
- Optional owner’s title insurance
- Fees for providers chosen by the borrower
<hr>When Can a Revised Loan Estimate Be Issued?
A Revised Loan Estimate can only be issued when there is a real change in the situation.
These May Include:
- Borrower amends the loan amount.
- Borrower’s credit report is updated.
- The property’s appraised value differs substantially from the estimate.
- Other information is made known that would affect the Borrower’s eligibility.
- Interest rate is locked.
- Borrower changes the request to a different one.
- The transaction is affected by a natural disaster.
- However, a Revised Loan Estimate should not be issued just because the lender estimated the fees too low.
- The fees too low.
What Counts as a Changed Circumstance?
A changed circumstance is any event outside the lender’s control that affects closing costs or loan terms.
These May Include:
- Changes in the value of the property.
- Changes in the Borrower’s income.
- Changes in the Borrower’s employment.
- Issues with the title.
- Changes in the appraisal.
- Borrower adds or removes a co-Borrower.
- Changes in the loan program.
A Revised Loan Estimate requires proper proof of the changed circumstance.
<hr>When Do Corrections Need a New Three-day Closing Disclosure Wait?
Not all corrections mean the three-day Closing Disclosure wait must start over.
A new waiting period is generally triggered if:
APR Changes Beyond Allowed Tolerance
If the Annual Percentage Rate changes by more than is allowed, a new Closing Disclosure must be provided, and the waiting period restarts. A change from a fixed-rate loan to an ARM
- A change from a Conventional loan to an FHA loan
- A change from an FHA loan to a VA loan
- An Interest-only loan feature that is added
A Prepayment Penalty is Added
If a prepayment penalty is added, a new waiting period is required.
Changes That Usually Do NOT Restart the Waiting Period: Examples Include:
- Small changes to recording fees
- Changes to the amount of escrow
- Changes to property taxes
- Changes to prepaid interest that are small
- Spelling correction
- Small lender credit adjustments
- Utility proration changes
A borrower does not have to wait an extra three business days for a corrected Closing Disclosure.
Should an MLO Review be Conducted Before Closing?An MLO Must Compare the Loan Estimate with the final Closing Disclosure and Confirm the Following:
- The amount of the loan
- The interest rate
- The monthly payment
- The amount of cash to close
- The amount and types of credits
- Seller concessions
- The amount of funds in escrow
- Mortgage insurance
- Property taxes
- Homeowners insurance
- The loan program
- The borrower’s occupancy of the property
- The loan term
Finding any differences before sending the Closing Disclosure helps keep the process smooth and prevents last-minute confusion or delays.
What are Common Closing Delays?
Most delays can be avoided because their causes often appear during the closing process.
There are many reasons transactions may be delayed. Common causes include:
- Documents are not closing correctly
- Missing required documents
- Title Defects
- Issues with insurance
- Changes in employment
- New debt is being incurred
- Cash to Close is not being calculated correctly
- Delays in transactions
- Missing required documents
- Changes in loan programs
Clear and Regular Communication Between the Loan Officer, Processor, and Underwriter is Essential for Keeping Transactions on Schedule.
Successful, Experienced Mortgage Loan Officers (MLOs) Follow These Best Practices, Including:
- Present the borrower with the Loan Estimate as soon as possible.
- Prepare the borrower for possible changes in loan costs.
- Explain any changes to the borrower’s estimates right away, rather than waiting for them to ask.
- Lock in the interest rate as soon as possible.
- Communicate with the title company throughout the transaction process.
- Closing cost estimates (Closing Disclosures) should be checked for accuracy before the borrower reviews and signs them.
- Encourage the borrower to review the Closing Disclosure as soon as possible.
- Update Closing Disclosures quickly to keep transactions moving.
- The Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure help explain the mortgage process, so borrowers understand what to expect from start to finish.
- When loan officers know TRID timing, fee limits, and why disclosures change, they can follow the rules and work more efficiently.
- Checking these documents before closing helps prevent mistakes and leads to better conversations with borrowers.
Knowledge Check
Within how many business days must a Loan Estimate generally be delivered after receiving a complete application?
A. 1 day
B. 3 business days ✅
C. 5 business days
D. 7 business days
<hr>How many business days before consummation must the borrower receive the Closing Disclosure?
A. Same day
B. 1 business day
C. 3 business days ✅
D. 7 business days
<hr>Which document contains the final closing costs?
A. Loan Estimate
B. Initial Loan Application
C. Closing Disclosure ✅
D. Rate Lock Agreement
<hr>Which of the following may require a new three-business-Day waiting period after a Closing Disclosure has been issued?
A. Minor escrow adjustment
B. Utility proration
C. Loan product changes ✅
D. Recording fee correction
True or False:
The Loan Estimate provides the borrower with estimated costs. The Closing Disclosure provides the borrower with the final loan terms and settlement figures.
Answer: True ✅
This lesson gives new mortgage loan officers a solid foundation. If you want to learn more, the next module, “TRID Compliance for Mortgage Loan Officers: Advanced Training,” covers topics like Intent to Proceed, redisclosure timing, valid changed circumstances, fee tolerance cures, business days, and CFPB examination findings.
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