Shop around before choosing a
mortgage lender, but don't stop there. When you receive
your good faith estimate of closing costs, or GFE, the
negotiation hasn't ended.
The lender or mortgage broker is required to give you a GFE within three working days of accepting your loan application. The GFE comes in the form of an itemized list of estimated closing costs for everything from the lender's fees to the appraisal charge to the title insurance premium to a partial month's interest payment.
The lender or broker charges some fees, and third parties charge others. The first step is to find out which are loan origination fees and which are third-party fees. Don't guess. Ask the lender or broker.
The big money question
"Say, 'Please explain to me what those fees are,'"
says Jessica Cecere, director of the Consumer Credit
Counseling Service in West Palm Beach, Fla.
Simple advice, but a lot of loan applicants don't follow it.
On the GFE, fees are categorized by numerical codes ranging from the 800s to the 1300s. Most of the negotiable lender-charged fees are in the 800s: application, origination, commitment, loan discount, broker, tax-related service and underwriting fees.
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