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CHAPTER XII -- YOU'VE MADE IT! CLOSING DAY

LESSON 23: ESCROW (IMPOUND) ACCOUNTS

(continued from previous page)

The amount of money in your escrow account varies over the course of the year. Right after taxes are paid, for instance, the balance will be low. Lenders try to maintain a cushion of extra money in borrower accounts. But the federal Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) limits the amount of financial cushion these accounts can have to a maximum of two months of escrow payments.

MisconceptionLenders always require the mortgagor to set up an escrow account. False: Escrow agreements are usually required when the loan-to-value is more than 80 percent at closing.

If there isn't enough money in your account to pay a bill, your lender will typically cover the shortage. But don't think you'll get a free ride! Every so often, your lender will perform an analysis of what bills you're expected to pay in the coming months and how much money you have to pay them. If there has been a recent shortfall, your lender will boost your payment for a few months to recoup what it had to pay on your behalf.

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Lenders sometimes charge fees to set up these escrow accounts. These fees usually range from $50 to $150. You can ask your lender not to establish an escrow account and pay your taxes and insurance premiums yourself. But your lender may boost your interest rate to compensate for the additional risk it's assuming!

Benefit Escrow accounts are a useful tool for cash budgeting. You spread the property taxes and insurance expenses over the year.
Drawback You lose out on interest income by using an escrow account, and not all states require lenders to pay interest on monies held in escrow.

Remember

It's difficult to get a lender to cancel an escrow requirement once it's in place. If your loan is sold -- and loans are typically sold two or three times -- and there is nothing in the lending agreement that provides for the cancellation of the escrow requirement, you'll have to live with the new firm's decision.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
  Lesson 1
  Quiz

CHAPTER II
  Lesson 2
  Quiz

CHAPTER III
  Lesson 3
  Lesson 4
  Lesson 5
  Quiz

CHAPTER IV
  Lesson 6
  Lesson 7
  Quiz

CHAPTER V
  Lesson 8
  Lesson 9
  Quiz

CHAPTER VI
  Lesson 10
  Lesson 11
  Quiz

CHAPTER VII
  Lesson 12
  Lesson 13
  Lesson 14
  Quiz

CHAPTER VIII
  Lesson 15
  Lesson 16
  Lesson 17
  Lesson 18
  Quiz

CHAPTER IX
  Lesson 19
  Quiz

CHAPTER X
  Lesson 20
  Quiz

CHAPTER XI
  Lesson 21
  Quiz

CHAPTER XII
  Lesson 22
  Lesson 23
  Lesson 24
  Quiz

CHAPTER XIII
  Lesson 25
  Lesson 26
  Lesson 27
  Quiz

CHAPTER XIV
  Lesson 28
  Lesson 29
  Lesson 30
  Quiz

Definitions





RELATED STORIES

The purpose of escrow accounts


Why consumers like and dislike an escrow account


Escrow makes payments -- even on fixed-rate mortgages -- variable

 

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