(a) In general.
(1) Scope. This section applies to a closed-end consumer credit transaction
secured by a dwelling, unless an exemption in paragraph (e) of this
section applies. A closed end consumer credit transaction secured by
a dwelling is referred to as a mortgage loan for purposes of
this section.
(2) Periodic statements. A servicer of a transaction
subject to this section shall provide the consumer, for each billing
cycle, a periodic statement meeting the requirements of paragraphs
(b), (c), and (d) of this section. If a mortgage loan has a billing
cycle shorter than a period of 31 days (for example, a bi-weekly billing
cycle), a periodic statement covering an entire month may be used.
For the purposes of this section, servicer includes the creditor,
assignee, or servicer, as applicable. A creditor or assignee that
does not currently own the mortgage loan or the mortgage servicing
rights is not subject to the requirement in this section to provide
a periodic statement.
(b) Timing of the periodic statement. The periodic
statement must be delivered or placed in the mail within a reasonably
prompt time after the payment due date or the end of any courtesy
period provided for the previous billing cycle.
(c) Form of the periodic statement. The servicer must make the disclosures required by this section
clearly and conspicuously in writing, or electronically if the consumer
agrees, and in a form that the consumer may keep. Sample forms for
periodic statements are provided in appendix H-30. Proper use of these
forms complies with the requirements of this paragraph (c) and the
layout requirements in paragraph (d) of this section.
(d) Content and layout of the periodic
statement. The periodic statement required by this section shall
include:
(1) Amount due. Grouped together in close proximity
to each other and located at the top of the first page of the statement:
(i) The payment due date;
(ii) The amount of any late payment
fee, and the date on which that fee will be imposed if payment has
not been received; and
(iii) The amount due, shown more prominently than other disclosures
on the page and, if the transaction has multiple payment options,
the amount due under each of the payment options.
(2) Explanation of amount due. The following items, grouped together
in close proximity to each other and located on the first page of
the statement:
(i) The monthly payment amount, including
a breakdown showing how much, if any, will be applied to principal,
interest, and escrow and, if a mortgage loan has multiple payment
options, a breakdown of each of the payment options along with information
on whether the principal balance will increase, decrease, or stay
the same for each option listed;
(ii) The total sum of any fees or charges
imposed since the last statement; and
(iii) Any payment amount past due.
(3) Past payment breakdown. The following items,
grouped together in close proximity to each other and located on the
first page of the statement:
(i) The total of all payments
received since the last statement, including a breakdown showing the
amount, if any, that was applied to principal, interest, escrow, fees
and charges, and the amount, if any, sent to any suspense or unapplied
funds account; and
(ii) The total of all payments received since the beginning of the
current calendar year, including a breakdown of that total showing
the amount, if any, that was applied to principal, interest, escrow,
fees and charges, and the amount, if any, currently held in any suspense
or unapplied funds account.
(4) Transaction
activity. A list of all the transaction activity that occurred
since the last statement. For purposes of this paragraph (d)(4), transaction
activity means any activity that causes a credit or debit to the amount
currently due. This list must include the date of the transaction,
a brief description of the transaction, and the amount of the transaction
for each activity on the list.
(5) Partial payment
information. If a statement reflects a partial payment that was
placed in a suspense or unapplied funds account, information explaining
what must be done for the funds to be applied. The information must
be on the front page of the statement or, alternatively, may be included
on a separate page enclosed with the periodic statement or in a separate
letter.
(6) Contact information. A toll-free telephone
number and, if applicable, an electronic mailing address that may
be used by the consumer to obtain information about the consumer’s
account, located on the front page of the statement.
(7) Account information. The following information:
(i) The amount of the outstanding principal
balance;
(ii) The
current interest rate in effect for the mortgage loan;
(iii) The date after which
the interest rate may next change;
(iv) The existence of any prepayment
penalty, as defined in section 1026.32(b)(6)(i), that may be charged;
(v) The Web site to
access either the Bureau list or the HUD list of homeownership counselors
and counseling organizations and the HUD toll-free telephone number
to access contact information for homeownership counselors or counseling
organizations; and
(8) Delinquency
information. If the consumer is more than 45 days delinquent,
the following items, grouped together in close proximity to each other
and located on the first page of the statement or, alternatively,
on a separate page enclosed with the periodic statement or in a separate
letter:
(i) The length of the consumer’s delinquency;
(ii) A notification
of possible risks, such as foreclosure, and expenses, that may be
incurred if the delinquency is not cured;
(iii) An account history showing, for
the previous six months or the period since the last time the account
was current, whichever is shorter, the amount remaining past due from
each billing cycle or, if any such payment was fully paid, the date
on which it was credited as fully paid;
(iv) A notice indicating any loss mitigation
program to which the consumer has agreed, if applicable;
(v) A notice of whether
the servicer has made the first notice or filing required by applicable
law for any judicial or non-judicial foreclosure process, if applicable;
(vi) The total payment
amount needed to bring the account current; and
(vii) A reference to the homeownership
counselor information disclosed pursuant to paragraph (d)(7)(v) of
this section.
(e) Exemptions.
(1) Reverse mortgages. Reverse mortgage transactions, as defined by section 1026.33(a),
are exempt from the requirements of this section.
(2) Timeshare
plans. Transactions secured by consumers’ interests in timeshare
plans, as defined by 11 U.S.C. 101(53D), are exempt from the requirements
of this section.
(3) Coupon books. The requirements of paragraph
(a) of this section do not apply to fixed-rate loans if the servicer:
(i) Provides the consumer with a coupon book that includes on each
coupon the information listed in paragraph (d)(1) of this section;
(ii) Provides the
consumer with a coupon book that includes anywhere in the coupon book:
(A) The account information listed in paragraph (d)(7) of this section;
(B) The contact information
for the servicer, listed in paragraph (d)(6) of this section; and
(C) Information on how the
consumer can obtain the information listed in paragraph (e)(3)(iii)
of this section;
(iii) Makes available upon request to
the consumer by telephone, in writing, in person, or electronically,
if the consumer consents, the information listed in paragraph (d)(2)
through (5) of this section; and
(iv) Provides the consumer the information
listed in paragraph (d)(8) of this section in writing, for any billing
cycle during which the consumer is more than 45 days delinquent.
(4) Small servicers.
(i) Exemption. A creditor, assignee, or servicer
is exempt from the requirements of this section for mortgage loans
serviced by a small servicer.
(ii) Small
servicer defined. A small servicer is a servicer that:
(A) Services,
together with any affiliates, 5,000 or fewer mortgage loans, for all
of which the servicer (or an affiliate) is the creditor or assignee;
(B) Is a Housing Finance
Agency, as defined in 24 CFR 266.5; or
(C) Is a nonprofit entity that services 5,000
or fewer mortgage loans, including any mortgage loans serviced on
behalf of associated nonprofit entities, for all of which the servicer
or an associated nonprofit entity is the creditor. For purposes of
this paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(C), the following definitions apply:
(1) The term “nonprofit entity” means
an entity having a tax exemption ruling or determination letter from
the Internal Revenue Service under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3); 26 CFR 1.501(c)(3)-1),
and;
(2) The term
“associated nonprofit entities” means nonprofit entities that by agreement
operate using a common name, trademark, or servicemark to further
and support a common charitable mission or purpose.
(iii) Small servicer determination. In determining
whether a servicer satisfies paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(A) of this section,
the servicer is evaluated based on the mortgage loans serviced by
the servicer and any affiliates as of January 1 and for the remainder
of the calendar year. In determining whether a servicer satisfies
paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(C) of this section, the servicer is evaluated
based on the mortgage loans serviced by the servicer as of January
1 and for the remainder of the calendar year. A servicer that ceases
to qualify as a small servicer will have six months from the time
it ceases to qualify or until the next January 1, whichever is later,
to comply with any requirements from which the servicer is no longer
exempt as a small servicer. The following mortgage loans are not considered
in determining whether a servicer qualifies as a small servicer:
(A) Mortgage loans voluntarily serviced by the servicer for a non-affiliate
of the servicer and for which the servicer does not receive any compensation
or fees.
(B) Reverse mortgage
transactions.
(C) Mortgage
loans secured by consumers’ interests in timeshare plans.
(D) Transactions serviced by
the servicer for a seller financer that meets all of the criteria
identified in section 1026.36(a)(5).
(5) Certain consumers in bankruptcy.
(i) Exemption. Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(5)(ii) of this section, a servicer is exempt from the requirements
of this section with regard to a mortgage loan if:
(A) Any consumer
on the mortgage loan is a debtor in bankruptcy under title 11 of the
United States Code or has discharged personal liability for the mortgage
loan pursuant to 11 U.S.C. 727, 1141, 1228, or 1328; and
(B) With regard to any consumer
on the mortgage loan:
(1) The consumer requests in writing that the servicer cease
providing a periodic statement or coupon book;
(2) The consumer’s bankruptcy plan
provides that the consumer will surrender the dwelling securing the
mortgage loan, provides for the avoidance of the lien securing the
mortgage loan, or otherwise does not provide for, as applicable, the
payment of pre-bankruptcy arrearage or the maintenance of payments
due under the mortgage loan;
(3) A court enters an order in the
bankruptcy case providing for the avoidance of the lien securing the
mortgage loan, lifting the automatic stay pursuant to 11 U.S.C.
362 with regard to the dwelling securing the mortgage loan, or requiring
the servicer to cease providing a periodic statement or coupon book;
or
(4) The consumer
files with the court overseeing the bankruptcy case a statement of
intention pursuant to 11 U.S.C. 521(a) identifying an intent to surrender
the dwelling securing the mortgage loan and a consumer has not made
any partial or periodic payment on the mortgage loan after the commencement
of the consumer’s bankruptcy case.
(ii) Reaffirmation or consumer request to receive
statement or coupon book. A servicer ceases to qualify for an
exemption pursuant to paragraph (e)(5)(i) of this section with respect
to a mortgage loan if the consumer reaffirms personal liability for
the loan or any consumer on the loan requests in writing that the
servicer provide a periodic statement or coupon book, unless a court
enters an order in the bankruptcy case requiring the servicer to cease
providing a periodic statement or coupon book.
(iii) Exclusive
address. A servicer may establish an address that a consumer
must use to submit a written request under paragraph (e)(5)(i)(B)(1) or (e)(5)(ii) of this section, provided that the servicer
notifies the consumer of the address in a manner that is reasonably
designed to inform the consumer of the address. If a servicer designates
a specific address for requests under paragraph (e)(5)(i)(B)(1) or (e)(5)(ii) of this section, the servicer shall designate the
same address for purposes of both paragraphs (e)(5)(i)(B)(1) and (e)(5)(ii) of this section.
(iv) Timing
of compliance following transition.
(A) Triggering events for transitioning to modified and unmodified periodic
statements. A servicer transitions to providing a periodic statement
or coupon book with the modifications set forth in paragraph (f) of
this section or to providing a periodic statement or coupon book without
such modifications when one of the following three events occurs:
(1) A mortgage loan becomes subject
to the requirements of paragraph (f) of this section;
(2) A mortgage loan ceases
to be subject to the requirements of paragraph (f) of this section;
or
(3) A servicer
ceases to qualify for an exemption pursuant to paragraph (e)(5)(i)
of this section with respect to a mortgage loan.
(B) Single-statement exemption. As of the date on which one of the
events listed in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(A) of this section occurs, a
servicer is exempt from the requirements of this section with respect
to the next periodic statement or coupon book that would otherwise
be required but thereafter must provide modified or unmodified periodic
statements or coupon books that comply with the requirements of this
section.
(6) Charged-off
loans.
(i) A servicer is exempt from the requirements
of this section for a mortgage loan if the servicer:
(A) Has charged
off the loan in accordance with loan-loss provisions and will not
charge any additional fees or interest on the account; and
(B) Provides, within 30 days
of charge-off or the most recent periodic statement, a periodic statement,
clearly and conspicuously labeled “Suspension of Statements &
Notice of Charge Off—Retain This Copy for Your Records.” The periodic
statement must clearly and conspicuously explain that, as applicable,
the mortgage loan has been charged off and the servicer will not charge
any additional fees or interest on the account; the servicer will
no longer provide the consumer a periodic statement for each billing
cycle; the lien on the property remains in place and the consumer
remains liable for the mortgage loan obligation and any obligations
arising from or related to the property, which may include property
taxes; the consumer may be required to pay the balance on the account
in the future, for example, upon sale of the property; the balance
on the account is not being canceled or forgiven; and the loan may
be purchased, assigned, or transferred.
(ii) Resuming compliance.
(A) If a servicer fails at any
time to treat a mortgage loan that is exempt under paragraph (e)(6)(i)
of this section as charged off or charges any additional fees or interest
on the account, the obligation to provide a periodic statement pursuant
to this section resumes.
(B) Prohibition on retroactive fees. A servicer may not retroactively assess fees or interest on the
account for the period of time during which the exemption in paragraph
(e)(6)(i) of this section applied.
(f) Modified
periodic statements and coupon books for certain consumers in bankruptcy. While any consumer on a mortgage loan is a debtor in bankruptcy
under title 11 of the United States Code, or if such consumer has
discharged personal liability for the mortgage loan pursuant to 11
U.S.C. 727, 1141, 1228, or 1328, the requirements of this section
are subject to the following modifications with regard to that mortgage
loan:
(1) Requirements not applicable. The periodic
statement may omit the information set forth in paragraphs (d)(1)(ii)
and (d)(8)(i), (ii), and (v) of this section. The requirement in paragraph
(d)(1)(iii) of this section that the amount due must be shown more
prominently than other disclosures on the page shall not apply.
(2) Bankruptcy notices. The periodic statement
must include the following:
(i) A statement identifying the consumer’s
status as a debtor in bankruptcy or the discharged status of the mortgage
loan; and
(ii) A
statement that the periodic statement is for informational purposes
only.
(3) Chapter 12 and chapter 13 consumers. In
addition to any other provisions of this paragraph (f) that may apply,
with regard to a mortgage loan for which any consumer with primary
liability is a debtor in a chapter 12 or chapter 13 bankruptcy case,
the requirements of this section are subject to the following modifications:
(i) Requirements not applicable. In
addition to omitting the information set forth in paragraph (f)(1)
of this section, the periodic statement may also omit the information
set forth in paragraphs (d)(8)(iii), (iv), (vi), and (vii) of this
section.
(ii) Amount due. The amount due information
set forth in paragraph (d)(1) of this section may be limited to the
date and amount of the post-petition payments due and any post-petition
fees and charges imposed by the servicer.
(iii) Explanation
of amount due. The explanation of amount due information set
forth in paragraph (d)(2) of this section may be limited to:
(A) The monthly
post-petition payment amount, including a breakdown showing how much,
if any, will be applied to principal, interest, and escrow;
(B) The total sum of any post-petition
fees or charges imposed since the last statement; and
(C) Any post-petition payment amount past
due.
(iv) Transaction activity. The transaction
activity information set forth in paragraph (d)(4) of this section
must include all payments the servicer has received since the last
statement, including all post-petition and prepetition payments and
payments of post-petition fees and charges, and all post-petition
fees and charges the servicer has imposed since the last statement.
The brief description of the activity need not identify the source
of any payments.
(v) Pre-petition arrearage. If applicable,
a servicer must disclose, grouped in close proximity to each other
and located on the first page of the statement or, alternatively,
on a separate page enclosed with the periodic statement or in a separate
letter:
(A) The total of all pre-petition payments
received since the last statement;
(B) The total of all pre-petition payments
received since the beginning of the consumer’s bankruptcy case; and
(C) The current balance
of the consumer’s pre-petition arrearage.
(vi) Additional disclosures. The periodic statement
must include, as applicable:
(A) A statement that the amount
due includes only post-petition payments and does not include other
payments that may be due under the terms of the consumer’s bankruptcy
plan;
(B) If the consumer’s
bankruptcy plan requires the consumer to make the post-petition mortgage
payments directly to a bankruptcy trustee, a statement that the consumer
should send the payment to the trustee and not to the servicer;
(C) A statement that the
information disclosed on the periodic statement may not include payments
the consumer has made to the trustee and may not be consistent with
the trustee’s records;
(D) A statement that encourages the consumer to contact the consumer’s
attorney or the trustee with questions regarding the application of
payments; and
(E) If the
consumer is more than 45 days delinquent on post-petition payments,
a statement that the servicer has not received all the payments that
became due since the consumer filed for bankruptcy.
(4) Multiple obligors. If this paragraph (f)
applies in connection with a mortgage loan with more than one primary
obligor, the servicer may provide the modified statement to any or
all of the primary obligors, even if a primary obligor to whom the
servicer provides the modified statement is not a debtor in bankruptcy.
(5) Coupon books. A servicer that provides
a coupon book instead of a periodic statement under paragraph (e)(3)
of this section must include in the coupon book the disclosures set
forth in paragraphs (f)(2) and (f)(3)(vi) of this section, as applicable.
The servicer may include these disclosures anywhere in the coupon
book provided to the consumer or on a separate page enclosed with
the coupon book. The servicer must make available upon request to
the consumer by telephone, in writing, in person, or electronically,
if the consumer consents, the information listed in paragraph (f)(3)(v)
of this section, as applicable. The modifications set forth in paragraphs
(f)(1) and (f)(3)(i) through (iv) and (vi) of this section apply to
a coupon book and other information a servicer provides to the consumer
under paragraph (e)(3) of this section.
(g) Successor in interest. If, upon
confirmation, a servicer provides a confirmed successor in interest
who is not liable on the mortgage loan obligation with a written notice
and acknowledgment form in accordance with Regulation X, section 1024.32(c)(1)
of this chapter, the servicer is not required to provide to the confirmed
successor in interest any written disclosure required by this section
unless and until the confirmed successor in interest either assumes
the mortgage loan obligation under State law or has provided the servicer
an executed acknowledgment in accordance with Regulation X, section
1024.32(c)(1)(iv) of this chapter, that the confirmed successor in
interest has not revoked.