(a) Purpose and scope.
(1) Purpose. The purpose of this section is to implement the requirements of
the National Flood Insurance Act of 1968 and the Flood Disaster Protection
Act of 1973, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4001-4129).
(2) Scope. This section, except for paragraphs (f) and (h) of this section,
applies to loans secured by buildings or mobile homes located or
to be located in areas determined by the Administrator of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency to have special flood hazards. Paragraphs
(f) and (h) of this section apply to loans secured by buildings or
mobile homes, regardless of location.
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(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Act means the
National Flood Insurance Act of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4001-4129).
(2) Administrator of
FEMA means the Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management
Agency.
(3) Building means a walled and roofed structure, other than a gas or liquid
storage tank, that is principally above ground and affixed to a permanent
site, and a walled and roofed structure while in the course of construction,
alteration, or repair.
(4) Community means a State or a political subdivision of
a State that has zoning and building code jurisdiction over a particular
area having special flood hazards.
(5) Designated loan means a loan
secured by a building or mobile home that is located or to be located
in a special flood hazard area in which flood insurance is available
under the Act.
(6) Mobile home means a structure, transportable in one or more sections,
that is built on a permanent chassis and designed for use with or
without a permanent foundation when attached to the required utilities.
The term mobile home does not include a recreational vehicle.
For purposes of this section, the term mobile home means a
mobile home on a permanent foundation. The term mobile home includes a manufactured home as that term is used in the NFIP.
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(7) Mutual aid society means an organization—
(i) Whose members share a common religious,
charitable, educational, or fraternal bond;
(ii) That covers losses caused by damage
to members’ property pursuant to an agreement, including damage caused
by flooding, in accordance with this common bond; and
(iii) That has a demonstrated history
of fulfilling the terms of agreements to cover losses to members’
property caused by flooding.
(8) NFIP means the National Flood
Insurance Program authorized under the Act.
(9) Private flood insurance means
an insurance policy that:
(i) Is issued by an insurance company
that is:
(A) Licensed, admitted, or otherwise approved
to engage in the business of insurance by the insurance regulator
of the State or jurisdiction in which the property to be insured is
located; or
(B) Recognized,
or not disapproved, as a surplus lines insurer by the insurance regulator
of the State or jurisdiction in which the property to be insured is
located in the case of a policy of difference in conditions, multiple
peril, all risk, or other blanket coverage insuring nonresidential
commercial property;
(ii) Provides flood insurance coverage
that is at least as broad as the coverage provided under an SFIP for
the same type of property, including when considering deductibles,
exclusions, and conditions offered by the insurer. To be at least
as broad as the coverage provided under an SFIP, the policy must,
at a minimum:
(A) Define the term “flood” to include the
events defined as a “flood” in an SFIP;
(B) Contain the coverage specified in an SFIP,
including that relating to building property coverage; personal property
coverage, if purchased by the insured mortgagor(s); other coverages;
and increased cost of compliance coverage;
(C) Contain deductibles no higher than the
specified maximum, and include similar non-applicability provisions,
as under an SFIP, for any total policy coverage amount up to the maximum
available under the NFIP at the time the policy is provided to the
lender;
(D) Provide coverage
for direct physical loss caused by a flood and may only exclude other
causes of loss that are excluded in an SFIP. Any exclusions other
than those in an SFIP may pertain only to coverage that is in addition
to the amount and type of coverage that could be provided by an SFIP
or have the effect of providing broader coverage to the policyholder;
and
(E) Not contain conditions
that narrow the coverage provided in an SFIP;
(iii) Includes all of the
following:
(A) A requirement for the insurer to give
written notice 45 days before cancellation or non-renewal of flood
insurance coverage to:
(1) The insured; and
(2) The member bank that made the designated loan secured
by the property covered by the flood insurance, or the servicer acting
on its behalf;
(B) Information about the availability of
flood insurance coverage under the NFIP;
(C) A mortgage interest clause similar to
the clause contained in an SFIP; and (D) A provision requiring an
insured to file suit not later than one year after the date of a written
denial of all or part of a claim under the policy; and
(iv) Contains cancellation
provisions that are as restrictive as the provisions contained in
an SFIP.
(10) Residential improved real estate means real estate upon
which a home or other residential building is located or to be located.
(11) Servicer means
the person responsible for:
(i) Receiving any scheduled, periodic
payments from a borrower under the terms of a loan, including amounts
for taxes, insurance premiums, and other charges with respect to the
property securing the loan; and
(ii) Making payments of principal and
interest and any other payments from the amounts received from the
borrower as may be required under the terms of the loan.
(12) SFIP means,
for purposes of paragraph (b)(9) of this section, a standard flood
insurance policy issued under the NFIP in effect as of the date private
flood insurance is provided to a member bank.
(13) Special flood hazard area means
the land in the flood plain within a community having at least a one
percent chance of flooding in any given year, as designated by the
Administrator of FEMA.
(14) Table funding means a settlement at which a loan is funded
by a contemporaneous advance of loan funds and an assignment of the
loan to the person advancing the funds.
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(c) Requirement to purchase flood insurance
where available.
(1) In general. A member bank shall not make, increase, extend, or renew any designated
loan unless the building or mobile home and any personal property
securing the loan is covered by flood insurance for the term of the
loan. The amount of insurance must be at least equal to the lesser
of the outstanding principal balance of the designated loan or the
maximum limit of coverage available for the particular type of property
under the Act. Flood insurance coverage under the Act is limited to
the building or mobile home and any personal property that secures
a loan and not the land itself.
(2) Table funded
loans. A member bank that acquires a loan from a mortgage broker
or other entity through table funding shall be considered to be making
a loan for the purposes of this section.
(3) Private flood
insurance.
(i) Mandatory
acceptance. A member bank must accept private flood insurance,
as defined in paragraph (b)(9) of this section, in satisfaction of
the flood insurance purchase requirement in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section if the policy meets the requirements for coverage in paragraph
(c)(1) of this section.
(ii) Compliance aid for mandatory acceptance. A member bank may determine that a policy meets the definition of private
flood insurance in paragraph (b)(9) of this section, without further
review of the policy, if the following statement is included within
the policy or as an endorsement to the policy: “This policy meets
the definition of private flood insurance contained in 42 U.S.C. 4012a(b)(7)
and the corresponding regulation.”
(iii) Discretionary
acceptance. A member bank may accept a flood insurance policy
issued by a private insurer that is not issued under the NFIP and
that does not meet the definition of private flood insurance in paragraph
(b)(9) of this section in satisfaction of the flood insurance purchase
requirement in paragraph (c)(1) of this section if the policy:
(A) Provides coverage in the amount required by paragraph (c)(1)
of this section;
(B) Is
issued by an insurer that is licensed, admitted, or otherwise approved
to engage in the business of insurance by the insurance regulator
of the State or jurisdiction in which the property to be insured is
located; or in the case of a policy of difference in conditions, multiple
peril, all risk, or other blanket coverage insuring nonresidential
commercial property, is issued by a surplus lines insurer recognized,
or not disapproved, by the insurance regulator of the State or jurisdiction
where the property to be insured is located;
(C) Covers both the mortgagor(s) and the mortgagee(s)
as loss payees, except in the case of a policy that is provided by
a condominium association, cooperative, homeowners association, or
other applicable group and for which the premium is paid by the condominium
association, cooperative, homeowners association, or other applicable
group as a common expense; and
(D) Provides sufficient protection of the
designated loan, consistent with general safety and soundness principles,
and the member bank documents its conclusion regarding sufficiency
of the protection of the loan in writing.
(iv) Mutual aid societies. Notwithstanding the
requirements of paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section, a member bank
may accept a plan issued by a mutual aid society, as defined in paragraph
(b)(7) of this section, in satisfaction of the flood insurance purchase
requirement in paragraph (c)(1) of this section if:
(A) The Board
has determined that such plans qualify as flood insurance for purposes
of the Act.
(B) The plan
provides coverage in the amount required by paragraph (c)(1) of this
section;
(C) The plan
covers both the mortgagor(s) and the mortgagee(s) as loss payees;
and
(D) The plan provides
sufficient protection of the designated loan, consistent with general
safety and soundness principles, and the member bank documents its
conclusion regarding sufficiency of the protection of the loan in
writing.
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(d) Exemptions. The flood insurance
requirement prescribed by paragraph (c) of this section does not apply
with respect to:
(1) Any State-owned property covered under
a policy of self-insurance satisfactory to the Administrator of FEMA,
who publishes and periodically revises the list of States falling
within this exemption;
(2) Property securing any loan with an original principal balance of $5,000
or less and a repayment term of one year or less; or
(3) Any structure that is a part of any
residential property but is detached from the primary residential
structure of such property and does not serve as a residence. For
purposes of this paragraph (d)(3):
(i) “A structure that is
a part of a residential property” is a structure used primarily for
personal, family, or household purposes, and not used primarily for
agri cultural, commercial, industrial, or other business purposes;
(ii) A structure is
“detached” from the primary residential structure if it is not joined
by any structural connection to that structure; and
(iii) “Serve as a residence” shall be
based upon the good faith determination of the member bank that the
structure is intended for use or actually used as a residence, which
generally includes sleeping, bathroom, or kitchen facilities.
(e) Escrow requirement.
(1) In general.
(i) Applicability. Except as provided in paragraphs (e)(1)(ii) or (e)(3) of this section,
a member bank, or a servicer acting on its behalf, shall require the
escrow of all premiums and fees for any flood insurance required under
paragraph (c) of this section for any designated loan secured by residential
improved real estate or a mobile home that is made, increased, extended,
or renewed on or after January 1, 2016, payable with the same frequency
as payments on the designated loan are required to be made for the
duration of the loan.
(ii) Exceptions. Paragraph (e)(1)(i)
of this section does not apply if:
(A) The loan is an extension
of credit primarily for business, commercial, or agricultural purposes;
(B) The loan is in a subordinate
position to a senior lien secured by the same residential improved
real estate or mobile home for which the borrower has obtained flood
insurance coverage that meets the requirements of paragraph (c) of
this section;
(C) Flood
insurance coverage for the residential improved real estate or mobile
home is provided by a policy that:
(1) Meets the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section;
(2) Is provided
by a condominium association, cooperative, homeowners association,
or other applicable group; and
(3) The premium for which is paid
by the condominium association, cooperative, homeowners association,
or other applicable group as a common expense;
(D) The loan is a home equity
line of credit;
(E) The
loan is a nonperforming loan, which is a loan that is 90 or more days
past due and remains nonperforming until it is permanently modified
or until the entire amount past due, including principal, accrued
interest, and penalty interest incurred as the result of past due
status, is collected or otherwise discharged in full; or
(F) The loan has a term of not
longer than 12 months.
(iii) Duration
of exception. If a member bank, or a servicer acting on behalf
of the bank, determines at any time during the term of a designated
loan secured by residential improved real estate or a mobile home
that is made, increased, extended, or renewed on or after January
1, 2016, that an exception under paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section
does not apply, then the bank or its servicer shall require the escrow
of all premiums and fees for any flood insurance required under paragraph (c)
of this section as soon as reasonably practicable and, if applicable,
shall provide any disclosure required under section 10 of the Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974 (12 U.S.C. 2609) (RESPA).
(iv) Escrow account. The member bank, or a servicer
acting on its behalf, shall deposit the flood insurance premiums and
fees on behalf of the borrower in an escrow account. This escrow account
will be subject to escrow requirements adopted pursuant to section
10 of RESPA, which generally limits the amount that may be maintained
in escrow accounts for certain types of loans and requires escrow
account statements for those accounts, only if the loan is otherwise
subject to RESPA. Following receipt of a notice from the Administrator
of FEMA or other provider of flood insurance that premiums are due,
the member bank, or a servicer acting on its behalf, shall pay the
amount owed to the insurance provider from the escrow account by the
date when such premiums are due.
(2) Notice. For any loan for which a member bank is required to escrow under
paragraphs (e)(1) or (e)(3)(ii) of this section or may be required
to escrow under paragraph (e)(1)(iii) of this section during the term
of the loan, the member bank, or a servicer acting on its behalf,
shall mail or deliver a written notice with the notice provided under
paragraph (i) of this section informing the borrower that the member
bank is required to escrow all premiums and fees for required flood
insurance, using language that is substantially similar to model clauses
on the escrow requirement in appendix A to this section.
(3) Small lender exception.
(i) Qualification. Except as may be required under applicable State
law, paragraphs (e)(1), (2), and (4) of this section do not apply
to a member bank:
(A) That has total assets of less than $1
billion as of December 31 of either of the two prior calendar years;
and
(B) On or before July
6, 2012:
(1) Was not required
under Federal or State law to deposit taxes, insurance premiums, fees,
or any other charges in an escrow account for the entire term of any
loan secured by residential improved real estate or a mobile home;
and
(2) Did not
have a policy of consistently and uniformly requiring the deposit
of taxes, insurance premiums, fees, or any other charges in an escrow
account for any loans secured by residential improved real estate
or a mobile home.
(ii) Change
in status. If a member bank previously qualified for the exception
in paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this section, but no longer qualifies for
the exception because it had assets of $1 billion or more for two
consecutive calendar year ends, the member bank must escrow premiums
and fees for flood insurance pursuant to paragraph (e)(1) of this
section for any designated loan made, increased, extended, or renewed
on or after July 1 of the first calendar year of changed status.
(4) Option to escrow.
(i) In general. A member bank, or a servicer
acting on its behalf, shall offer and make available to the borrower
the option to escrow all premiums and fees for any flood insurance
required under paragraph (c) of this section for any loan secured
by residential improved real estate or a mobile home that is outstanding
on January 1, 2016, or July 1 of the first calendar year in which
the member bank has had a change in status pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(ii)
of this section, unless:
(A) The loan or the member bank qualifies
for an exception from the escrow requirement under paragraphs (e)(1)(ii)
or (e)(3) of this section, respectively;
(B) The borrower is already escrowing all
premiums and fees for flood insurance for the loan; or
(C) The member bank is required
to escrow flood insurance premiums and fees pursuant to paragraph
(e)(1) of this section.
(ii) Notice. For any loan subject to paragraph (e)(4)(i) of this section, the
member bank, or a servicer acting on its behalf, shall mail or deliver
to the borrower no later than June 30, 2016, or September 30 of the
first calendar year in which the member bank has had a change in status
pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of this section, a notice in writing,
or if the borrower agrees, electronically, informing the borrower
of the option to escrow all premiums and fees for any required flood
insurance and the method(s) by which the borrower may request the
escrow, using language similar to the model clause in appendix B to
this section.
(iii) Timing. The member bank or servicer must
begin escrowing premiums and fees for flood insurance as soon as reasonably
practicable after the member bank or servicer receives the borrower’s
request to escrow.
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(f) Required use of standard flood hazard determination
form.
(1) Use of form. A state member bank shall
use the standard flood hazard determination form developed by the
Administrator of FEMA when determining whether the building or mobile
home offered as collateral security for a loan is or will be located
in a special flood hazard area in which flood insurance is available
under the Act. The standard flood hazard determination form may be
used in a printed, computerized, or electronic manner. A state member
bank may obtain the standard flood hazard determination form from
FEMA’s Web site at www.fema.gov.
(2) Retention
of form. A state member bank shall retain a copy of the completed
standard flood hazard determination form, in either hard copy or electronic
form, for the period of time the state member bank owns the loan.
(g) Force placement
of flood insurance.
(1) Notice and
purchase of coverage. If a member bank, or a servicer acting
on behalf of the bank, determines at any time during the term of a
designated loan, that the building or mobile home and any personal
property securing the designated loan is not covered by flood insurance
or is covered by flood insurance in an amount less than the amount
required under paragraph (c) of this section, then the member bank
or its servicer shall notify the borrower that the borrower should
obtain flood insurance, at the borrower’s expense, in an amount at
least equal to the amount required under paragraph (c) of this section,
for the remaining term of the loan. If the borrower fails to obtain
flood insurance within 45 days after notification, then the member
bank or its servicer shall purchase insurance on the borrower’s behalf.
The member bank or its servicer may charge the borrower for the cost
of premiums and fees incurred in purchasing the insurance, including
premiums or fees incurred for coverage beginning on the date on which
flood insurance coverage lapsed or did not provide a sufficient coverage
amount.
(2) Termination of force-placed insurance.
(i) Termination and refund. Within
30 days of receipt by a member bank, or a servicer acting on its behalf,
of a confirmation of a borrower’s existing flood insurance coverage,
the member bank or its servicer shall:
(A) Notify the insurance provider
to terminate any insurance purchased by the member bank or its servicer
under paragraph (g)(1) of this section; and
(B) Refund to the borrower all premiums paid
by the borrower for any insurance purchased by the member bank or
its servicer under paragraph (g)(1) of this section during any period
during which the borrower’s flood insurance coverage and the insurance
coverage purchased by the member bank or its servicer were each in
effect, and any related fees charged to the borrower with respect
to the insurance purchased by the member bank or its servicer during
such period.
(ii) Sufficiency
of demonstration. For purposes of confirming a borrower’s existing flood
insurance coverage under paragraph (g)(2) of this section, a member
bank or its servicer shall accept from the borrower an insurance policy
declarations page that includes the existing flood insurance policy
number and the identity of, and contact information for, the insurance
company or agent.
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(h) Determination fees.
(1) General. Notwithstanding any Federal or State law other than the Flood Disaster
Protection Act of 1973, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4001-4129), any member
bank, or a servicer acting on behalf of the bank, may charge a reasonable
fee for determining whether the building or mobile home securing the
loan is located or will be located in a special flood hazard area.
A determination fee may also include, but is not limited to, a fee
for life-of-loan monitoring.
(2) Borrower
fee. The determination fee authorized by paragraph (h)(1) of
this section may be charged to the borrower if the determination:
(i) Is made in connection with a making, increasing, extending, or
renewing of the loan that is initiated by the borrower;
(ii) Reflects the Administrator
of FEMA’s revision or updating of flood plain areas or flood-risk
zones;
(iii) Reflects
the Administrator of FEMA’s publication of a notice or compendium
that:
(A) Affects the area in which the building
or mobile home securing the loan is located; or
(B) By determination of the Administrator
of FEMA, may reasonably require a determination whether the building
or mobile home securing the loan is located in a special flood hazard
area; or
(iv) Results in the purchase of flood insurance coverage by the lender
or its servicer on behalf of the borrower under paragraph (g) of this
section.
(3) Purchaser or transferee fee. The
determination fee authorized by paragraph (h)(1) of this section may
be charged to the purchaser or transferee of a loan in the case of
the sale or transfer of the loan.
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(i) Notice of special flood hazards and availability
of Federal disaster relief assistance. When a member bank makes,
increases, extends, or renews a loan secured by a building or a mobile
home located or to be located in a special flood hazard area, the
bank shall mail or deliver a written notice to the borrower and to
the servicer in all cases whether or not flood insurance is available
under the Act for the collateral securing the loan.
(1) Contents
of notice. The written notice must include the following information:
(i) A warning, in a form approved by the Administrator of FEMA, that
the building or the mobile home is or will be located in a special
flood hazard area;
(ii) A description of the flood insurance purchase requirements set
forth in section 102(b) of the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973,
as amended (42 U.S.C. 4012a(b));
(iii) A statement, where applicable,
that flood insurance coverage is available from private insurance
companies that issue standard flood insurance policies on behalf of
the NFIP or directly from the NFIP;
(iv) A statement that flood insurance
that provides the same level of coverage as a standard flood insurance
policy under the NFIP also may be available from a private insurance
company that issues policies on behalf of the company;
(v) A statement that the
borrower is encouraged to compare the flood insurance coverage, deductibles,
exclusions, conditions, and premiums associated with flood insurance
policies issued on behalf of the NFIP and policies issued on behalf
of private insurance companies and that the borrower should direct
inquiries regarding the availability, cost, and comparisons of flood
insurance coverage to an insurance agent; and
(vi) A statement whether Federal disaster
relief assistance may be available in the event of damage to the building
or mobile home caused by flooding in a Federally declared disaster.
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(2) Timing of notice. The member bank shall provide the notice required
by paragraph (i)(1) of this section to the borrower within a reasonable
time before the completion of the transaction, and to the servicer
as promptly as practicable after the bank provides notice to the borrower
and in any event no later than the time the bank provides other similar
notices to the servicer concerning hazard insurance and taxes. Notice
to the servicer may be made electronically or may take the form of
a copy of the notice to the borrower.
(3) Record of
receipt. The member bank shall retain a record of the receipt
of the notices by the borrower and the servicer for the period of
time the bank owns the loan.
(4) Alternate
method of notice. Instead of providing the notice to the borrower
required by paragraph (i)(1) of this section, a member bank may obtain
satisfactory written assurance from a seller or lessor that, within
a reasonable time before the completion of the sale or lease transaction,
the seller or lessor has provided such notice to the purchaser or
lessee. The member bank shall retain a record of the written assurance
from the seller or lessor for the period of time the bank owns the
loan.
(5) Use of sample form of notice. A member
bank will be considered to be in compliance with the requirement for
notice to the borrower of this paragraph (i) of this section by providing
written notice to the borrower containing the language presented in
appendix A of this section within a reasonable time before the completion
of the transaction. The notice presented in appendix A of this section
satisfies the borrower notice requirements of the Act.
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(j) Notice of servicer’s identity.
(1) Notice requirement. When a member bank makes, increases, extends,
renews, sells, or transfers a loan secured by a building or mobile
home located or to be located in a special flood hazard area, the
bank shall notify the Administrator of FEMA (or the Administrator’s
designee) in writing of the identity of the servicer of the loan.
The Administrator of FEMA has designated the insurance provider to
receive the member bank’s notice of the servicer’s identity. This
notice may be provided electronically if electronic transmission is
satisfactory to the Administrator of FEMA’s designee.
(2) Transfer
of servicing rights. The member bank shall notify the Administrator
of FEMA (or the Administrator’s designee) of any change in the servicer
of a loan described in paragraph (j)(1) of this section within 60
days after the effective date of the change. This notice may be provided
electronically if electronic transmission is satisfactory to the Administrator
of FEMA’s designee. Upon any change in the servicing of a loan described
in paragraph (j)(1) of this section, the duty to provide notice under
this paragraph (j)(2) of this section shall transfer to the transferee
servicer.