How the TRID Disclosure Timeline Works
The TRID timeline begins when the lender receives the sixth and final piece of application information: borrower name, income, Social Security number, property address, estimated property value, and desired loan amount. Within three business days of receiving all six elements, the lender must deliver the Loan Estimate. The LE can be delivered in person, by mail, or electronically (if the borrower has consented to electronic delivery under the E-SIGN Act). If mailed, the LE is presumed received three business days after mailing.
After receiving the LE, the borrower indicates intent to proceed. This trigger allows the lender to begin charging fees beyond the credit report fee and to order appraisals, title searches, and other services. The lender cannot require the borrower to indicate intent to proceed within any specific timeframe, and the borrower is free to take as long as needed to compare offers from other lenders before committing.
If a valid changed circumstance occurs after the initial LE, the lender has three business days from the date it becomes aware of the change to issue a revised LE. The revised LE must be received by the borrower no later than seven business days before consummation (closing). If the timing does not permit this, the lender may need to reflect the changes on the Closing Disclosure instead, but tolerance protections still apply based on the most recent valid LE .
How Tolerance Calculations Work
Tolerance calculations compare the fees on the final Closing Disclosure against the fees on the most recent valid Loan Estimate (original or revised). For zero-tolerance fees, the comparison is line by line: each individual zero-tolerance fee on the CD must be less than or equal to the corresponding fee on the LE. For 10% cumulative tolerance fees, the comparison is aggregate: all 10% tolerance fees on the CD are summed, all 10% tolerance fees on the LE are summed, and the CD total cannot exceed the LE total by more than 10%.
If a tolerance violation is identified at closing, the lender must cure it by providing a refund or credit to the borrower. The cure must be applied within 60 calendar days of consummation. If the lender discovers the violation after closing (through internal QC review or regulatory examination), the cure must still be provided within the 60-day window. Borrowers who identify potential tolerance violations should raise them with their loan officer or closing agent immediately.
Tolerance calculations are based on the amounts disclosed on the LE and CD, not on what was verbally discussed or informally quoted. This is why the written LE is the controlling document for consumer protection purposes, and why borrowers should review every line item carefully.
How the Rate Lock Works with the Loan Estimate
The Loan Estimate includes a field indicating whether the interest rate is locked and, if so, the lock expiration date. If the rate is not locked at the time the LE is issued, the LE must be reissued when the rate is locked to reflect the locked rate and any associated changes to fees (such as discount points or lender credits that are rate-dependent).
Rate locking is a separate agreement between the borrower and lender. Locking the rate freezes the interest rate and, typically, the lender credits or discount points associated with that rate for a specified period (commonly 30, 45, or 60 days). If the lock expires before closing, the borrower may need to pay an extension fee or accept the current market rate. Rate lock policies vary by lender, and borrowers should confirm the lock terms in writing before proceeding.
Float-down provisions, which allow the borrower to take advantage of rate decreases after locking, are offered by some lenders under specific conditions. These provisions typically require a minimum rate decrease (such as 0.25%) and may involve a fee. Float-down availability and terms should be confirmed at the time of lock.
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