Step 1: Identify Your Loan Program and Priorities
Before evaluating lenders, determine the type of loan you need (conventional, FHA, VA, USDA, jumbo, or specialty), your approximate credit score and financial profile, and your priorities (lowest rate, fastest closing, local service, specific program expertise). These factors narrow the field of appropriate lenders. A borrower seeking a VA loan should prioritize lenders with significant VA origination volume and expertise. A borrower with a tight closing deadline should prioritize lenders known for fast processing. Defining priorities before shopping prevents the borrower from selecting a lender based on a single factor (such as rate) while neglecting other considerations that may be equally important.
Step 2: Compile a List of Candidate Lenders
Build a list of three to five lenders from different categories. Include at least one from each relevant category: a retail bank or credit union where you have an existing relationship, a mortgage broker who can access wholesale pricing, and a direct or online lender. Ask for referrals from trusted sources (real estate agent, attorney, friends, or family who have recently obtained mortgages) but do not limit your search to referrals. Check each lender’s NMLS license status and review the CFPB complaint database for any patterns of negative feedback.
Step 3: Request and Compare Loan Estimates
Submit a formal application to each candidate lender within the FICO rate-shopping window (14 days under mortgage-specific FICO models) to ensure multiple inquiries are grouped as a single scoring event. Each lender must provide a Loan Estimate within three business days. Compare the Loan Estimates side by side, focusing on the interest rate and APR, origination charges (Section A), total closing costs, discount points or lender credits, estimated monthly payment including taxes and insurance, and cash to close. If one lender’s Loan Estimate is significantly better in some areas but worse in others, ask the lender to explain the differences.
Step 4: Evaluate Service Quality and Processing Capability
Beyond pricing, evaluate each lender’s responsiveness, communication quality, and ability to meet your timeline. Ask each lender about their average processing time from application to closing, how they handle underwriting conditions, whether they use in-house or outsourced underwriting, and how they communicate status updates. If you are under contract with a closing deadline, confirm that the lender can meet the date. A lender who quotes the lowest rate but cannot close on time may cost the borrower more through contract extension penalties or lost earnest money than a slightly more expensive lender who closes reliably on schedule.
Step 5: Select, Lock, and Proceed
After comparing Loan Estimates and evaluating service quality, select the lender that offers the best overall value based on your specific priorities. Request a rate lock that covers the expected timeline to closing plus a buffer for potential delays. Confirm the lock terms in writing and begin submitting the required documentation. Maintain communication with the loan officer throughout the process and respond promptly to any conditions or requests for additional information. The borrower’s responsiveness is a significant factor in meeting the closing timeline, and delays in providing documentation can extend processing times regardless of the lender’s capabilities.
Related topics include mortgage application process step by step, documents needed for a mortgage application, mortgage underwriting explained, your loan estimate, closing disclosure explained, and mortgage closing process.