However, the FHA approval process and paperwork can
appear overwhelming, especially to smaller companies. To
help lenders understand the guidelines, below is a brief
summary of FHA’s approval requirements. (For a detailed list
of all requirements, visit www.hud.gov.)
Organization Requirements
In
order to reduce risk, FHA limits its approval to
experienced, well-established organizations; the officer in
charge of an organization’s FHA operation must have at least
three years of mortgage experience. Furthermore, to be
considered for FHA approval, an organization cannot be a
sole proprietorship. Corporations, partnerships, LLC’s,
chartered financial institutions, and government agencies
are acceptable. Along the same lines, FHA approved
organizations must have at least two full time employees and
a commercial office location (not a home office).
Paperwork
Each prospective FHA
lender must fill out the HUD 11701 application. FHA also
requires certain letters and other documents, depending on
the desired type of FHA approval (non-supervised loan
correspondent, investing lender, etc.). For example, brokers
wanting to become FHA approved must submit a sponsor/funding
letter, whereas lenders need a funding program. For a list
of all required documents by FHA approval type, visit
www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/lender/approvalreq20080529.pdf.
Finances
Excluding “Government
Mortgagee,” the application fee for all FHA approval types
is $1,000. Additionally, lenders must submit audited
financial statements with the application. The lender’s
financial statements need to show at least $63,000 net worth
with 20% liquid assets.
Quality Control Plan
Finally, FHA
approval requires organizations to submit a quality control
plan, in order to mitigate fraud and errors. Organizations
can create a quality control plan themselves, or purchase
one from a third party. As part of the quality control plan,
lenders must audit 10% of the FHA loans they originate.
These audits need to be performed regularly—within 90 days
of the end of the month in which the loan closed.
Quality control audits may be performed in-house, if the
lender properly trains and establishes a unit solely for
quality control. The staff must not be involved in loan
production. Alternatively, lenders may have a third party,
such as Mortgage Compliance Advisors, LLC, perform the
quality control function, as long as it meets HUD’s
requirements.
For more information on FHA approval services or
quality control audits, visit
www.MortgageComplianceAdvisors.com/get_started.php?campaignid=125
or call 877-226-3217.
About Mortgage Compliance Advisors (MCA):
MCA has
grown to help clients across the country through the FHA
approval process, and continues to help them stay compliant
with regulations after approval. MCA's principals have a
combined sixty years of experience in the mortgage industry,
including thirteen years at the Salt Lake City HUD/FHA
office. As a former FHA branch chief, MCA’s principal Bob
Warnock can advise clients through every step of the FHA
approval process.
Contact:
Sarah Adams – Director of
Marketing
Mortgage Compliance Advisors, LLC
5505 South
900 East, Suite 110
Salt Lake City, UT 84117 Phone:
877-226-321