We recently introduced our OneFee
Plus Program. The creation of this program has been a long time
dream of mine. I started this business because I was going for a
loan on my first home and the lender I was working with tried to
take advantage of me. he was charging 2 points in broker fees,
about $1,000 in junk fees and he was getting another 2 points in
yield spread premium (which has a direct result on my rate) My
loan was going to be on a house costing $150,000. Which means he
was going to earn $7,000 in fees off of my loan.
The worse thing was this loan
officer was extremely busy. he probably did 20 - 30 similar
loans per month. Now I'm all for capitalism but there is no need
to take advantage of people.
Since I've been in the business
it has been my goal to reduce costs and fees to as low an amount
as possible. My first job was with McDonald's and I have always
been a fan of Wal-Mart. These two companies have one thing in
common. They have mastered efficiencies in their respective
businesses. I knew that to lower customer costs in the mortgage
business I too had to improve efficiencies.
Now, after years in the business
I am able to do just that. Effective Immediately I will do all
of my loans for a Flat TOTAL
Fee of $1,595 plus a lender paid yield spread premium of .25%.
Unless you are in the mortgage
business or understand how lenders, brokers, and loan
originators get paid this may not seem like a big deal. To help
you get a better picture of how people in my business get paid I
have created an article below that explains it all. If you have
a settlement statement from a previous loan you will be able to
see what you have been charged in the past.
To fully
disclose who we are and how we operate
www.YourMortgageDoctor.com is set up and allowed
to get paid as a lender and a mortgage broker, And although we
can take some advantages that lenders have we consciously choose
not to.
Mortgage
brokers, originators, lenders, and loan officers almost always
get paid on a commission basis. We receive compensation in one
of several ways
Origination Fee -
(Sometimes labeled as points, mortgage broker fees, and or
various other "junk fees") This fee is typically 1%-3% for most
loan originators. This is a percentage of your total loan
amount.
Yield Spread Premium
- (This fee can sometimes be labeled as "YSP", Rebate paid by
lender, Back end fees, Lender paid fees) The tricky things about
these fees are as follows
-
Anybody doing a loan that is a lender or works for a
lender (eg Loan originator and Loan Officer) or "Uses
their own money" are not required by law to disclose
this fee at anytime during the loan process, including
at the settlement table. This means you as the consumer
will never see how much the "lender" really makes on
your loan
-
This
"Hidden" Fee can range from .5% to almost 4% of the loan
amount and is a fee that is "Earned" by the "lender" The
higher this fee is the higher your rate. Our OneFee Plus
program always quote a YSP of .25%
-
Mortgage Brokers are required by federal law to disclose
an estimate on your initial good faith estimate how much
they expect the the "YSP" to be. may will put in a range
of 0% - 3% meaning they can go up to 3% if they wanted
to.
Service Release Premium
- (This fee is always hidden by the lender and not even
available to a broker) A lender will get extra
fee (Typically 1%) for closing a loan in their own name.
Junk Fees - Many
lenders, loan officers, loan originators and mortgage
brokers will put in "Junk Fees" that can add up to several
hundred dollars. The only fees a loan originator should
charge is a Loan origination fee and/or mortgage broker fee
they will also have a fee for loan processing as most
efficient lenders use outside services to process loans. All
other fees charged by the loan originator such as Credit
reports, Application, Commitment fee, Overnight fees,
Paperwork fee, Copying fee etc. should not be charged, If
they want to charge you for items they should just add these
fees to the origination or broker fee and stop trying to
hide them
More on YSP and Service
Release premiums
Many
lenders will say that they sell the loan to a lender and the
lender is the one that pays their fees, that is true to some
extent, but as I will explain you will see that it is still
you paying for this rebate.
The
Yield Spread premium and the Service Release premium is very
important to you because the amount paid to the loan
originator on these items absolutely and directly affects
the rate that the originator "SOLD" to you, yes they sold
you a rate of 6.5% which you thought was acceptable. (Most
customers don't realize the negotiation ability they have
with a rate) I will show you below exactly how much that
"originators" selling job has cost you. The service
release premium is a fee that only lenders who close in
their own name get but it works on the same principle.
The
yield spread premium changes based on the rate that the
originator "sold" to you. The
higher rate he or she sells
you the more money
they
make. It is
very hard for most loan
originators to keep your best
interest in mind when their compensation is based on
how high they can push your rate.
Our OneFee Plus program is the
best deal you will find. In order to take advantage of this deal
you must be aware of the following
-
The $1,595 is our fee for
doing your loan it does not include other closing costs as
determined by other 3rd party companies.
-
1 tri merge credit report is
included in the OneFee
-
Our Overnight delivery fees
to the lender are included in the OneFee
-
Appraisal Fees, Appraisal
reviews, surveys, condo questionnaire request, misc fees
charged by your banks or employers to verify loan
information are not included and will be paid for by you
upfront or if allowed added to your settlement statement.
-
Processing fee of $495 for
1st mortgage and $225 for 2nd mortgage (if applicable) is
separately charged.
-
Any other fees generated by
any third parties are not our responsibility, We would
suggest working with your third party providers to see if
they can reduce their fees
Important Fine
Print
We of course cannot control the fees of third party providers
and cannot guarantee their share of the closing costs