What Is A Mortgage Escrow Account
When a mortgage loan closes, the loan servicer establishes an escrow account to collect and hold money for property-related bills that must be paid on time. Most often, those bills include property taxes and homeowners insurance, and they may also include flood insurance, mortgage insurance, or other permitted charges depending on the loan and the property.
Disclosure: Most lenders sell their loans to either Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac for conventional mortgage loans. This is to free up money for making additional loans to applicants. These agencies provide the guidelines for these mortgages. Each of these investors have automated underwriting systems which help to determine the final approval rating.
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (usually the intended buyer of many mortgage loan) does not require an escrow deposit for property or flood insurance premiums for an individual unit in a condo, co-op, or PUD when the project in which the unit is located is covered by a blanket insurance policy purchased by the homeowners’ association or co-op corporation.
Why Is A Mortgage Escrow Account Necessary
Escrow is necessary because unpaid taxes can create a lien against the property, and a lapse in insurance can leave both the homeowner and the lender exposed to major financial loss.
By collecting these costs monthly and paying them when due, the servicer helps protect the property, keeps required coverage in force, and reduces the chance that the borrower will face a large lump-sum bill unexpectedly.
At closing, the borrower typically makes an initial escrow deposit so the account has enough funds to pay upcoming tax and insurance bills before enough monthly payments have built up. After closing, the estimated monthly escrow amount is added to the mortgage payment as part of PITI: principal, interest, taxes, and insurance.
How a Mortgage Escrow Account Works
An escrow account is managed by the mortgage service; the company that receives the monthly mortgage payment and administers the loan. Each month, the servicer collects the escrow portion of the payment, holds those funds in the account, and then pays the tax and insurance bills when they come due.
In plain language, an escrow account is a separate account the servicer controls for paying property taxes, insurance premiums, and certain other housing-related charges tied to the mortgage.
Federal servicing rules under the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Regulation X limit how escrow accounts are calculated and generally cap the cushion a servicer can require at no more than one-sixth of the estimated annual disbursements, which is about two months of escrow payments.
Servicers must also perform an annual escrow analysis to compare what was collected versus what was actually paid, then adjust the monthly escrow amount if taxes or insurance costs change.
Common Escrow and Prepaid Items Collected at Closing
- Prepaid interest from the closing date through the end of the month.
- The first year of homeowners insurance, plus any initial escrow deposit needed to maintain the account balance.
- Property tax reserves based on when taxes are next due and the amount needed to keep the escrow account funded properly.
- Flood insurance, if the property is located in a required flood zone.
- Mortgage insurance, if applicable under the loan program
- Other permitted property-related charges that the servicer is authorized to collect and pay, depending on the loan and property type.
In short, escrow is not just an extra line item in the mortgage payment; it is a budgeting and risk-management tool. For borrowers, it spreads large annual expenses into manageable monthly amounts and helps avoid missed tax or insurance payments. For lenders, it helps protect the property that secures the loan. That is why escrow is common in mortgage lending and, in many cases, required.
Disclosure re: Mortgage Escrow Account Waiver:
The agencies supports the use of escrow accounts for the payment of taxes and insurance, especially for borrowers with impaired credit histories and first-time homebuyers.
Unless otherwise required by law, a lender may waive the escrow account requirement for an individual first mortgage, provided that the standard escrow provision remains in the mortgage loan legal documents.
However, lenders may not waive an escrow account for certain refinance transactions, (cash-out refinances), or for the payment of premiums related to borrower-purchased mortgage insurance, when applicable. If the escrow requirement is waived, the lender must preserve the right to reinstate the requirement under appropriate circumstances.
