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Truth in Lending: 40(a)(2) Precedence of Certain Disclosures.

1. Precedence rule. The list of conditions provided at the creditor’s option under § 1026.40(d)(4)(iii) need not precede the other disclosures.

Paragraph 40(a)(3)

1. Form of disclosures. Whether disclosures must be in electronic form depends upon the following:

Truth in Lending: 40(b) Time of Disclosures.

1. Mail and telephone applications. If the creditor sends applications through the mail, the disclosures and a brochure must accompany the application. If an application is taken over the telephone, the disclosures and brochure may be delivered or mailed within three business days of taking the application. If an application is mailed to the consumer following a telephone request, however, the creditor also must send the disclosures and a brochure along with the application.

Truth in Lending: 40(c) Duties of Third Parties.

1. Disclosure requirements. Although third parties who give applications to consumers for home equity plans must provide the brochure required under § 1026.40(e) in all cases, such persons need provide the disclosures required under § 1026.40(d) only in certain instances. A third party has no duty to obtain disclosures about a creditor’s home equity plan or to create a set of disclosures based on what it knows about a creditor’s plan.

Truth in Lending: Disclosures given as applicable and Duty to respond to requests for information

1. Disclosures given as applicable. The disclosures required under this section need be made only as applicable. Thus, for example, if negative amortization cannot occur in a home equity plan, a reference to it need not be made.

2. Duty to respond to requests for information. If the consumer, prior to the opening of a plan, requests information as suggested in the disclosures (such as the current index value or margin), the creditor must provide this information as soon as reasonably possible after the request.

Truth in Lending: 40(d)(1) Retention of Information.

1. When disclosure not required. The creditor need not disclose that the consumer should make or otherwise retain a copy of the disclosures if they are retainable—for example, if the disclosures are not part of an application that must be returned to the creditor to apply for the plan.

Truth in Lending: 40(d)(2) Conditions for Disclosed Terms.

Paragraph 40(d)(2)(i)

1. Guaranteed terms. The requirement that the creditor disclose the time by which an application must be submitted to obtain the disclosed terms does not require the creditor to guarantee any terms. If a creditor chooses not to guarantee any terms, it must disclose that all of the terms are subject to change prior to opening the plan. The creditor also is permitted to guarantee some terms and not others, but must indicate which terms are subject to change.

Truth in Lending: 40(d)(6) Annual Percentage Rate.

1. Preferred-rate plans. If a creditor offers a preferential fixed-rate plan in which the rate will increase a specified amount upon the occurrence of a specified event, the creditor must disclose the specific amount the rate will increase.

Truth in Lending: 40(d)(7) Fees Imposed by Creditor.

1. Applicability. The fees referred to in § 1026.40(d)(7) include items such as application fees, points, annual fees, transaction fees, fees to obtain checks to access the plan, and fees imposed for converting to a repayment phase that is provided for in the original agreement. This disclosure includes any fees that are imposed by the creditor to use or maintain the plan, whether the fees are kept by the creditor or a third party.

Truth in Lending: 40(d)(8) Fees Imposed by Third Parties to Open a Plan.

1. Applicability. Section 1026.40(d)(8) applies only to fees imposed by third parties to open the plan. Thus, for example, this section does not require disclosure of a fee imposed by a government agency at the end of a plan to release a security interest. Fees to be disclosed include appraisal, credit report, government agency, and attorneys fees. In cases where property insurance is required by the creditor, the creditor either may disclose the amount of the premium or may state that property insurance is required.

Truth in Lending: 40(d)(9) Negative Amortization.

1. Disclosure required. In transactions where the minimum payment will not or may not be sufficient to cover the interest that accrues on the outstanding balance, the creditor must disclose that negative amortization will or may occur. This disclosure is required whether or not the unpaid interest is added to the outstanding balance upon which interest is computed. A disclosure is not required merely because a loan calls for non-amortizing or partially amortizing payments.

Truth in Lending: 40(d)(12) Disclosures for Variable-Rate Plans.

1. Variable-rate provisions. Sample forms in appendix G-14 provide illustrative guidance on the variable-rate rules.

Paragraph 40(d)(12)(iv)

1. Determination of annual percentage rate. If the creditor adjusts its index through the addition of a margin, the disclosure might read, “Your annual percentage rate is based on the index plus a margin.” The creditor is not required to disclose a specific value for the margin.

Paragraph 40(d)(12)(viii)

Truth in Lending: 40(e) Brochure.

1. Substitutes. A brochure is a suitable substitute for the home equity brochure, “What You Should Know About Home Equity Lines of Credit,” (available on the Bureau’s Web site) if it is, at a minimum, comparable to that brochure in substance and comprehensiveness. Creditors are permitted to provide more detailed information than is contained in that brochure.

Truth in Lending: 40(f) Limitations on Home Equity Plans.

1. Coverage. Section 1026.40(f) limits both actions that may be taken and language that may be included in contracts, and applies to any assignee or holder as well as to the original creditor. The limitations apply to the draw period and any repayment period, and to any renewal or modification of the original agreement.

Paragraph 40(f)(1)

Truth in Lending: 40(g) Refund of Fees.

1. Refund of fees required. If any disclosed term, including any term provided upon request pursuant to § 1026.40(d), changes between the time the early disclosures are provided to the consumer and the time the plan is opened, and the consumer as a result decides to not enter into the plan, a creditor must refund all fees paid by the consumer in connection with the application. All fees, including credit report fees and appraisal fees, must be refunded whether such fees are paid to the creditor or directly to third parties.

Truth in Lending: 40(h) Imposition of Nonrefundable Fees.

1. Collection of fees after consumer receives disclosures. A fee may be collected after the consumer receives the disclosures and brochure and before the expiration of three days, although the fee must be refunded if, within three days of receiving the required information, the consumer decides to not enter into the agreement. In such a case, the consumer must be notified that the fee is refundable for three days.

Truth in Lending: Amendment History

[66 Fed. Reg. 17,340 (Mar. 30, 2001); 72 Fed. Reg. 63,476 (Nov. 9, 2007); 72 Fed. Reg. 71,059 (Dec. 14, 2007); 74 Fed. Reg. 5244 (Jan. 29, 2009); 75 Fed. Reg. 7848 (Feb. 22, 2010); 75 Fed. Reg. 7925 (Feb. 22, 2010); 75 Fed. Reg. 66,583 (Oct. 28, 2010); 76 Fed. Reg. 79,772 (Dec. 22, 2011); 86 Fed. Reg. 69,716 (Dec. 8, 2021); 88 Fed. Reg. 30,598 (May 11, 2023)]

Truth in Lending: 41(b) Timing of the periodic statement.

Editor’s Note786

1. Reasonably prompt time.787 Section 1026.41(b) requires that the periodic statement be delivered or placed in the mail no later than a reasonably prompt time after the payment due date or the end of any courtesy period. Delivering, emailing or placing the periodic statement in the mail within four days of the close of the courtesy period of the previous billing cycle generally would be considered reasonably prompt.