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Vol. 78

Wednesday,

No. 30

February 13, 2013

Part III

Department of the Treasury
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Parts 34 and 164

Federal Reserve System
12 CFR Part 226

National Credit Union Administration
12 CFR Part 722

Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection
12 CFR Part 1026

Federal Housing Finance Agency
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12 CFR Part 1222
Appraisals for Higher-Priced Mortgage Loans; Final Rule

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Parts 34 and 164
[Docket No. OCC–2012–0013]
RIN 1557–AD62

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 226
[Docket No. R–1443]
RIN 7100–AD90

NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 722
RIN 3133–AE04

BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1026
[Docket No. CFPB–2012–0031]
RIN 3170–AA11

FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1222
RIN 2590–AA58

Appraisals for Higher-Priced Mortgage
Loans
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board); Bureau
of Consumer Financial Protection
(Bureau); Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC); Federal Housing
Finance Agency (FHFA); National
Credit Union Administration (NCUA);
and Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Treasury (OCC).
ACTION: Final rule; official staff
commentary.
AGENCY:

The Board, Bureau, FDIC,
FHFA, NCUA, and OCC (collectively,
the Agencies) are issuing a final rule to
amend Regulation Z, which implements
the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), and
the official interpretation to the
regulation. The revisions to Regulation
Z implement a new provision requiring
appraisals for ‘‘higher-risk mortgages’’
that was added to TILA by the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (the Dodd-Frank Act or
Act). For mortgages with an annual
percentage rate that exceeds the average
prime offer rate by a specified
percentage, the final rule requires

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SUMMARY:

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creditors to obtain an appraisal or
appraisals meeting certain specified
standards, provide applicants with a
notification regarding the use of the
appraisals, and give applicants a copy of
the written appraisals used.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
January 18, 2014.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Board: Lorna Neill or Mandie Aubrey,
Counsels, Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs, at (202) 452–3667,
or Carmen Holly, Supervisory Financial
Analyst, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation, at (202)
973–6122, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, Washington,
DC 20551.
Bureau: Owen Bonheimer, Counsel,
or William W. Matchneer, Senior
Counsel, Division of Research, Markets,
and Regulations, Bureau of Consumer
Financial Protection, 1700 G Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20552, at (202)
435–7000.
FDIC: Beverlea S. Gardner, Senior
Examination Specialist, Risk
Management Section, at (202) 898–3640,
Sumaya A. Muraywid, Examination
Specialist, Risk Management Section, at
(573) 875–6620, Glenn S. Gimble,
Senior Policy Analyst, Division of
Consumer Protection, at (202) 898–6865,
Sandra S. Barker, Senior Policy Analyst,
Division of Consumer Protection, at
(202) 898–3615, Mark Mellon, Counsel,
Legal Division, at (202) 898–3884, or
Kimberly Stock, Counsel, Legal
Division, at (202) 898–3815, or 550 17th
St. NW., Washington, DC 20429.
FHFA: Susan Cooper, Senior Policy
Analyst, (202) 649–3121, Lori Bowes,
Policy Analyst, Office of Housing and
Regulatory Policy, (202) 649–3111,
Ming-Yuen Meyer-Fong, Assistant
General Counsel, Office of General
Counsel, (202) 649–3078, or Sharron
P.A. Levine, Associate General Counsel,
Office of General Counsel, (202) 649–
3496, Federal Housing Finance Agency,
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC, 20024.
NCUA: John Brolin and Pamela Yu,
Staff Attorneys, or Frank Kressman,
Associate General Counsel, Office of
General Counsel, at (703) 518–6540, or
Vincent Vieten, Program Officer, Office
of Examination and Insurance, at (703)
518–6360, or 1775 Duke Street,
Alexandria, Virginia, 22314.
OCC: Robert L. Parson, Appraisal
Policy Specialist, (202) 649–6423, G.
Kevin Lawton, Appraiser (Real Estate
Specialist), (202) 649–7152, Carolyn B.
Engelhardt, Bank Examiner (Risk
Specialist—Credit), (202) 649–6404,
Charlotte M. Bahin, Senior Counsel or
Mitchell Plave, Special Counsel,

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Legislative & Regulatory Activities
Division, (202) 649–5490, Krista
LaBelle, Special Counsel, Community
and Consumer Law Division, (202) 649–
6350, or 250 E Street SW., Washington
DC 20219.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
In general, the Truth in Lending Act
(TILA), 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq., seeks to
promote the informed use of consumer
credit by requiring disclosures about its
costs and terms. TILA requires
additional disclosures for loans secured
by consumers’ homes and permits
consumers to rescind certain
transactions that involve their principal
dwelling. For most types of creditors,
TILA directs the Bureau to prescribe
regulations to carry out the purposes of
the law and specifically authorizes the
Bureau to issue regulations that contain
such classifications, differentiations, or
other provisions, or that provide for
such adjustments and exceptions for
any class of transactions, that in the
Bureau’s judgment are necessary or
proper to effectuate the purposes of
TILA, or prevent circumvention or
evasion of TILA.1 15 U.S.C. 1604(a). For
most types of creditors and most
provisions of the statute, TILA is
implemented by the Bureau’s
Regulation Z. See 12 CFR part 1026.
Official Interpretations provide
guidance to creditors in applying the
rules to specific transactions and
interpret the requirements of the
regulation. See 12 CFR part 1026, Supp.
I. However, as explained in the sectionby-section analysis of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, the new
appraisal section of TILA addressed in
this final rule (TILA section 129H, 15
U.S.C. 1639h) is implemented not only
for all affected creditors by the Bureau’s
Regulation Z, but also, for creditors
overseen by the OCC and the Board,
respectively, by OCC regulations and
the Board’s Regulation Z. See 12 CFR
parts 34 and 164 (OCC regulations) and
part 226 (the Board’s Regulation Z). The
Bureau’s, the OCC’s and the Board’s
versions of the appraisal rules and
corresponding official interpretations
are substantively identical. The FDIC,
NCUA, and FHFA are adopting the
1 For motor vehicle dealers as defined in section
1029 of the Dodd-Frank Act, TILA directs the Board
to prescribe regulations to carry out the purposes
of TILA and authorizes the Board to issue
regulations that contain such classifications,
differentiations, or other provisions, or that provide
for such adjustments and exceptions for any class
of transactions, that in the Board’s judgment are
necessary or proper to effectuate the purposes of
TILA, or prevent circumvention or evasion of TILA.
15 U.S.C. 5519; 15 U.S.C. 1604(a).

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
Bureau’s version of the regulations
under this final rule.
The Dodd-Frank Act 2 was signed into
law on July 21, 2010. Section 1471 of
the Dodd-Frank Act’s Title XIV, Subtitle
F (Appraisal Activities), added a new
TILA section 129H, 15 U.S.C. 1639h,
which establishes appraisal
requirements that apply to ‘‘higher-risk
mortgages.’’ Specifically, new TILA
section 129H prohibits a creditor from
extending credit in the form of a higherrisk mortgage loan to any consumer
without first:
• Obtaining a written appraisal
performed by a certified or licensed
appraiser who conducts a physical
property visit of the interior of the
property.
• Obtaining an additional appraisal
from a different certified or licensed
appraiser if the higher-risk mortgage
finances the purchase or acquisition of
a property from a seller at a higher price
than the seller paid, within 180 days of
the seller’s purchase or acquisition. The
additional appraisal must include an
analysis of the difference in sale prices,
changes in market conditions, and any
improvements made to the property
between the date of the previous sale
and the current sale.
A creditor of a ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’
must also:
• Provide the applicant, at the time of
the initial mortgage application, with a
statement that any appraisal prepared
for the mortgage is for the sole use of the
creditor, and that the applicant may
choose to have a separate appraisal
conducted at the applicant’s expense.
• Provide the applicant with one
copy of each appraisal conducted in
accordance with TILA section 129H
without charge, at least three (3) days
prior to the transaction closing date.
New TILA section 129H(f) defines a
‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ with reference to
the annual percentage rate (APR) for the
transaction. A higher-risk mortgage is a
‘‘residential mortgage loan’’ 3 secured by
a principal dwelling with an APR that
exceeds the average prime offer rate
(APOR) for a comparable transaction as
of the date the interest rate is set—
• By 1.5 or more percentage points,
for a first lien residential mortgage loan
with an original principal obligation
amount that does not exceed the amount
for the maximum limitation on the
original principal obligation of a
mortgage in effect for a residence of the
applicable size, as of the date of the
2 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (DoddFrank Act).
3 See Dodd-Frank Act, § 1401; TILA section
103(cc)(5), 15 U.S.C. 1602(cc)(5) (defining
‘‘residential mortgage loan’’).

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interest rate set, pursuant to the sixth
sentence of section 305(a)(2) of the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation Act (12 U.S.C. 1454);
• By 2.5 or more percentage points,
for a first lien residential mortgage loan
having an original principal obligation
amount that exceeds the amount for the
maximum limitation on the original
principal obligation of a mortgage in
effect for a residence of the applicable
size, as of the date of the interest rate
set, pursuant to the sixth sentence of
section 305(a)(2) of the Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation Act (12
U.S.C. 1454); or
• By 3.5 or more percentage points,
for a subordinate lien residential
mortgage loan.
The definition of ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ expressly excludes ‘‘qualified
mortgages,’’ as defined in TILA section
129C, and ‘‘reverse mortgage loans that
are qualified mortgages,’’ as defined in
TILA section 129C. 15 U.S.C. 1639c.
New TILA section 103(cc)(5) defines
the term ‘‘residential mortgage loan’’ as
any consumer credit transaction that is
secured by a mortgage, deed of trust, or
other equivalent consensual security
interest on a dwelling or on residential
real property that includes a dwelling,
other than a consumer credit transaction
under an open-end credit plan. 15
U.S.C. 1602(cc)(5).
New TILA section 129H(b)(4)(A)
requires the Agencies jointly to
prescribe regulations to implement the
property appraisal requirements for
higher-risk mortgages. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(4)(A). The Dodd-Frank Act
requires that final regulations to
implement these provisions be issued
within 18 months of the transfer of
functions to the Bureau pursuant to
section 1062 of the Act, or January 21,
2013.4 These regulations are to take
effect 12 months after issuance.5
The Agencies published proposed
regulations on September 5, 2012, that
would implement these higher-risk
mortgage appraisal provisions. 77 FR
54722 (Sept. 5, 2012). The comment
period closed on October 15, 2012. The
Agencies received more than 200
comment letters regarding the proposal
from banks, credit unions, other
creditors, appraisers, appraisal
management companies, industry trade
associations, consumer groups, and
others.
II. Summary of the Final Rule
Loans Covered
To implement the statutory definition
of ‘‘higher-risk mortgage,’’ the final rule
4 See
5 See

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uses the term ‘‘higher-priced mortgage
loan’’ (HPML), a term already in use
under the Bureau’s Regulation Z with a
meaning substantially similar to the
meaning of ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ in
the Dodd-Frank Act. In response to
commenters, the Agencies are using the
term HPML to refer generally to the
loans that could be subject to this final
rule because they are closed-end credit
and meet the statutory rate triggers, but
the Agencies are separately exempting
several types of HPML transactions from
the rule. The term ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ encompasses a closed-end
consumer credit transaction secured by
a principal dwelling with an APR
exceeding certain statutory thresholds.
These rate thresholds are substantially
similar to rate triggers that have been in
use under Regulation Z for HPMLs.6
Specifically, consistent with TILA
section 129H, a loan is a ‘‘higher-priced
mortgage loan’’ under the final rule if
the APR exceeds the APOR by 1.5
percent for first-lien conventional or
conforming loans, 2.5 percent for firstlien jumbo loans, and 3.5 percent for
subordinate-lien loans.7
Consistent with the statute, the final
rule exempts ‘‘qualified mortgages’’
from the requirements of the rule.
Qualified mortgages are defined in
§ 1026.43(e) of the Bureau’s final rule
implementing the Dodd-Frank Act’s
ability-to-repay requirements in TILA
section 129C (2013 ATR Final Rule).8 15
U.S.C. 1639c.
In addition, the final rule excludes the
following classes of loans from coverage
of the higher-risk mortgage appraisal
rule:
(1) Transactions secured by a new
manufactured home;
(2) transactions secured by a mobile
home, boat, or trailer;
(3) transactions to finance the initial
construction of a dwelling;
(4) loans with maturities of 12 months
or less, if the purpose of the loan is a
‘‘bridge’’ loan connected with the
acquisition of a dwelling intended to
become the consumer’s principal
dwelling; and
(5) reverse mortgage loans.
For reasons discussed more fully in
the section-by-section analysis of
6 Added to Regulation Z by the Board pursuant
to the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act
of 1994 (HOEPA), the HPML rules address unfair
or deceptive practices in connection with subprime
mortgages. See 73 FR 44522, July 30, 2008; 12 CFR
1026.35.
7 The existing HPML rules apply the 2.5 percent
over APOR trigger for jumbo loans only with
respect to a requirement to establish escrow
accounts. See 12 CFR 1026.35(b)(3)(v).
8 The Bureau released the 2013 ATR Final Rule
on January 10, 2013, under Docket No. CFPB–2011–
0008, CFPB–2012–0022, RIN 3170–AA17, at
http://consumerfinance.gov/Regulations.

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§ 1026.35(a)(1), below, the proposal
included a request for comments on an
alternative method of determining
coverage based on the ‘‘transaction
coverage rate’’ or TCR, rather than the
APR. Unlike the APR, the TCR would
exclude all prepaid finance charges not
retained by the creditor, a mortgage
broker, or an affiliate of either.9 This
change was proposed to address a
possible expansion of the definition of
‘‘finance charge’’ used to calculate the
APR, proposed by the Bureau in its
rulemaking to integrate mortgage
disclosures (2012 TILA–RESPA
Proposal 10). Accordingly, the proposal
defined ‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’
(termed ‘‘higher-priced mortgage loan’’
in this final rule) in the alternative as
calculated by either the TCR or APR,
with comment sought on both
approaches.
As explained more fully in the
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(a)(1), below, the final rule
requires creditors to determine whether
a loan is an HPML by comparing the
APR to the APOR. The Agencies are not
at this time adopting the proposed
alternative of replacing the APR with
the TCR and comparing the TCR to the
APOR. The Agencies will consider the
merits of any modifications to this
approach and public comments on this
matter if and when the Bureau adopts
the more inclusive definition of finance
charge proposed in the 2012 TILA–
RESPA Proposal.
Finally, based on public comments,
the Agencies intend to publish a
supplemental proposal to request
comment on possible exemptions for
‘‘streamlined’’ refinance programs and
small dollar loans, as well as to seek
comment on whether application of the
HPML appraisal rule to loans secured by
certain other property types, such as
existing manufactured homes, is
appropriate.
Requirements That Apply to All
Appraisals Performed for Non-Exempt
HPMLs
Consistent with the statute, the final
rule allows a creditor to originate an
HPML that is not otherwise exempt
from the appraisal rules only if the
following conditions are met:
• The creditor obtains a written
appraisal;
• The appraisal is performed by a
certified or licensed appraiser; and
• The appraiser conducts a physical
property visit of the interior of the
property.
9 See 75 FR 58539, 58660–62 (Sept. 24, 2010); 76
FR 11598, 11609, 11620, 11626 (March 2, 2011).
10 See 77 FR 51116 (Aug. 23, 2012).

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Also consistent with the statute, the
following requirements also apply with
respect to HPMLs subject to the final
rule:
• At application, the consumer must
be provided with a statement regarding
the purpose of the appraisal, that the
creditor will provide the applicant a
copy of any written appraisal, and that
the applicant may choose to have a
separate appraisal conducted for the
applicant’s own use at his or her own
expense; and
• The consumer must be provided
with a free copy of any written
appraisals obtained for the transaction
at least three (3) business days before
consummation.
Requirement To Obtain an Additional
Appraisal in Certain HPML
Transactions
In addition, the final rule implements
the Act’s requirement that the creditor
of a ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ obtain an
additional written appraisal, at no cost
to the borrower, when the ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ will finance the purchase of
the consumer’s principal dwelling and
there has been an increase in the
purchase price from a prior sale that
took place within 180 days of the
current sale. TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A), 15 U.S.C. 1639(b)(2)(A).
In the final rule, using their exemption
authority, the Agencies are setting
thresholds for the increase that will
trigger an additional appraisal. An
additional appraisal will be required for
an HPML (that is not otherwise exempt)
if either:
• The seller is reselling the property
within 90 days of acquiring it and the
resale price exceeds the seller’s
acquisition price by more than 10
percent; or
• The seller is reselling the property
within 91 to 180 days of acquiring it and
the resale price exceeds the seller’s
acquisition price by more than 20
percent.
The additional written appraisal, from
a different licensed or certified
appraiser, generally must include the
following information: an analysis of the
difference in sale prices (i.e., the sale
price paid by the seller and the
acquisition price of the property as set
forth in the consumer’s purchase
agreement), changes in market
conditions, and any improvements
made to the property between the date
of the previous sale and the current sale.
III. Legal Authority
As noted above, TILA section
129H(b)(4)(A), added by the Dodd-Frank
Act, requires the Agencies jointly to
prescribe regulations implementing

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section 129H. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(4)(A).
In addition, TILA section 129H(b)(4)(B)
grants the Agencies the authority jointly
to exempt, by rule, a class of loans from
the requirements of TILA section
129H(a) or section 129H(b) if the
Agencies determine that the exemption
is in the public interest and promotes
the safety and soundness of creditors. 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(4)(B).
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
For ease of reference, unless
otherwise noted, the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION refers to the section
numbers of the rules that will be
published in the Bureau’s Regulation Z
at 12 CFR 1026.35(a) and (c).11 As
explained further in the section-bysection analysis of § 1026.35(c)(7), the
rules are being published separately by
the OCC, the Board, and the Bureau. No
substantive difference among the three
sets of rules is intended. The NCUA and
FHFA adopt the rules as published in
the Bureau’s Regulation Z at 12 CFR
1026.35(a) and (c), by cross-referencing
these rules in 12 CFR 722.3 and 12 CFR
Part 1222, respectively. The FDIC
adopts the rules as published in the
Bureau’s Regulation Z at 12 CFR
1026.35(a) and (c), but does not crossreference the Bureau’s Regulation Z.
Section 1026.35 Prohibited Acts or
Practices in Connection With HigherPriced Mortgage Loans
The final rule is incorporated into
Regulation Z’s existing section on
prohibited acts or practices in
connection with HPMLs, § 1026.35. As
revised, § 1026.35 will consist of four
subsections—(a) Definitions; (b)
Escrows for higher-priced mortgage
loans; (c) Appraisals for higher-priced
mortgage loans; and (d) Evasion; openend credit. As explained in more detail
in the Bureau’s final rule on escrow
requirements for HPMLs (2013 Escrows
Final Rule) 12 (finalizing the Board’s
proposal to implement the Act’s escrow
account requirements under TILA
section 129D, 15 U.S.C. 1639d (2011
Escrows Proposal) 13), the subsections
on repayment ability (existing
§ 1026.35(b)(1)) and prepayment
penalties (existing § 1026.35(b)(2)) will
be deleted because the Dodd-Frank Act
addressed these matters in other ways.
Accordingly, repayment ability and
prepayment penalties are now
11 The final rule was issued by the Bureau on
January 18, 2013, in accordance with 12 CFR
1074.1.
12 The Bureau released the 2013 Escrows Final
Rule on January 10, 2013, under Docket No. CFPB–
2013–0001, RIN 3170–AA16, at http://
consumerfinance.gov/Regulations.
13 76 FR 11598, 11612 (March 2, 2011).

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
addressed in the Bureau’s final abilityto-repay rule (2013 ATR Final Rule) and
high-cost mortgage rule (2013 HOEPA
Final Rule).14 See §§ 1026.32(d)(6) and
1026.43(c), (d), (f), and (g).

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35(a) Definitions
35(a)(1) Higher-priced mortgage loan
TILA section 129H(f) defines a
‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ as a residential
mortgage loan secured by a principal
dwelling with an APR that exceeds the
APOR for a comparable transaction by a
specified percentage as of the date the
interest rate is set. 15 U.S.C. 1639(f).
New TILA section 103(cc)(5) defines the
term ‘‘residential mortgage loan’’ as
‘‘any consumer credit transaction that is
secured by a mortgage, deed of trust, or
other equivalent consensual security
interest on a dwelling or on residential
real property that includes a dwelling,
other than a consumer credit transaction
under an open-end credit plan.’’ 15
U.S.C. 1602(cc)(5).
Consistent with TILA sections 129H(f)
and 103(cc)(5), the proposal provided
that a ‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’ is a
closed-end consumer credit transaction
secured by the consumer’s principal
dwelling with an APR that exceeds the
APOR for a comparable transaction as of
the date the interest rate is set by 1.5
percentage points for first-lien
conventional mortgages, 2.5 percentage
points for first-lien jumbo mortgages,
and 3.5 percentage points for
subordinate-lien mortgages.
The Agencies noted in the proposal
that the statutory definition of higherrisk mortgage, though similar to that of
the regulatory term ‘‘higher-priced
mortgage loan,’’ differs from the existing
regulatory definition of higher-priced
mortgage loan in some important
respects. First, the statutory definition
of higher-risk mortgage expressly
excludes loans that meet the definition
of a ‘‘qualified mortgage’’ under TILA
section 129C. In addition, the statutory
definition of higher-risk mortgage
includes an additional 2.5 percentage
point threshold for first-lien jumbo
mortgage loans, while the definition of
higher-priced mortgage loan has
contained this threshold only for
purposes of applying the requirement to
establish escrow accounts for higherpriced mortgage loans. Compare TILA
section 129H(f)(2), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(f)(2),
with 12 CFR 1026.35(a)(1) and
1026.35(b)(3). The Agencies requested
comment on whether the concurrent use
of the defined terms ‘‘higher-risk
14 The Bureau released the 2013 HOEPA Final
Rule on January 10, 2013, under Docket No. CFPB–
2012–0029, RIN 3170–AA12, at http://
consumerfinance.gov/Regulations.

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mortgage loan’’ and ‘‘higher-priced
mortgage loan’’ in different portions of
Regulation Z may confuse industry or
consumers and, if so, what alternative
approach the Agencies could take to
implementing the statutory definition of
‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’ consistent
with the requirements of TILA section
129H. 15 U.S.C. 1639h.
The final rule adopts the proposed
definition, but replaces the term
‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’ with the
term ‘‘higher-priced mortgage loan’’ or
HPML. See existing § 1026.35(a)(1). The
final rule also makes certain changes to
the existing definition of HPML,
discussed in detail below.
Public Comments on the Proposal
Several credit unions, banks, and an
individual commenter believed that the
definition of ‘‘higher-risk mortgage
loan’’ did not adequately capture loans
that were truly ‘‘high risk.’’ Several of
these commenters stated that the
definition should account not only for
the cost of the loan, but also for other
risk factors, such as debt to income
ratio, loan amounts, and credit scores
and other measures of a consumer’s
creditworthiness. A bank commenter
believed that the interest rate thresholds
in the definition were ambiguous and
arbitrary and asserted that, for example,
1.5 percent was not an exceptionally
high interest margin in comparison with
interest margins for credit cards and
other financing. A credit union
commenter believed the rule would
apply to consumers who were in fact a
low credit risk.
Most commenters on the definition
expressly supported using the existing
term HPML rather than the new term
‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan.’’
Commenters including, among others, a
mortgage company, bank, credit union,
financial holding company, credit union
trade association, and banking trade
association, asserted that the use of two
terms with similar meanings would be
confusing to the mortgage credit
industry. Some asserted that consumers
would be confused by this as well.
Some of these commenters noted that
Regulation Z also already used the term
‘‘high-cost mortgage’’ with different
requirements and believed this third
term would further compound
consumer and industry confusion. Of
commenters who expressed a preference
for the term that should be used, most
recommended using the term HPML
because this term has been used by
industry for some time.
Some commenters on this issue also
advocated making the rate triggers and
overall definition the same for existing
HPMLs and ‘‘higher-risk mortgages’’

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regardless of the terms used. They
argued that this would reduce
compliance burdens and confusion and
ease costs associated with developing
and managing systems. One commenter
believed that developing a single
standard would also avoid creating
unnecessary delay and additional cost
for consumers in the origination
process.
A few commenters acknowledged key
differences between the statutory
meaning of ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ and
the regulatory term HPML, and
suggested ways of harmonizing the two
definitions. For example, these
commenters noted that ‘‘higher-risk
mortgages’’ do not include qualified
mortgages, whereas HPMLs do. To
address this difference, one commenter
suggested, for example, that the
appraisal requirements should apply to
HPMLs as currently defined, except for
qualified mortgages. Other commenters
suggested that the basic definition of
HPML be understood to refer solely to
the rate thresholds and suggested that
the exemption for qualified mortgages
from the appraisal rules be inserted as
a separate provision. They did not
discuss how to address additional
variances in the types of transactions
excluded from HPML and ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage,’’ respectively, such as the
exclusion from the meaning of HPML
but not the statutory definition of
‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ for constructiononly and bridge loans.
Other commenters also acknowledged
that the current definition of HPML
includes only two rate thresholds—one
for first-lien mortgages (APR exceeds
APOR by 1.5 percentage points) and the
other for subordinate-lien mortgages
(APR exceeds APOR by 3.5 percentage
points). By contrast, the statutory
definition of ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ has
an additional rate tier for first-lien
jumbo mortgages (APR exceeds APOR
by 2.5 percentage points). The HPML
requirements in Regulation Z apply a
rate threshold of 2.5 percentage points
above APOR to jumbo loans only for
purposes of the requirement to escrow.
The commenters who noted this
distinction held the view that the
‘‘middle tier’’ threshold would not have
a practical advantage for lenders or
consumers. Instead, they recommended
adopting a final rule with a single APR
trigger of 1.5 percentage points above
APOR for all first-lien loans.
Discussion
In the final rule, the Agencies use the
term HPML rather than the proposed
term ‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’ to
refer generally to the loans covered by
the appraisal rules. In a separate

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subsection of the final rule
(§ 1026.35(c)(2), discussed in the
section-by-section analysis below), the
Agencies exempt several types of
transactions from coverage of the HPML
appraisal rules.
On January 10, 2013, the Bureau
published the 2013 Escrows Final Rule,
its final rule to implement Dodd-Frank
Act amendments to TILA regarding the
requirement to escrow for certain
consumer mortgages.15 See TILA section
129D, 15 U.S.C. 1639d. These rules are
to take effect in May 2013, before the
effective date of this final rule (January
18, 2014).
Thus, consistent with TILA sections
129H(f) and 103(cc)(5) and the proposal,
the final rule in § 1026.35(a)(1) follows
the Bureau’s 2013 Escrows Final Rule in
defining an HPML as a closed-end
consumer credit transaction secured by
the consumer’s principal dwelling with
an annual percentage rate that exceeds
the average prime offer rate for a
comparable transaction as of the date
the interest rate is set:
• By 1.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a first lien with a
principal obligation at consummation
that does not exceed the limit in effect
as of the date the transaction’s interest
rate is set for the maximum principal
obligation eligible for purchase by
Freddie Mac;
• By 2.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a first lien with a
principal obligation at consummation
that exceeds the limit in effect as of the
date the transaction’s interest rate is set
for the maximum principal obligation
eligible for purchase by Freddie Mac;
and
• By 3.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a subordinate lien.
The Agencies acknowledge that some
commenters have concerns about the
rate thresholds; however, these rate
thresholds are prescribed by statute. See
TILA section 129H(f)(2), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(f)(2); see also 15 U.S.C.
1602(cc)(5).
The Bureau in the 2013 Escrows Final
Rule adopted a definition of HPML that
is consistent for both TILA’s escrow
requirement and TILA’s appraisal
requirements for ‘‘higher-risk
mortgages.’’ TILA sections 129D and
129H, 15 U.S.C. 1639d and 1639h. This
definition incorporates the APR
thresholds for loans covered by these
rules as prescribed by Dodd-Frank Act
amendments to TILA and also reflects
that both sets of rules apply only to
15 The

Bureau released the 2013 Escrows Final
Rule on January 10, 2013, under Docket No. CFPB–
2013–0001, RIN 3170–AA16, at http://
consumerfinance.gov/Regulations.

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closed-end mortgage transactions. TILA
sections 129D(b)(3) and 129H(f), 15
U.S.C. 1639d(b)(3) and 1639h(f).
Overall, the revised definition of HPML
adopted in the 2013 Escrows Final Rule
reflects only minor changes from the
current definition of HPML in existing
12 CFR 1026.35(a). For clarity, the
Agencies are re-publishing the
definition published earlier in the 2013
Escrows Final Rule.16 The incorporation
by reference in § 1026.35(c) of the term
HPML in § 1026.35(a) and the republishing of § 1026.35(a) in this final
rule are not intended to subject
§ 1026.35(a) to the joint rulemaking
authority of the Agencies under TILA
section 129H.
Consistent with the proposal, the final
rule uses the phrase ‘‘a closed-end
consumer credit transaction secured by
the consumer’s principal dwelling’’ in
place of the statutory term ‘‘residential
mortgage loan’’ throughout
§ 1026.35(a)(1). As also proposed, the
Agencies have elected to incorporate the
substantive elements of the statutory
definition of ‘‘residential mortgage
loan’’ into the definition of HPML rather
than using the term itself to avoid
inadvertent confusion of the term
‘‘residential mortgage loan’’ with the
term ‘‘residential mortgage transaction,’’
which is an established term used
throughout Regulation Z and defined in
§ 1026.2(a)(24). Compare 15 U.S.C.
1602(cc)(5) (defining ‘‘residential
mortgage loan’’) with 12 CFR
1026.2(a)(24) (defining ‘‘residential
mortgage transaction’’). Accordingly, the
final regulation text differs from the
express statutory language, but with no
intended substantive change to the
scope of TILA section 129H.
Annual Percentage Rate (APR) Versus
Transaction Coverage Rate (TCR)
The Agencies are not at this time
adopting an alternative method of
determining coverage based on the
‘‘transaction coverage rate’’ or TCR. The
proposal included a request for
comments on a proposed amendment to
the method of calculating the APR that
was proposed as part of other mortgagerelated proposals issued for comment by
the Bureau. In the Bureau’s proposal to
integrate mortgage disclosures (2012
TILA–RESPA Proposal), the Bureau
proposed to adopt a more simple and
inclusive finance charge calculation for
closed-end credit secured by real
16 In their respective publications of the final rule,
the Board is publishing the definition of HPML at
12 CFR 226.43(a)(3) and the OCC is including a
cross-reference to the definition of HPML at 12 CFR
34.202(b).

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property or a dwelling.17 The moreinclusive finance charge definition
would affect the APR calculation
because the finance charge is integral to
the APR calculation. The Bureau
therefore also sought comment on
whether replacing APR with an
alternative metric might be warranted to
determine whether a loan is a ‘‘high-cost
mortgage’’ covered by the Bureau’s
proposal to implement the Dodd-Frank
Act provision related to ‘‘high-cost
mortgages’’ (2012 HOEPA Proposal),18
as well as by the proposal to implement
the Dodd-Frank Act’s escrow
requirements in TILA section 129D
(2011 Escrows Proposal).19 The
alternative metric would have
implications for the 2013 ATR Final
Rule as well. One possible alternative
metric discussed in those proposals is
the ‘‘transaction coverage rate’’ (TCR),
which would exclude all prepaid
finance charges not retained by the
creditor, a mortgage broker, or an
affiliate of either.20
The new rate triggers for both ‘‘highcost mortgages’’ and ‘‘higher-risk
mortgages’’ under the Dodd-Frank Act
are based on the percentage by which
the APR exceeds APOR. Given this
similarity, the Agencies sought
comment in the higher-risk mortgage
proposal on whether a modification
should be considered for this final rule
as well and, if so, what type of
modification. Accordingly, the proposal
defined ‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’
(termed HPML in this final rule) in the
alternative as calculated by either the
TCR or APR, with comment sought on
both approaches. The Agencies relied
on their exemption authority under
section 1471 of the Dodd-Frank Act to
propose this alternative definition of
higher-risk mortgage. TILA section
129H(b)(4)(B), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(4)(B).
On September 6, 2012, the Bureau
published notice in the Federal Register
that the comment period for public
comments on the more inclusive
definition of ‘‘finance charge’’ in the
2012 TILA–RESPA Proposal and the use
of the TCR in the 2012 HOEPA Proposal
would be extended to November 6,
2012.21 The Bureau explained that it
believed that commenters needed
additional time to evaluate the proposed
more inclusive finance charge in light of
17 See 2012 TILA–RESPA Proposal, 77 FR 51116,
51143–46, 51277–79, 51291–93, 51310–11 (Aug. 23,
2012).
18 See 2012 HOEPA Proposal, 77 FR 49090,
49100–07, 49133–35 (Aug. 15, 2012).
19 15 U.S.C. 1639d; 76 FR 11598 (March 2, 2011).
20 See 75 FR 58539, 58660–62 (Sept. 24, 2010); 76
FR 11598, 11609, 11620, 11626 (March 2, 2011).
21 77 FR 54843 (Sept. 6, 2012); 77 FR 54844 (Sept.
6, 2012).

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the other proposals affected by the more
inclusive finance charge proposal and
the Bureau’s request for data on the
effects of a more inclusive finance
charge. The Bureau stated that it did not
expect to address any proposed changes
to the definition of finance charge or
methods of reconciling an expanded
definition of finance charge with APR
coverage tests until it finalizes the
disclosures in the 2012 TILA–RESPA
Proposal. A final TILA–RESPA
disclosure rule is not expected to be
issued until sometime after January of
2013.
For this reason, this final rule requires
creditors to determine whether a loan is
an HPML by comparing the APR to the
APOR and is not at this time finalizing
the proposed alternative of replacing the
APR with the TCR and comparing the
TCR to the APOR. The Agencies will
consider the merits of any modifications
to this approach that might be necessary
and public comments on this matter if
and when the Bureau adopts the more
inclusive definition of finance charge
proposed in the 2012 TILA–RESPA
Proposal.
Existing Definition of HPML Versus New
Definition of HPML
The new definition of HPML differs
from the definition of HPML in existing
§ 1026.35(a)(1) in several respects.
First, the new definition of HPML
incorporates an additional rate
threshold for determining coverage for
first-lien loans—an APR trigger of 2.5
percentage points above APOR for firstlien jumbo mortgage loans. The
definition retains the APR triggers of 1.5
percentage points above APOR for firstlien conforming mortgages and 3.5
percentage points above APOR for
subordinate-lien loans.
By statute, this additional APR
threshold of 2.5 percentage points above
APOR applies in determining coverage
of both the escrow requirements in
revised § 1026.35(b) and the appraisal
requirements in revised § 1026.35(c).
See TILA section 129D(b)(3)(B), 15
U.S.C. 1639d(b)(3)(B) (escrow rules);
TILA section 129H(f)(2)(B), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(f)(2)(B) (appraisal rules). The
APR trigger for first-lien jumbo loans
has applied to the requirement to
establish escrow accounts for HPMLs
under Regulation Z since April 1, 2011.
See existing § 1026.35(b)(3)(i) and (v);
76 FR 11319 (March 2, 2011).
Under the existing HPML rules in
§ 1026.35, the APR threshold of 2.5
percentage points above APOR applies
only to the requirement to escrow
HPMLs in § 1026.35(b)(3). See
§ 1026.35(b)(3)(v). Due to amendments
to TILA mandated by the Dodd-Frank

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Act, however, existing HPML rules on
repayment ability (§ 1026.35(b)(1)) and
prepayment penalties (§ 1026.35(b)(2))
will be eliminated from the HPML rules
in § 1026.35. New rules on repayment
ability and prepayment penalties are
incorporated into the Bureau’s 2013
ATR Final Rule and final rules on
‘‘high-cost’’ mortgages. See
§ 1026.32(b)(6) and (d)(6),
§ 1026.43(b)(10), (c), (e).
Thus, as revised, § 1026.35 will have
only two sets of rules for HPMLs—the
escrow requirements in revised
§ 1026.35(b) and the appraisal
requirements in new § 1026.35(c). The
APR test of 2.5 percentage points above
APOR applies, as noted, to both sets of
rules, so is now folded into the general
definition of HPML in § 1026.35(a)(1).
Accordingly, the definition of ‘‘jumbo’’
loans in preexisting § 1026.35(b)(3)(v) is
being removed.
A second change is that the revised
HPML definition adds the qualification
that an HPML is a ‘‘closed-end’’
consumer credit transaction. This
change is not substantive; instead, it
merely replaces text previously in
§ 1026.35(a)(3), that excludes from the
definition of HPML ‘‘a home-equity line
of credit subject to section 1026.5b.’’
Other exemptions from the current
definition of HPML listed in existing
§ 1026.35(a)(3) are moved into the
specific provisions setting forth
exemptions for certain types of HPMLs
from coverage of the escrow rules and
appraisal rules, respectively. See
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(2). Thus, the final rule
eliminates § 1026.35(a)(3), but with no
substantive change intended.
Third, with no substantive change
intended, the language used to describe
the HPML rate triggers has been revised
from preexisting § 1026.35(a)(1) to
conform to the language used in the
proposed ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’
appraisal rule, which in turn conforms
more closely to the statutory language
used to describe the rate triggers for
‘‘higher-risk mortgages’’ and similar
statutory rate triggers for application of
the escrow requirements. See TILA
section 129D(B)(3), 15 U.S.C.
1639d(b)(3) (escrow rules); TILA section
129H(f)(2), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(f)(2)
(appraisal rules).
Finally, the Official Staff
Interpretations are reorganized with no
substantive change intended.
Specifically, comments 35(a)(2)–1 and
–3, clarifying the terms ‘‘comparable
transaction’’ and ‘‘rate set,’’
respectively, are moved to comments
35(a)(1)–1 and 35(a)(1)–2. This
modification reflects that the terms
‘‘comparable transaction’’ and ‘‘rate set’’

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occur in the definition of ‘‘higher-priced
mortgage loan’’ in § 1026.35(a)(1).
Comparable Transaction
As comment 35(a)(1)–1 indicates, the
table of APORs published by the Bureau
will provide guidance to creditors in
determining how to use the table to
identify which APOR is applicable to a
particular mortgage transaction. The
Bureau publishes on the internet,
currently at http://www.ffiec.gov/
ratespread/newcalc.aspx, in table form,
APORs for a wide variety of mortgage
transaction types based on available
information. For example, the Bureau
publishes a separate APOR for at least
two types of variable rate transactions
and at least two types of non-variable
rate transactions. APORs are estimated
APRs derived by the Bureau from
average interest rates, points, and other
loan pricing terms currently offered to
consumers by a representative sample of
creditors for mortgage transactions that
have low-risk credit characteristics.
Currently, the Bureau calculates APORs
consistent with Regulation Z (see 12
CFR 1026.22 and appendix J to part
1026), for each transaction type for
which pricing terms are available from
a survey, and estimates APORs for other
types of transactions for which direct
survey data are not available based on
the loan pricing terms available in the
survey and other information. However,
data are not available for some types of
mortgage transactions, including reverse
mortgages. In addition, the Bureau
publishes on the internet the
methodology it uses to arrive at these
estimates.
Rate Set
Comment 35(a)(1)–2 clarifies that a
transaction’s APR is compared to the
APOR as of the date the transaction’s
interest rate is set (or ‘‘locked’’) before
consummation. The comment notes that
sometimes a creditor sets the interest
rate initially and then re-sets it at a
different level before consummation.
Accordingly, under the final rule, for
purposes of § 1026.35(a)(1), the creditor
should use the last date the interest rate
for the mortgage is set before
consummation.
Average Prime Offer Rate
The Agencies are not separately
publishing the definition of the term
‘‘average prime offer rate’’ in
§ 1026.35(a)(2). The meaning of this
term is determined by the Bureau and
is published and explained in the
Bureau’s 2013 Escrows Final Rule.
Consistent with the proposal, in the
Board’s publication of this final rule, the
term APOR is defined to have the same

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meaning as in § 1026.35(a)(2). See 12
CFR 226.43(a)(3)(Board). The OCC’s
publication of this final rule crossreferences the definition of HPML,
which incorporates the term APOR as
defined in § 1026.35(a)(2). See 12 CFR
34.202(b). The OCC’s and the Board’s
versions of Official Staff Interpretations
to the final rule cross-reference
comments to § 1026.35(a)(2) that explain
the meaning of average prime offer rate
as described below. See 12 CFR 34.202,
comment 1 (OCC); 12 CFR 226.43,
comment 2. Comment 35(a)(2)–1
clarifies that APORs are APRs derived
from average interest rates, points, and
other loan pricing terms currently
offered to consumers by a representative
sample of creditors for mortgage
transactions that have low-risk pricing
characteristics. Other pricing terms
include commonly used indices,
margins, and initial fixed-rate periods
for variable-rate transactions. Relevant
pricing characteristics include a
consumer’s credit history and
transaction characteristics such as the
loan-to-value ratio, owner-occupant
status, and purpose of the transaction.
Currently, to obtain APORs, the Bureau
uses a survey of creditors that both
meets the criteria of § 1026.35(a)(2) and
provides pricing terms for at least two
types of variable rate transactions and at
least two types of non-variable rate
transactions. The Freddie Mac Primary
Mortgage Market Survey® is an example
of such a survey, and is the survey
currently used to calculate APORs.
Principal Dwelling
As in the proposal, the final versions
of the OCC’s and the Board’s
publication of the definition of ‘‘higherpriced mortgage loan’’ rules crossreference the Bureau’s Regulation Z and
Official Staff Interpretations for the
meanings of ‘‘principal dwelling,’’
‘‘average prime offer rate,’’ ‘‘comparable
transaction,’’ and ‘‘rate set.’’ See 12 CFR
34.202, comments 1 (OCC); 12 CFR
226.43(a)(3), comments 1, 2, 3, and 4
(Board). The Regulation Z comments to
which the OCC’s and Board’s rules
cross-reference regarding the meaning of
‘‘average prime offer rate,’’ ‘‘comparable
transaction,’’ and ‘‘rate set’’ are
described above. See 12 CFR 34.202,
comment1 (OCC); 12 CFR 226.43(a)(3),
comments 2, 3, and 4 (Board). A
proposed comment cross-referencing the
Bureau’s Regulation Z for the meaning
of the term ‘‘principal dwelling’’ is not
adopted in the Bureau’s version of the
final rule because the meaning of
‘‘principal dwelling’’ in new
§ 1026.35(a)(1) is understood to be
consistent within the Bureau’s
Regulation Z. The OCC’s version of this

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final rule also does not include the
proposed comment specifically crossreferencing the meaning of ‘‘principal
dwelling’’ in the Bureau’s Regulation Z
because the OCC is adopting the
Bureau’s definition of HPML, which the
Bureau’s definition of ‘‘principal
dwelling.’’ See 12 CFR 34.202(b); see
also 12 CFR 34.202, comment 1. The
proposed comment is, however, adopted
in the Board’s publication of the rule.
See 12 CFR 226.43(a)(3), comment 1.
Consistent with the proposal, in the
final rule, the term ‘‘principal dwelling’’
has the same meaning as in
§ 1026.2(a)(24) and is further explained
in existing comment 2(a)(24)–3.
Consistent with comment 2(a)(24)–3, a
vacation home or other second home
would not be a principal dwelling.
However, if a consumer buys or builds
a new dwelling that will become the
consumer’s principal dwelling within a
year or upon the completion of
construction, the comment clarifies that
the new dwelling is considered the
principal dwelling.
Threshold for ‘‘Jumbo’’ Loans
Comment 35(a)(1)–3 explains that
§ 1026.35(a)(1)(ii) provides a separate
threshold for determining whether a
transaction is a higher-priced mortgage
loan subject to § 1026.35 when the
principal balance exceeds the limit in
effect as of the date the transaction’s rate
is set for the maximum principal
obligation eligible for purchase by
Freddie Mac (a ‘‘jumbo’’ loan). The
comment further explains that FHFA
establishes and adjusts the maximum
principal obligation pursuant to rules
under 12 U.S.C. 1454(a)(2) and other
provisions of Federal law. The comment
clarifies that adjustments to the
maximum principal obligation made by
FHFA apply in determining whether a
mortgage loan is a ‘‘jumbo’’ loan to
which the separate coverage threshold
in § 1026.35(a)(1)(ii) applies.
The Board’s publication of the
definition of ‘‘higher-priced mortgage
loan’’ rule in this final rule crossreferences this comment in the Bureau’s
Official Staff Interpretations. See 12 CFR
226.43(a)(3), comment 3 (Board). The
OCC’s version of the final rule adopts
this comment in 12 CFR 34.202,
comment 1.
35(c) Appraisals for Higher-Priced
Mortgage Loans
New § 1026.35(c) implements the
substantive appraisal requirements for
‘‘higher-risk mortgages’’ in TILA section
129H. 15 U.S.C. 1639h. The OCC’s and
the Board’s versions of these rules are
substantively identical to the rules in
§ 1026.35(c). See 12 CFR 34.201 et seq.

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(OCC) and 12 CFR 226.43 (Board); see
also section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(7).
35(c)(1) Definitions
As discussed above, revised
§ 1026.35(a) contains the definitions of
HPML and APOR, which are used in
both the HPML escrow rules in
§ 1026.35(b) and the HPML appraisal
rules in new § 1026.35(c). Definitions
specific to the substantive appraisal
requirements of § 1026.35(c) are
segregated in new § 1026.35(c)(1) and
described below, along with applicable
public comments.
35(c)(1)(i) Certified or Licensed
Appraiser
TILA section 129H(b)(3) defines
‘‘certified or licensed appraiser’’ as a
person who ‘‘(A) is, at a minimum,
certified or licensed by the State in
which the property to be appraised is
located; and (B) performs each appraisal
in conformity with the Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal
Practice and title XI of the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989, and the
regulations prescribed under such title,
as in effect on the date of the appraisal.’’
15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(3). Consistent with
the statute, the Agencies proposed to
define ‘‘certified or licensed appraiser’’
as a person who is certified or licensed
by the State agency in the State in
which the property that secures the
transaction is located, and who
performs the appraisal in conformity
with the Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP)
and the requirements applicable to
appraisers in title XI of the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989, as amended
(FIRREA title XI) (12 U.S.C. 3331 et
seq.), and any implementing regulations
in effect at the time the appraiser signs
the appraiser’s certification.
The proposed definition of ‘‘certified
or licensed appraiser’’ generally mirrors
the statutory language in TILA section
129H(b)(3) regarding State licensing and
certification. However, the Agencies
proposed to use the defined term ‘‘State
agency’’ to clarify that the appraiser
must be certified or licensed by a State
agency that meets the standards of
FIRREA title XI. The proposal defined
the term ‘‘State agency’’ to mean a
‘‘State appraiser certifying and licensing
agency’’ recognized in accordance with
section 1118(b) of FIRREA title XI (12
U.S.C. 3347(b)) and any implementing

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regulations.22 See section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(1)(iv), below.
As discussed below, the Agencies are
adopting the proposed definition of
‘‘certified or licensed appraiser’’
without change.
Uniform Standards of Professional
Appraisal Practice (USPAP). Consistent
with the statutory definition of
‘‘certified or licensed appraiser,’’ the
proposal incorporated into the proposed
definition the requirement that, to be a
‘‘certified or licensed appraiser’’ under
the appraisal rules, the appraiser has to
perform the appraisal in conformity
with the ‘‘Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice.’’ A
comment was proposed to clarify that
USPAP refers to the professional
appraisal standards established by the
Appraisal Standards Board of the
‘‘Appraisal Foundation,’’ as defined in
FIRREA section 1121(9). 12 U.S.C.
3350(9). The Agencies believe that this
terminology is appropriate for
consistency with the existing definition
in FIRREA title XI and adopt the
definition and comment as proposed.
See § 1026.35(c)(1)(i) and comment
35(c)(1)(i)–1.
In addition, TILA section 129H(b)(3)
requires that the appraisal be performed
in conformity with USPAP ‘‘as in effect
on the date of the appraisal.’’ 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(3). The Agencies proposed to
incorporate this concept in the
definition of ‘‘certified or licensed
appraiser’’ and to include a comment
clarifying that the ‘‘date of the
appraisal’’ is the date on which the
appraiser signs the appraiser’s
certification. Again, the Agencies adopt
the definition and comment as
proposed. See § 1026.35(c)(1)(i) and
comment 35(c)(1)(i)–1. Thus, the
relevant edition of USPAP is the one in
effect at the time the appraiser signs the
appraiser’s certification.
Appraiser’s certification. The
proposal also included a comment to
clarify that the term ‘‘appraiser’s
certification’’ refers to the certification
that must be signed by the appraiser for
each appraisal assignment as specified
in USPAP Standards Rule 2–3.23 The
final rule adopts this clarification
22 If the Appraisal Subcommittee of the Federal
Financial Institutions Examination Council issues
certain written findings concerning, among other
things, a State agency’s failure to recognize and
enforce FIRREA title XI standards, appraiser
certifications and licenses issued by that State are
not recognized for purposes of title XI and
appraisals performed by appraisers certified or
licensed by that State are not acceptable for
federally-related transactions. 12 U.S.C. 3347(b).
23 See Appraisal Standards Bd., Appraisal Fdn.,
Standards Rule 2–3, USPAP (2012–2013 ed.) at U–
29, available at http://www.uspap.org.

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without change. See comment
35(c)(1)(i)–2.
FIRREA title XI and implementing
regulations. As noted, TILA section
129H(b)(3) defines ‘‘certified or licensed
appraiser’’ as a person who is certified
or licensed as an appraiser and
‘‘performs each appraisal in accordance
with [USPAP] and title XI of [FIRREA],
and the regulations prescribed under
such title, as in effect on the date of the
appraisal.’’ 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(3).
Section 1110 of FIRREA directs each
Federal financial institutions regulatory
agency 24 to prescribe ‘‘appropriate
standards for the performance of real
estate appraisals in connection with
federally related transactions under the
jurisdiction of each such agency or
instrumentality.’’ 12 U.S.C. 3339. These
rules must require, at a minimum—(1)
that real estate appraisals be performed
in accordance with generally accepted
appraisal standards as evidenced by the
appraisal standards promulgated by the
Appraisal Standards Board of the
Appraisal Foundation; and (2) that such
appraisals shall be written appraisals.
12 U.S.C. 3339(1) and (2).
The Dodd-Frank Act added a third
requirement—that real estate appraisals
be subject to appropriate review for
compliance with USPAP—for which the
Federal financial institutions regulatory
agencies must prescribe implementing
regulations. FIRREA section 1110(3), 12
U.S.C. 3339(3). FIRREA section 1110
also provides that each Federal banking
agency may require compliance with
additional standards if the agency
determines in writing that additional
standards are required to properly carry
out its statutory responsibilities. 12
U.S.C. 3339. Accordingly, the Federal
financial institutions regulatory
agencies have prescribed appraisal
regulations implementing FIRREA title
XI that set forth, among other
requirements, minimum standards for
the performance of real estate appraisals
in connection with ‘‘federally related
transactions,’’ which are defined as real
estate-related financial transactions that
a Federal banking agency engages in,
contracts for, or regulates, and that
require the services of an appraiser.25 12
U.S.C. 3339, 3350(4).
The Agencies’ proposal provided that
the relevant provisions of FIRREA title
XI and its implementing regulations are
those selected portions of FIRREA title
XI requirements ‘‘applicable to
24 The Federal financial institutions regulatory
agencies are the Board, the FDIC, the OCC, and the
NCUA.
25 See OCC: 12 CFR Part 34, Subpart C; Board: 12
CFR part 208, subpart E, and 12 CFR part 225,
subpart G; FDIC: 12 CFR part 323; and NCUA: 12
CFR part 722.

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appraisers,’’ in effect at the time the
appraiser signs the appraiser’s
certification. While the Federal financial
institutions regulatory agencies’
requirements in FIRREA also apply to
an institution’s ordering and review of
an appraisal, the Agencies proposed that
the definition of ‘‘certified or licensed
appraiser’’ incorporate only FIRREA
title XI’s minimum standards related to
the appraiser’s performance of the
appraisal. Accordingly, a proposed
comment clarified that the relevant
standards ‘‘applicable to appraisers’’ are
found in regulations prescribed under
FIRREA section 1110 (12 U.S.C. 3339)
‘‘that relate to an appraiser’s
development and reporting of the
appraisal,’’ and that paragraph (3) of
FIRREA, which relates to the review of
appraisals, is not relevant. The Agencies
are adopting these proposals as
§ 1026.35(c)(1)(i) and comment
35(c)(1)(i)–3.
The Agencies also noted that FIRREA
title XI applies by its terms to ‘‘federally
related transactions’’ involving a
narrower category of loans and
institutions than the group of loans and
lenders that fall within TILA’s
definition of ‘‘creditor.’’ 26 For example,
the FIRREA title XI regulations do not
apply to transactions of $250,000 or
less.27 They also do not apply to nondepository institutions.28 However, the
Agencies believe that Congress, by
including the higher-risk mortgage
appraisal rules in TILA, which applies
to all creditors, demonstrated its
intention that all creditors that extend
higher-risk mortgage loans, such as
independent mortgage companies,
should obtain appraisals from
appraisers who conform to the
standards in FIRREA related to the
development and reporting of the
appraisal. The Agencies also believe
that, by placing this rule in TILA,
Congress did not intend to limit its
application to loans over $250,000. The
Agencies adopt this broader
interpretation in the final rule.
In the proposed rule, the Agencies did
not identify specific FIRREA regulations
that relate to the appraiser’s
development and reporting of the
appraisal. The Agencies requested
26 TILA section 103(g), 15 U.S.C. 1602(g)
(implemented by § 1026.2(a)(17)). See also 12
U.S.C. 3350(4) and OCC: 12 CFR 34.42(f); Board: 12
CFR 225.62(f); FDIC: 12 CFR 323.2(f); and NCUA:
12 CFR 722.2(e) (defining ‘‘federally related
transaction’’).
27 See OCC: 12 CFR 34.43(a)(1); Board: 12 CFR
225.63(a)(1); FDIC: 12 CFR 323.3(a)(1); and NCUA:
12 CFR 722.3(a)(1).
28 See 12 U.S.C. 3339, 3350(4) (defining
‘‘federally related transaction,’’ (6) (defining
‘‘federal financial institutions regulatory agencies’’)
and (7) (defining ‘‘financial institution’’).

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comment on whether the final rule
should address any particular FIRREA
requirements applicable to appraisers
that related to the development and
reporting of the appraisal. Consistent
with the proposal, the final rule does
not identify specific FIRREA regulations
that relate to the appraiser’s
development and reporting of the
appraisal.

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Public Comments on the Proposal
Appraiser trade associations, a
housing advocate, and a credit union
commenter agreed that the rule should
apply to all qualifying mortgage loans,
and not only the subset of the higherrisk mortgage loans already covered by
FIRREA, including those loans with a
transaction value of $250,000 or less.
The appraiser trade associations and the
housing advocate commenters believed
that all higher-risk mortgages must be
included in the rule to ensure that
consumers receive the protections
offered by appraisals. The housing
advocate commenter also believed that
including all higher-risk mortgages
would reduce risk to all parties involved
in the financing and servicing of
mortgages and would ensure equal
access to credit. This commenter
specifically requested that the Agencies
at least require an interior appraisal by
licensed appraisers for all residential
mortgages above $50,000, regardless of
whether they are originated or insured
by the private sector, Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac, or the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA).
A banking trade association and a
credit union commenter, however,
believed that Congress intended the
FIRREA requirements to apply only to a
subset of higher-risk mortgages that are
already covered by FIRREA. The
banking trade association commenter
believed the Agencies should not
require the rule to apply to loans held
in portfolio or loans with a value of
$250,000 or less, because a bank holding
a loan in portfolio has strong incentive
to ensure that the property sale is
legitimate and the property is properly
valued. The commenter also believed
the statute intended to apply the rules
only to the subset of higher-risk
mortgages with a value of over
$250,000, as is provided in the Federal
financial institutions regulatory
agencies’ regulations implementing
FIRREA. The banking trade association
and a bank commenter noted that many
community banks, particularly in rural
areas, limit costs to consumers by not
requiring appraisals on mortgages held
in portfolio of $250,000 or less as
permitted under FIRREA title XI or by

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performing cheaper, in-house
evaluations of property.
On whether the final rule should
identify specific FIRREA regulations
that relate to the development and
reporting of the appraisal, the Agencies
received one comment letter from
appraiser trade associations. These
commenters requested that the Agencies
specify that creditors must use certified
rather than licensed appraisers. The
comment is discussed in more detail in
the discussion of the use of ‘‘certified’’
versus ‘‘licensed’’ appraisers, below.
Discussion
As discussed in the proposal, the
Agencies believe that, by referencing
FIRREA requirements in the context of
defining ‘‘certified or licensed
appraiser,’’ the statute intended to limit
FIRREA’s requirements to those that
apply to the appraiser’s development
and reporting of performance of the
appraisal, rather than the FIRREA
requirements that apply to a creditor’s
ordering and review of the appraisal.
TILA section 129H(b)(3), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(3). The Agencies also did not
propose to interpret ‘‘certified or
licensed appraiser’’ to include
requirements related to appraisal review
under FIRREA section 1110(3) because
these requirements relate to an
institution’s responsibilities after
receiving the appraisal, rather than to
how the certified or licensed appraiser
performs the appraisal. Comment
35(c)(1)(i)–3 is consistent with the
proposal in this regard. Accordingly, as
proposed, the final rule includes a
comment clarifying that the
requirements of FIRREA section 1110(3)
that relate to the ‘‘appropriate review’’
of appraisals are not relevant for
purposes of whether an appraiser is a
certified or licensed appraiser under the
proposal. See comment 35(c)(1)(i)–3.
At the same time and in light of
public comments, the Agencies
reviewed the relevant statutory
provisions and confirmed their
conclusion that applying the FIRREA
requirements related to an appraiser’s
performance of an appraisal broadly—to
transactions originated by creditors and
transaction types not necessarily subject
to FIRREA (such as loans of $250,000 or
less)—is wholly consistent with the
consumer protection purpose of title
XIV of the Dodd-Frank Act, as well as
specific language of the appraisal
provisions. For example, the Agencies
believe that if Congress intended to
limit application of the FIRREA
requirements to mortgage loans covered
by FIRREA, such as loans of over
$250,000 made by Federally-regulated
depositories, Congress would have

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expressly done so. Instead, Congress
placed the appraisal requirements,
including the definition of ‘‘certified
and licensed appraiser’’ referencing
FIRREA, in TILA, which applies to
loans made by all types of creditors.
Moreover, limiting coverage of the
Dodd-Frank Act higher-risk mortgage
appraisal rules to loans of over $250,000
would eliminate protections for most
higher-risk mortgage consumers.29 From
a practical standpoint, the Agencies
believe that the most reasonable
interpretation of the statute is that all
mortgage loans meeting the definition of
‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ are subject to a
uniform set of rules, regardless of the
type of creditor. This creates a level
playing field and ensures the same
protections for all consumers of ‘‘higherrisk mortgages.’’ For these reasons,
consistent with the proposal, the final
rule applies the FIRREA requirements to
appraisals for all HPMLs that are not
exempt from the regulation. See
§ 1026.35(c)(2).
‘‘Certified’’ versus ‘‘licensed’’
appraiser. Neither TILA section 129H
nor the proposed rule defined the
individual terms ‘‘certified appraiser’’
and ‘‘licensed appraiser,’’ or specified
when a certified appraiser or a licensed
appraiser must be used. Instead, the
proposed rule required that creditors
obtain an appraisal performed by ‘‘a
certified or licensed appraiser.’’ 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(1), (b)(2). The Agencies
noted in the proposal that certified
appraisers generally differ from licensed
appraisers based on the examination,
education, and experience requirements
necessary to obtain each credential. The
proposal also stated that existing State
and Federal law and regulations require
the use of a certified appraiser rather
than a licensed appraiser for certain
types of transactions. The Agencies
requested comment on whether the final
rule should address the issue of when
a creditor must use a certified appraiser
rather than a licensed appraiser.
Consistent with the proposal, the final
rule does not separately define
‘‘certified’’ appraiser or ‘‘licensed’’
appraiser, or specify when a creditor
29 According to HMDA data, mean loan size for
purchase-money HPMLs in 2011 was $141,600
(median $109,000) and for refinance HPMLs in
2011, mean loans size was $141,600 (median
$104,000). In 2010, mean loan size for purchasemoney HPMLs was $140,400 (median $100,000)
and for refinance HPMLs, mean loan size was
$138,600 (median $95,000). See Robert B. Avery,
Neil Bhutta, Kenneth B. Brevoort, and Glenn
Canner, ‘‘The Mortgage Market in 2011: Highlights
from the Data Reported under the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act,’’ FR Bulletin, Vol. 98, no. 6 (Dec.
2012) http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/bulletin/
2012/PDF/2011_HMDA.pdf.

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should use a ‘‘certified’’ rather than a
‘‘licensed’’ appraiser.

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Public Comments on the Proposal
Several national and State credit
union trade associations believed that
the Agencies should not specify when a
creditor must use a certified appraiser
rather than a licensed appraiser and
requested that the Agencies provide
creditors with flexibility to make that
determination. Some of these
commenters noted that State
requirements for certified or licensed
appraisers may vary significantly; some
states may not issue licenses for
appraisers, and some may issue
different certified appraiser credentials
based on the type of property. A
financial holding company commenter,
on the other hand, requested that the
Agencies clarify circumstances under
which a lender must use a certified or
a licensed appraiser to facilitate
compliance.
On the other hand, appraiser trade
association commenters believed that
creditors should be required to use only
certified appraisers, because the
certification is more rigorous than
licensure. These commenters stated that
the FHA requires newly-eligible
appraisers to be certified, and noted that
many states have phased out, or are in
the process of phasing out, the licensing
of appraisers rather than certification.
The commenters further stated that
when collateral property is complex, the
Agencies should require a certified
appraiser who is also credentialed by a
recognized professional appraisal
organization. Similarly, a realtor trade
association commenter believed that
using certified appraisers was
preferable. The commenter believed that
the rule should define appraisals for
higher-risk mortgages as ‘‘complex,’’
thus requiring that only certified
appraisers may perform the appraisals.
Discussion
As noted above, several commenters
confirmed the Agencies’ concerns that
State requirements for certified or
licensed appraisers may vary
significantly and are evolving. Overall,
the Agencies believe that imposing
specific requirements in this rule about
when a certified or licensed appraiser is
required goes beyond the scope of the
statutory ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’
appraisal provisions in TILA section
129h. 15 U.S.C. 1639h. The Agencies do
not believe that this rule is an
appropriate vehicle for guidance on
standards for use of a State certified or
licensed appraiser that may change over
time and vary by jurisdiction. Although
the FIRREA appraisal regulations

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specifically require a ‘‘certified’’
appraiser for certain types of mortgage
transactions, the Agencies do not
believe that these FIRREA rules are
incorporated into the higher-risk
mortgage appraisal rules applicable to
all creditors. See section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(1)(i) (defining
‘‘certified or licensed appraiser’’ to
incorporate FIRREA requirements
related to the development and
reporting of the appraisal, not appraiser
selection or review). Thus, the final rule
need not clarify these rules for entities
not subject to the FIRREA appraisal
regulations; entities subject to the
FIRREA appraisal regulations are
familiar with them.
Appraiser competency. In the
proposed rule, the Agencies also noted
that, in selecting an appraiser for a
particular appraisal assignment,
creditors typically consider an
appraiser’s experience, knowledge, and
educational background to determine
the individual’s competency to appraise
a particular property and in a particular
market. The proposed rule did not
specify competency standards, but the
Agencies requested comment on
whether the rule should address
appraiser competency. In keeping with
the proposal, the final rule does not
specify competency standards for
appraisers.
Public Comments on the Proposal
A realtor trade association commenter
suggested that the rule incorporate
guidance from the Interagency
Appraisal and Evaluation Guidelines 30
regarding creditors’ criteria for selecting,
evaluating, and monitoring the
performance of appraisers. However, a
banking trade association, a financial
holding company, appraiser trade
association, and several national and
State credit union trade association
commenters stated that the Agencies
should not require creditors to apply
specific competency standards for
appraisers. Several commenters asserted
that competency standards would result
in increased regulatory burden and cost,
and a banking trade association
expressed concern that requiring
creditors to implement subjective
competency standards could raise
conflict of interest issues with respect to
appraiser independence.
Appraiser trade association
commenters suggested that instead of
setting forth competency standards, the
Agencies should require a creditor to
ensure that the engagement letter
properly lays out the required scope of
work, that the appraiser is independent,
30 75

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10377

and that the appraiser possesses the
appropriate experience to perform the
assignment including, when necessary,
geographic competency. The financial
holding company commenter suggested
that the rule should reference FIRREA
and require creditors to ensure that
appraisers are in good standing. The
banking trade association commenter
believed that the Agencies should
include a reference to USPAP to create
a uniform competency standard. One
State credit union association believed
that the Agencies should permit
creditors to rely on appraisers’
representations regarding licensing and
certification.
Discussion
The Agencies believe that the many
aspects of appraiser competency are
beyond the scope of TILA’s ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ provisions defining ‘‘certified
or licensed appraiser,’’ which do not
mention competency. Appraiser
competency is addressed in a number of
regulations and guidelines for Federallyregulated depositories, which are
expected to know and follow rules and
guidance under FIRREA regarding
appraiser competency. 31
35(c)(1)(ii) Manufactured Home
As discussed in in the section-bysection analysis of § 1026.35(c)(2)(ii),
below, the final rule exempts a
transaction secured by a new
manufactured home from the appraisal
requirements of § 1026.35(c).
Accordingly, § 1026.35(c)(1)(ii) adds a
definition of manufactured home,
clarifying that, for the purposes of this
section, the term manufactured home
has the same meaning as in HUD
regulation 24 CFR 3280.2.
35(c)(1)(iii) National Registry
As discussed in § 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(B)
below, to qualify for the safe harbor
provided in the final rule, a creditor
must verify through the ‘‘National
Registry’’ that the appraiser is a certified
or licensed appraiser in the State in
which the property is located as of the
date the appraiser signs the appraiser’s
certification. Under FIRREA section
1109, the Appraisal Subcommittee of
the FFIEC is required to maintain a
registry of State certified and licensed
appraisers eligible to perform appraisals
in connection with federally related
31 See, e.g., id. at 77465–68 (Dec. 10, 2010).
Appraiser competency is critical to the quality and
accuracy of residential mortgage appraisals. As a
commenter noted, the federal banking agencies
provide guidance in the Interagency Appraisal and
Evaluation Guidelines regarding creditors’ criteria
for selecting, evaluating, and monitoring the
performance of appraisers. See id.

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transactions. 12 U.S.C. 3338. For
purposes of qualifying for the safe
harbor, the final rule requires that a
creditor must verify that the appraiser
holds a valid appraisal license or
certification through the registry
maintained by the Appraisal
Subcommittee. Thus, as proposed,
§ 1026.35(c)(1)(iii) in the final rule
provides that the term ‘‘National
Registry’’ means the database of
information about State certified and
licensed appraisers maintained by the
Appraisal Subcommittee of the FFIEC.

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

35(c)(1)(iv) State Agency
TILA section 129H(b)(3)(A) provides
that, among other things, a certified or
licensed appraiser means a person who
is certified or licensed by the ‘‘State’’ in
which the property to be appraised is
located. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(3)(A). As
discussed above, a certified or licensed
appraiser means a person certified or
licensed by the ‘‘State agency’’ in the
State in which the property that secures
the transaction is located. Under
FIRREA section 1118, the Appraisal
Subcommittee of the FFIEC is
responsible for recognizing each State’s
appraiser certifying and licensing
agency for the purpose of determining
whether the agency is in compliance
with the appraiser certifying and
licensing requirements of FIRREA title
XI. 12 U.S.C. 3347. In addition, FIRREA
section 1120(a) prohibits a financial
institution from obtaining an appraisal
from a person the financial institution
knows is not a State certified or licensed
appraiser in connection with a federally
related transaction. 12 U.S.C. 3349(a).
Accordingly, as proposed,
§ 1026.35(c)(1)(iv) in the final rule
defines the term ‘‘State agency’’ as a
‘‘State appraiser certifying and licensing
agency’’ recognized in accordance with
section 1118(b) of FIRREA and any
implementing regulations.
35(c)(2) Exemptions
The Agencies proposed to exclude
from the definition of ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage loan,’’ and thus from coverage
of TILA’s ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’
appraisal rules entirely, the following
types of loans: (1) Qualified mortgage
loans as defined in § 1026.43(e); (2)
reverse-mortgage transactions subject to
§ 1026.33(a); and (3) loans secured
solely by a residential structure. These
exclusions were proposed consistent
with the express language of TILA
section 129H(f) and pursuant to the
Agencies’ exemption authority in TILA
section 129H(b)(4)(B), which authorizes
the Agencies to exempt from coverage of
the appraisal rules a class of loans if the
Agencies determine that the exemption

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is in the public interest and promotes
the safety and soundness of creditors. 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(4)(B) and (f).
The Agencies requested comment on
these proposed exemptions. In addition,
the Agencies requested comment on
whether the final rule should exempt
the following types of loans:
• Loans to finance new construction
of a dwelling;
• Temporary or ‘‘bridge’’ loans,
typically used to purchase a new
dwelling where the consumer plans to
sell the consumer’s current dwelling;
and
• Loans secured by properties in
‘‘rural’’ areas. For this last exemption,
the Agencies requested comment on
how to define ‘‘rural’’; specifically,
whether to define it as the Board did in
its proposal to implement Dodd-Frank
Act ability-to-repay requirements under
TILA section 129C. See 15 U.S.C. 1639c;
76 FR 27390 (May 11, 2011) (2011 ATR
Proposal) (and also in the 2011 Escrows
Proposal), discussed in more detail
below.
Finally, the Agencies requested
comment on whether commenters
believed that any other types of loans
should be exempt from the final rule.
The final rule adopts two of the
proposed exemptions: qualified
mortgages and reverse mortgages. See
§ 1026.35(c)(2)(i) and (vi). The final rule
also adopts exemptions for loans
secured by new manufactured homes
and by mobile homes, boats, or trailers,
which replace the proposed exemption
for loans secured solely by a residential
structure. See § 1026.35(c)(2)(ii) (new
manufactured homes) and (iii) (mobile
homes, boats, or trailers). In addition,
the final rule exempts the two types of
loans on which the Agencies
specifically requested comment: new
construction loans and bridge loans. See
§ 1026.35(c)(2)(iv) (construction loans)
and (v) (bridge loans).
In addition, based on public
comments, the Agencies intend to
publish a supplemental proposal to
request comment on possible
exemptions for ‘‘streamlined’’ refinance
programs and small dollar loans, as well
as to seek comment on whether
application of the HPML appraisal rule
to loans secured by certain other
property types, such as existing
manufactured homes, is appropriate.
Exemptions from the HPML appraisal
rules of § 1026.35(c) are set out in new
§ 1026.35(c)(2). The structure of the
final rule differs from that of the
proposed rule. The proposed rule
excluded certain loan types from the
definition of ‘‘higher-risk mortgage
loan’’ and thereby excluded these loan
types from coverage of all of the

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‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ appraisal rules.
By contrast, the final rule defines a
general term—HPML—and incorporates
exemptions from the appraisal rules in
a separate subsection, § 1026.35(c)(2).
As discussed, the general term HPML
applies also to loans covered by the
revised escrow rules in § 1026.35(b),
with exemptions specific to those rules
enumerated separately in
§ 1026.35(b)(2).
Thus, exemptions that are the same in
both the escrow rules in § 1026.35(b)
and the appraisal rules in § 1026.35(c)
are stated separately in the
‘‘exemptions’’ sections for each set of
rules. See § 1026.35(b)(2) and (c)(2). The
following exemptions are generally the
same for both the HPML escrow rules
and the HPML appraisal rules: new
construction loans, bridge loans, and
reverse mortgages. The intent of this
structure is to make clear that the
Agencies jointly have authority to
exempt transactions from the appraisal
rules, whereas only the Bureau has
authority to exempt transactions from
the escrow rules.
These exemptions and related public
comments are discussed in detail below.
35(c)(2)(i)
Qualified Mortgages
TILA section 129H(f) expressly
excludes from the definition of higherrisk mortgage any loan that is a qualified
mortgage as defined in TILA section
129C and a reverse mortgage loan that
is a qualified mortgage as defined in
TILA section 129C. 15 U.S.C. 1639(f).
Rather than implement one exclusion
for qualified mortgages and a separate
exclusion for any reverse mortgage loans
that may be defined by the Bureau as
qualified mortgages, the Agencies
proposed to provide a single exclusion
for a qualified mortgage as that term
would be defined in the Bureau’s final
rule implementing TILA section 129C.
15 U.S.C. 1639c.
Before authority regarding TILA
section 129C transferred to the Bureau
under the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board
issued the 2011 ATR Proposal, which,
among other things, would have defined
a ‘‘qualified mortgage’’ in a new
subsection of Regulation Z. 12 CFR
226.43(e). See 76 FR 27390, 27484–85
(May 11, 2011). During the proposal
period for the ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’
rule, the Bureau had not yet issued final
rules implementing TILA section 129C’s
definition of ‘‘qualified mortgage.’’
Since that time, the Bureau has issued
rules defining ‘‘qualified mortgage.’’ See
2013 ATR Final Rule, § 1026.43(e).
Consistent with the proposed definition
of ‘‘qualified mortgage,’’ the Bureau’s

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final rule defines ‘‘qualified mortgage’’
as generally including loans
characterized by the absence of certain
features considered risky, such as
negative amortization and balloon
payments.
The Agencies adopt the exemption for
‘‘qualified mortgages’’ as proposed, with
a cross-reference to the Bureau’s final
rules defining this class of loans in 12
CFR 1026.43(e).
Public Comments on the Proposal
All commenters—including national
and State credit union trade
associations, as well as national and
State banking trade associations—
supported this exemption. Some
banking trade associations believed the
exemption was appropriate because
qualified mortgages, by definition, are
safe and sound transactions. Other
banking and credit union trade
associations expressed concern that they
could not comment specifically on the
exemption, because the term was not yet
defined by the Bureau.
Discussion
The final rule incorporates the
exemption for ‘‘qualified mortgages’’ as
proposed because the exemption is
prescribed by statute and widely
supported by commenters. The
Agencies note that some commenters
requested that the final rule also exempt
‘‘qualified residential mortgages,’’
which the Dodd-Frank Act exempts
from the risk retention rules prescribed
by the Act. See Dodd-Frank Act section
941, section 15G of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. 780–
11(c)(1)(C)(iii). A qualified residential
mortgage, however, is by statute to be
defined by regulation as ‘‘no broader
than’’ the definition of qualified
mortgage prescribed by the Bureau in its
2013 ATR Final Rule. See id. at sec.
780–11(e)(4)(C). Therefore, the
exemption for qualified mortgages will
capture all qualified residential
mortgages and a separate exemption is
not necessary.
Transactions Secured by a New
Manufactured Home
The Agencies proposed to exclude
from coverage of the higher-risk
mortgage appraisal rules any loan
secured solely by a residential structure,
such as a manufactured home.32 The

Public Comments on the Proposal
Commenters, including national and
State credit union trade associations, a
manufactured housing industry
consultant, manufactured housing trade
associations, a realtor trade association,
a lender specializing in manufactured
housing financing, and national and
State banking trade associations,
submitted comments regarding the
exemption for loans secured ‘‘solely by
a residential structure,’’ but limited
their comments to the exemption as
applied to manufactured homes. The
commenters supported exempting loans
secured solely by manufactured homes.
Banking trade association commenters
believed that the statute was intended to
apply only to loans secured at least in
part by real property. A manufactured
housing industry consultant, a
manufactured housing lender, and
manufactured housing trade association
commenters concurred that traditional
appraisals were not appropriate for

32 The Agencies proposed to exclude from the
definition of ‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’ any loans
secured solely by a ‘‘residential structure,’’ as that
term is used in Regulation Z’s definition of
‘‘dwelling.’’ See 12 CFR 1026.2(a)(19). The
provision was intended to exclude loans that are
not secured in whole or in part by land. Thus, for

example, loans secured by manufactured homes
that are not also secured by the land on which they
are sited were proposed to be excluded from the
definition of higher-risk mortgage loan, regardless
of whether the manufactured home itself is deemed
to be personal property or real property under
applicable State law.

35(c)(2)(ii)

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Agencies believed that requiring
appraisals performed by certified or
licensed appraisers was not appropriate,
because such transactions typically
more closely resemble titled vehicle
loans. At the same time, based on
outreach, the Agencies believed that for
loans for residential structures, such as
manufactured homes that are secured by
both the home and the land to which
the home is attached, appraisals
performed by certified or licensed
appraisers are feasible. Such
transactions were therefore covered by
the proposed rule. The Agencies
believed the exemption for a loan
secured solely by a residential structure
was appropriate pursuant to the
exemption authority under TILA section
129H(b)(4)(B). 15 U.S.C.
1026.35(b)(4)(B).
The Agencies requested comment on
whether the proposed exclusion was
appropriate, and if not, reasonable
methods by which creditors could
comply with the requirements of this
proposed rule when providing loans
secured solely by a residential structure.
The Agencies also requested comment
on whether some alternative standards
for valuing residential structures
securing higher-risk mortgage loans
might be feasible and appropriate to
include as part of the final rule, in lieu
of an appraisal performed by a certified
or licensed appraiser.

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these transactions for a variety of
reasons, including: (1) A lack of
qualified and trained appraisers to
appraise such transactions, especially in
rural areas; (2) a lack of comparable
sales and limited sales volume; (3) the
high expense of appraisals relative to
the cost of the transaction; and (4)
inaccurate valuations resulting from
traditional appraisals. The
manufactured housing industry
consultant suggested that an exemption
was necessary in part because these
loans were unlikely to qualify for the
qualified mortgage exemption due to
their small size, which would in turn
increase the likelihood that they would
exceed the points and fees thresholds
defining qualified mortgages. See
§ 1026.43(e)(3).
Some of the commenters believed the
Agencies should expand the exemption
to include financing for both real estate
and manufactured homes, known as
‘‘land home’’ financing. Manufactured
housing trade association commenters
argued that traditional appraisals are not
appropriate for these transactions for
many of the same reasons cited for
excluding loans secured solely by a
residential structure. One of these
manufactured housing trade
associations also expressed the view
that appraisals are not appropriate
because the cost of the home itself is
readily known to consumers through
other means. In addition, the
commenter stated that in rural areas, the
cost of the land is small compared to the
overall value of the transaction.33 This
commenter recommended that if the
Agencies did not exclude all land home
transactions, the Agencies in the
alternative should at least exclude those
land home transactions that are under
$125,000 or that are in a rural area.
One commenter also questioned the
feasibility of appraisals for such
transactions. A lender specializing in
manufactured housing financing stated
that, in land home transactions, the land
on which manufactured homes will be
located is often not identified until well
after the time appraisals are typically
ordered. Moreover, the commenter
stated that manufactured homes are
typically not available for an interior
visit until after closing, regardless of
whether the transaction is secured
solely by the home itself or by land and
home together. As an alternative, the
commenter suggested different
regulatory language for the exclusion,
which would expand the exemption to
33 Note, however, that another manufactured
housing trade association commenter stated that the
majority of manufactured homes are not considered
an improvement or enhancement of the real
property on which they are sited.

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land home transactions and would
incorporate an existing definition of
‘‘manufactured home’’ to clearly
eliminate site-built manufactured homes
from the exemption.

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Discussion
Public commenters generally
confirmed Agencies’ concerns regarding
the application of the appraisal rules to
loans secured by certain manufactured
homes. Accordingly, the Agencies are
excluding certain manufactured homes
from coverage under the final rule.
However, in the final rule, the Agencies
are modifying the exemption. The
proposed rule would have exempted
loans ‘‘secured solely by a residential
structure,’’ which was intended to
exempt manufactured homes and other
types of dwellings when the loan was
not secured at least in part by land. The
language in the final rule is tailored to
exempt transactions secured by specific
types of dwellings. Accordingly, the
final rule exempts transactions secured
by a new manufactured home,
regardless of whether the structure is
attached to land or considered real
property, and also exempts transactions
secured by a mobile home, boat, or
trailer.
The Agencies believe that the
manufactured home exemption should
be based on whether the manufactured
home securing the transaction is a new
home, regardless of whether land also
secures the transaction. Upon further
consideration, the Agencies believe that
TILA section 129H is intended to apply
to certain transactions without regard to
whether a transaction is secured by
land.34 Thus, the approach in the final
rule is focused on the feasibility and
utility of requiring certified or licensed
appraisers to perform appraisals for
particular manufactured home
transactions.
The Agencies believe that an
exemption for new manufactured homes
regardless of whether the loan for such
a home is also secured by land more
precisely excludes from the rule those
transactions that should not be subject
to the new appraisal requirements.
34 The Agencies note that the definition of
‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’ in TILA section 129H
incorporates the definition of ‘‘residential mortgage
loan.’’ TILA section 129H(f). A residential mortgage
loan is defined, in part, to include loans involving
certain types of dwellings that are non-real estate
residences. TILA section 103(cc)(5). For example,
cooperatives are specifically described as dwellings
under TILA section 103(w). Moreover, although
TILA section 129H requires appraisals that conform
to FIRREA title XI, the Agencies do not believe that
TILA section 129H is limited to transactions subject
to FIRREA title XI or other Federal regulations.
Thus, the Agencies believe the statute intended to
apply the appraisal requirements to some loans that
are not secured by land.

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Based on further outreach, the Agencies
understand that for loans secured by
both new manufactured homes and
land, a valuation is often performed by
combining the manufactured home
invoice price with the value of the land,
rather than by a traditional appraisal
that is based on the collective value of
the structure and the land on which it
is sited.
The Agencies believe that requiring
traditional appraisals with interior
inspections for transactions secured by
a new manufactured home would add
very little value to the consumer beyond
existing valuation methods. Moreover,
because it may be difficult or impossible
to retain qualified appraisers to perform
such appraisals, the rule could result in
some creditors declining to extend loans
for manufactured homes. Exempting
new manufactured homes from the rule
is, therefore, in the public interest. The
Agencies believe that such an
exemption also promotes the safety and
soundness of creditors, because
creditors will be able to continue relying
on standardized valuations that are
more conducive to pricing new
manufactured homes than are appraisals
performed by a certified or licensed
appraiser.
Accordingly, in § 1026.35(c)(2)(ii), the
Agencies are exempting from the
appraisal requirements of § 1026.35(c) a
transaction secured by a new
manufactured home. Comment
35(c)(2)(ii)–1 in the final rule clarifies
that a transaction secured by a new
manufactured home, regardless of
whether the transaction is also secured
by the land on which it is sited, is not
a ‘‘higher-priced mortgage loan’’ subject
to the appraisal requirements of
§ 1026.35(c).
35(c)(2)(iii)
Transaction Secured by Mobile Home,
Boat, or Trailer
Section 1026.35(c)(2)(iii) of the final
rule also specifically exempts
transactions secured by a mobile home,
boat, or trailer. This is consistent with
the proposal, which would have
exempted these transactions because
they are secured ‘‘solely by a residential
structure.’’ The Agencies note that this
exemption applies even if the
transaction is also secured by land.
Comment 35(c)(2)(iii)–1 clarifies that,
for purposes of the exemption in
§ 1026.35(c)(2)(iii), a mobile home does
not include a manufactured home, as
defined in § 1026.35(c)(1)(ii).
The Agencies believe the exemption
is in the public interest, because
requiring an appraisal with an interior
property visit for these transactions

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would offer limited value due to
existing pricing tools, such as new
product invoices and publicly-available
pricing guides. The Agencies further
believe, for purposes of safety and
soundness, that creditors would be
better served by using other valuation
methods geared specifically for mobile
homes, boats, and trailers.
35(c)(2)(iv)
Construction Loans
In the proposal, the Agencies asked
for comment on whether to exempt from
the higher-risk mortgage appraisal rules
transactions that finance the
construction of a new home. The
Agencies recognized that for loans that
finance the construction of a new home,
an interior visit of the property securing
the loan is generally not feasible
because the homes are proposed to be
built or are in the process of being built.
At the same time, the Agencies
recognized that construction loans that
meet the pricing thresholds for higherrisk mortgage loans could pose many of
the same risks to consumers as other
types of loans meeting those thresholds.
The Agencies therefore requested
comment on whether to exclude
construction loans from the definition of
higher-risk mortgage loan. The Agencies
also sought comment on whether, if an
exemption for initial construction loans
were not adopted in the final rule,
creditors needed any additional
compliance guidance for applying
TILA’s ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ appraisal
rules to construction loans.
Alternatively, the Agencies requested
comment on whether construction loans
should be exempt only from the
requirement to conduct an interior visit
of the property, and be subject to all
other appraisal requirements under the
proposed rule.
The final rule adopts an exemption
from all of the HPML appraisal
requirements for a ‘‘transaction that
finances the initial construction of a
dwelling.’’ This exemption mirrors an
existing exemption from the current
HPML rules. See existing
§ 1026.35(a)(3), also retained in the 2013
Escrows Final Rule,
§ 1026.35(b)(2)(i)(B).
Public Comments on the Proposal
Appraiser trade association
commenters believed that new
construction loans should not be
exempted because consumers needed
the protection of the appraisal rules.
However, all other commenters—
including national and State credit
union trade associations, national and
State banking trade associations, banks,

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
a mortgage company, a financial holding
company, a home builder trade
association, and a loan origination
software company—supported the
proposed exemption.
Commenters that supported an
exemption for new construction loans
had varying views on the risks
associated with these loans, all
supporting the commenters’ request for
an exemption for such loans. A loan
origination software company and a
bank commenter asserted that new
construction loan interest rates and fees
are often high because the loans, which
are short-term, have inherently greater
risk. Thus, the appraisal rules would be
over-inclusive because they would
apply even when extended to prime
borrowers. Similarly, a banking
association commenter argued that new
construction loans are not those that
Congress intended to target in the
appraisal rules, which the commenter
viewed as loans priced higher due to the
relative credit risk of the borrower. The
home builder trade association,
however, supported an exemption
because the commenter believed that
new construction loans are not as risky
as the loans targeted by Congress in the
‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ appraisal rules
because these loans require close
coordination between a bank, home
builder, and consumer.
The financial holding company,
mortgage company, banking association,
and loan origination software company
commenters supported an exemption for
new construction loans because they are
temporary. One of these commenters
noted that most mortgage-related
regulations, such as those in Regulation
X and Z, make accommodations for
temporary loans. Others noted that the
property securing the new construction
loan ultimately will be subject to an
appraisal under TILA’s ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ appraisal rules if the
permanent financing replacing the new
construction loan is a ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage.’’
Several commenters supporting an
exemption cited concerns about the
feasibility and utility of performing
interior inspection appraisals during the
construction phase. A bank commenter
stated that an exemption was needed
because a home under construction is
not available for a physical inspection.
Similarly, credit union association and
banking association commenters stated
that an interior visit would not be
feasible during the construction phase.
Moreover, the commenter believed an
appraisal was unlikely to yield
sufficient information about the
condition of the property to justify the
expense to the consumer. A banking

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association commenter further asserted
that the usual value of a new
construction loan is the value ‘‘at
completion,’’ so an appraisal performed
during construction would not assess
the value of a completed home.
A State banking association
commenter asserted that failing to
exempt new construction loans from the
final rule would result in operational
difficulties and that an interior
inspection appraisal would be of little
value to consumers in these
circumstances. A bank commenter
requested guidance on how to comply
with the rules for these loans, if the
Agencies did not exempt them from the
rule.
Discussion
In § 1026.35(c)(2)(iv), the Agencies are
using their exemption authority to
exempt from the final rule a
‘‘transaction to finance the initial
construction of a dwelling.’’ Unlike the
exemption for ‘‘bridge’’ loans that the
Agencies are also adopting (see sectionby-section analysis of § 1026.35(c)(2)(v),
below), the exemption for new
construction loans is not limited to
loans of twelve months or less. This is
because the Agencies recognize that
new construction might take longer than
twelve months and that therefore new
construction loans might be for terms of
longer than twelve months. This aspect
of the exemption adopted in the final
rule also reflects the existing exemption
for new construction loans from the
current HPML rules. See § 1026.35(a)(3).
The Agencies’ decision to exempt
these types of transactions is consistent
with wide support for this exemption
received from commenters, which
largely confirmed the Agencies’
concerns about the drawbacks of
subjecting these transactions to the new
HPML appraisal requirements,
particularly the requirement for an
interior inspection, USPAP-compliant
appraisal. The Agencies also believe
that this exemption is important to
ensure consistency across mortgage
rules, and thus to facilitate compliance.
In addition to noting the existing
exemption for new construction loans
from the current HPML requirements,
the Agencies also note the exemption
for these loans from the new DoddFrank Act ability-to-repay and ‘‘highcost’’ mortgage rules issued by the
Bureau. See 2013 ATR Final Rule,
§ 1026.43(a)(3)(ii), and 2013 HOEPA
Final Rule, § 1026.32(a)(2)(ii).35
35 Moreover, the existing ‘‘high-cost’’ mortgage
rules contain a longstanding exemption for
construction loans from the limitation on balloon
payments. See existing § 1026.32(d)(1)(i).

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Due to their temporary nature and for
other reasons, these loans tend to have
higher rates and thus more of them
would be subject to the HPML appraisal
rules without an exemption. Applying
the HPML appraisal rules to these
products might subject them to rules
with which creditors might not in fact
be able to comply. The Agencies
therefore believe that this exemption
will help ensure that a useful credit
vehicle for consumers remains available
to build and revitalize communities.
The Agencies also recognize that new
construction loans can be an important
product for many creditors, enabling
them to strengthen and diversify their
lending portfolios. The Agencies are
also not aware of, and commenters did
not offer, evidence of widespread
valuation abuses in loans to finance new
construction. Thus, the Agencies find
that the exemption is both in the public
interest and promotes the safety and
soundness of creditors. See TILA
section 129H(b)(4)(B), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(4)(B).
The Agencies also wished to clarify in
the final rule the treatment of
‘‘construction to permanent’’ loans,
consisting of a single loan that
transforms into permanent financing at
the end of the construction phase. For
this reason, the commentary of the final
rule includes guidance on the
application of various rules in
Regulation Z to these loans that
parallels guidance provided in
commentary for the new ‘‘high-cost’’
mortgage rules. See 2013 HOEPA Final
Rule, comment 32(a)(2)(ii)–1.
Specifically, comment 35(c)(2)(iv)–1
clarifies that the exclusion for loans to
finance the initial construction of a
dwelling applies to a construction-only
loan as well as to the construction phase
of a construction-to-permanent loan.
The comment further clarifies that the
HPML appraisal rules in § 1026.35(c) do
apply if the permanent financing
qualifies as an HPML under
§ 1026.35(a)(1) and is not otherwise
exempt from the rules under
§ 1026.35(c)(2).
The comment also provides guidance
on the application of Regulation Z’s
general closed-end mortgage loan
disclosure requirements to constructionto-permanent loans. To this end, the
comment states that, when a
construction loan may be permanently
financed by the same creditor, the
general disclosure requirements for
closed-end credit (§ 1026.17) provide
that the creditor may give either one
combined disclosure for both the
construction financing and the
permanent financing, or a separate set of
disclosures for each of the two phases

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as though they were two separate
transactions. See § 1026.17(c)(6)(ii) and
comment 17(c)(6)–2. The comment
explains that § 1026.17(c)(6)(ii)
addresses only how a creditor may elect
to disclose a construction-to-permanent
transaction, and that which disclosure
option a creditor elects under
§ 1026.17(c)(6)(ii) does not affect
whether the permanent phase of the
transaction is subject to § 1026.35(c).
The comment further explains that,
when the creditor discloses the two
phases as separate transactions, the
annual percentage rate for the
permanent phase must be compared to
the average prime offer rate for a
transaction that is comparable to the
permanent financing to determine
coverage under § 1026.35(c). The
comment also explains that, when the
creditor discloses the two phases as a
single transaction, a single annual
percentage rate, reflecting the
appropriate charges from both phases,
must be calculated for the transaction in
accordance with § 1026.35 and
appendix D to part 1026. The comment
also clarifies that the APR must be
compared to the APOR for a transaction
that is comparable to the permanent
financing to determine coverage under
§ 1026.35(c). If the transaction is
determined to be an HPML that is not
otherwise exempt under § 1026.35(c)(2),
only the permanent phase is subject to
the HPML appraisal requirements of
§ 1026.35(c).

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

35(c)(2)(v)
Bridge Loans
In the proposal, the Agencies also
requested comment on whether the
appraisal rules of TILA section 129H
should apply to temporary or ‘‘bridge’’
loans with a term of 12 months or less.
15 U.S.C. 1639h. If such an exemption
were not adopted, the Agencies sought
comment on whether any additional
compliance guidance would be needed
for applying the new appraisal rules to
bridge loans. The Agencies stated
concerns about the burden to both
creditors and consumers of imposing
the rule’s requirements on such loans
and questioned whether such
requirements would be useful for many
consumers.
As explained in the proposal, bridge
loans are short-term loans typically used
when a consumer is buying a new home
before selling the consumer’s existing
home. Usually secured by the existing
home, a bridge loan provides financing
for the new home (often in the form of
the down payment) or mortgage
payment assistance until the consumer
can sell the existing home and secure

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permanent financing. Bridge loans
normally carry higher interest rates,
points and fees than conventional
mortgages, regardless of the consumer’s
creditworthiness.
In § 1026.35(c)(2)(v), the final rule
adopts an exemption from the new
HPML appraisal rules for a ‘‘loan with
a maturity of 12 months or less, if the
purpose of the loan is a ‘bridge’ loan
connected with the acquisition of a
dwelling intended to become the
consumer’s principal dwelling.’’
Public Comments on the Proposal
Almost all commenters—including
national and State banking associations,
national and State credit union
associations, a mortgage company, a
financial holding company, a loan
origination software company, a home
builder trade association, and a bank—
supported an exemption for bridge loans
for many of the same reasons that
commenters supported exempting
construction loans. Several commenters
emphasized that these loans are
temporary, and some further pointed
out that imposing appraisal
requirements was unnecessary because
bridge loans are ultimately converted to
permanent financing that will be subject
to the appraisal rules. Other
commenters argued that the protections
of the appraisal rules were not needed
because bridge loans’ higher rates are
generally unrelated to a consumer’s
creditworthiness; they argued that
TILA’s new ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’
appraisal rules were intended for loans
made to more vulnerable, less
creditworthy consumers without other
credit options.
Some commenters asserted that
failing to exempt these loans would
result in operational difficulties and
would be of little value to consumers. In
this regard, one commenter discussed
the difficulties of comparing an APR to
a ‘‘comparable’’ APOR for these loans.
One credit union association commenter
believed that without an exemption,
consumers’ access to bridge loans would
be reduced. Some commenters
requested that the Agencies exempt all
types of temporary loans. Appraiser
trade association commenters believed
that the Agencies should not allow an
exemption unless there was a
compelling policy reason to do so.
Discussion
The Agencies are adopting an
exemption for ‘‘bridge’’ loans of 12
months or less that are connected with
the acquisition of a dwelling intended to
become the consumer’s principal
dwelling for several reasons. First, the
Agencies believe that with this

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exemption, the consumer would still be
afforded the protection of the appraisal
rules. This is because bridge loans used
in connection with the acquisition of a
new home are typically secured by the
consumer’s existing home to facilitate
the purchase of a new home. Thus, the
consumer would be afforded the
protections of the appraisal rules on the
permanent financing secured by the
new home. This would include the
protections of § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)
regarding properties that are potentially
fraudulent flips.
Second, commenters generally
confirmed the Agencies’ concerns
expressed in the proposal about the
burden to both creditors and consumers
of imposing TILA section 129H’s
heightened appraisal requirements on
short-term financing of this nature. As
noted in the proposal, the Agencies
recognize that rates on short-term bridge
loans are often higher than on long-term
home mortgages, so these loans may be
more likely to meet the ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage loan’’ triggers. As also noted in
the proposal and echoed by
commenters, ‘‘higher-risk mortgages’’
under TILA section 129H would
generally be a credit option for less
creditworthy consumers, who may be
more vulnerable than others and in need
of enhanced consumer protections, such
as TILA section 129H’s special appraisal
requirements. However, a bridge loan
consumer could be subject to rates that
would exceed the higher-risk mortgage
loan thresholds even if the consumer
would qualify for a non-higher-risk
mortgage loan when seeking permanent
financing. The Agencies do not believe
that Congress intended TILA section
129H to apply to loans simply because
they have higher rates, regardless of the
consumer’s creditworthiness or the
purpose of the loan.
Further, the Agencies recognize that
the exemption can help facilitate
compliance by generally ensuring
consistency across residential mortgage
rules. Such consistency can reduce
compliance-related burdens and risks,
thereby promoting the safety and
soundness of creditors. The Agencies
also believe that consistency across the
rules can reduce operational risk and
support a creditor’s ability to offer these
loans, which can enable creditors to
strengthen and diversify their lending
portfolios.
In particular, the Agencies note the
current exemption for ‘‘temporary or
‘bridge’ loans of twelve months or less
from the existing HPML rules (retained
in the 2013 Escrows Final Rule,
§ 1026.35(b)(2)(i)(C)), but also a similar
exemption from TILA’s new ability-torepay requirements. See existing

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§ 1026.35(a)(3). See TILA section
129C(a)(8), 15 U.S.C. 1639c(a)(8); 2013
ATR Final Rule, § 1026.43(a)(3)(ii).36 In
addition, longstanding HOEPA rules
have included an exception from the
balloon payment prohibition for ‘‘loans
with maturities of less than one year, if
the purpose of the loan is a ‘bridge’ loan
connected with the acquisition or
construction of a dwelling intended to
become the consumer’s principal
dwelling.’’ § 1026.32(d)(1)(ii). The final
HOEPA rules adopted by the Bureau
contain the same exception with minor
changes for conformity across mortgage
rules. See 2013 HOEPA Final Rule,
§ 1026.32(d)(1)(ii)(B) (revising the
exception to cover bridge loans of 12
months or less, rather than less than one
year).
Like the HOEPA exception from the
balloon payment prohibition, the final
HPML appraisal rule does not exempt
all loans with terms of 12 months or
less. Only bridge loans of 12 months or
less that are made in connection with
the acquisition of a consumer’s
principal dwelling are exempted.
(Construction loans are separately
exempted under § 1026.35(c)(2)(iv),
discussed in the corresponding sectionby-section analysis above.) The
Agencies believe that the HPML
appraisal rule might be appropriately
applied to other types of temporary
financing, particularly temporary
financing that does not result in the
consumer ultimately obtaining
permanent financing covered by the
appraisal rule.
Finally, as with new construction
loans, the Agencies are not aware of,
and commenters did not offer, evidence
of widespread valuation abuses in
bridge loans of twelve months or less
used in connection with the acquisition
of a consumer’s principal dwelling. For
all these reasons, the Agencies find that
the exemption is both in the public
interest and promotes the safety and
soundness of creditors. See TILA
section 129H(b)(4)(B), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(4)(B).

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35(c)(2)(vi)
Reverse Mortgage Transactions
The Agencies proposed to exempt
reverse mortgage transactions subject to
§ 1026.33(a) from the definition of
‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan.’’ The
Agencies proposed this exemption in
part because the proprietary (private)
36 The exemption for ‘‘temporary or ‘bridge’ loans
of twelve months or less’’ in TILA’s ability-to-repay
rules codifies an exemption from the current ‘‘highcost’’ and HPML repayment ability requirements.
See existing §§ 1026.34(a)(4)(v), 1026.35(a)(3) and
(b)(1).

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reverse mortgage market is effectively
nonexistent, thus the vast majority of
reverse mortgage transactions made in
the United States today are insured by
FHA as part of the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development’s
(HUD) Home Equity Conversion
Mortgage (HECM) Program.37 The
Agencies stated that TILA’s new
‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ appraisal rules
are arguably unnecessary because
HECM creditors must adhere to specific
standards designed to protect both the
creditor and the consumer, including
robust appraisal rules.38 In addition, a
methodology for determining APORs for
reverse mortgage transactions does not
currently exist, so creditors would be
unable to determine whether the APR of
a given reverse mortgage transaction
exceeded the rate thresholds defining a
‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’ (HPML in
the final rule).
At the same time, the Agencies
expressed concern that providing a
permanent exemption for all reverse
mortgage transactions, both private and
HECM products, could deny key
protections to consumers who rely on
reverse mortgages. However, the
Agencies proposed the exemption on at
least a temporary basis, asserting that
avoiding any potential disruption of this
segment of the mortgage market in the
near term would be in the public
interest and promote the safety and
soundness of creditors.
The Agencies requested comment on
the appropriateness of this exemption.
The Agencies also sought comment on
whether available indices exist that
track the APR for reverse mortgages and
could be used by the Bureau to develop
and publish an APOR for these
transactions, or whether such an index
could be developed, noting, for
example, information published by
HUD on HECMs, including the contract
rate.39
As discussed further below, in
§ 1026.35(c)(2)(vi) of the final rule, the
Agencies are adopting the proposed
exemption for a ‘‘reverse-mortgage
transaction subject to § 1026.33(a).’’
Public Comments on the Proposal
National and State credit union trade
associations, as well as a State banking
trade association, supported the
proposed exemption. However,
37 See Bureau, Reverse Mortgages: Report to
Congress 14, 70–99 (June 28, 2012), available at
http://www.consumerfinance.gov/reports/reversemortgages-report (Bureau Reverse Mortgage Report).
38 See HUD Handbook 4235.1, ch. 3.
39 See http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/
program_offices/housing/rmra/oe/rpts/hecm/
hecmmenu (‘‘Home Equity Conversion Mortgage
Characteristics’’).

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appraiser trade association commenters
generally believed that excluding
appraisal protections would harm
consumers, particularly senior citizens,
and is contrary to public policy.
Appraiser trade association, realtor
trade association, and reverse mortgage
lending trade association commenters
suggested that any exemption should be
limited to reverse mortgages under the
FHA HECM program and not extended
to proprietary products, because HECM
consumers are afforded a
comprehensive and mandatory set of
appraisal protections. The reverse
mortgage lending trade association also
suggested circumstances under which
reverse mortgages should be deemed
qualified mortgages and, thus, qualify
for an exemption on that basis. See
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(2)(i).
No commenters offered suggestions
on an appropriate approach for
developing an APOR for reverse
mortgages. Appraiser trade associations,
who only supported an exemption for
HECMs, believed that the rules should
apply to reverse mortgages even though
indices do not currently exist. A reverse
mortgage lending trade association
believed that benchmark indices for
reverse mortgages could be developed,
but, supporting the proposed
exemption, questioned whether one
should be.
Discussion
The Agencies are adopting the
proposed exemption for a ‘‘reversemortgage transaction subject to
§ 1026.33’’ for the same basic reasons
discussed in the proposal, which were
affirmed by most commenters. The
Agencies share concerns expressed by
some commenters about the risks to
consumers of reverse mortgages
generally, and of proprietary reverse
mortgage loans in particular. Proprietary
reverse mortgage loans are not insured
by FHA or any other government entity,
so payments are not guaranteed by the
U.S. government to either consumers or
creditors. By contrast, HECMs are
insured by FHA and subject to a number
of rules and restrictions designed to
reduce risk to both consumers and
creditors, including appraisal rules. See
TILA section 129H(b)(4)(B), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(4)(B).
As noted in the proposal, however,
there is little to no market for
proprietary reverse mortgages, and
prospects for the reemergence of this
market in the near-term are remote.40
HECMs comprise virtually the entire
reverse mortgage market and are subject
40 Bureau

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to FHA’s extensive HECM rules, which
include appraisal requirements.41 In
addition, the Agencies believe that
unwarranted creditor liability and
operational risk could arise if the rule
were applied to loans that a creditor
cannot definitively determine are in fact
subject to the rule, as is the case here,
where no rate benchmark exists for
measuring whether a reverse mortgage
loan is an HPML. Thus, without an
exemption for reverse mortgages,
creditors would be susceptible to risks
that could negatively affect their safety
and soundness.
In reevaluating the proposed
exemption, the Agencies also focused
more attention on the fact that TILA’s
‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ appraisal rules
apply only to closed-end products.
Many (and historically most) reverse
mortgages are open-end products. The
Agencies are concerned about creating
anomalies in the market and compliance
confusion among creditors by applying
one set of rules to closed-end reverse
mortgages and another to open-end
reverse mortgages. The Agencies note
that compliance confusion among
creditors can create burden and
operational risk that can have a negative
impact on the safety and soundness of
the creditors. The Agencies are
concerned that this bifurcation of the
rule’s application could also hinder
creditors from offering a range of reverse
mortgage product choices that support
the creditors’ loan portfolios while also
benefitting consumers. In short,
questions remain for the Agencies about
whether this rule is the appropriate
vehicle for addressing appraisal issues
in the reverse mortgage market.
The Agencies remain concerned about
the potential for abuse related to
appraisals even with HECMs, which are
subject to appraisal rules. Indeed,
evidence exists that problems of
property value inflation and fraudulent
flipping occur even in the HECM
market.42 The Agencies plan to continue
monitoring the reverse mortgage market
closely and address appraisal issues as
needed, including through consultations
with the Bureau regarding any
initiatives to revisit previously-issued
reverse mortgage proposals (76 FR
58539, 53638–58659 (Sept. 24, 2012)).
For all these reasons, the Agencies
have concluded that an exemption for
all reverse mortgages at this time from
this rule is in the public interest and
promotes the safety and soundness of
creditors.43
41 See

HUD Handbook 4235.1, ch. 3.
Reverse Mortgage Report at 154, 157.
43 By statute, the term ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’
excludes any ‘‘qualified mortgage’’ and any ‘‘reverse
42 Bureau

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35(c)(3) Appraisals Required for HigherPriced Mortgage Loans
35(c)(3)(i) In General
Consistent with TILA section 129H(a)
and (b)(1), the proposal provided that a
creditor shall not extend a higher-risk
mortgage loan to a consumer without
obtaining, prior to consummation, a
written appraisal performed by a
certified or licensed appraiser who
conducts a physical visit of the interior
of the property that will secure the
transaction. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(a) and
(b)(1). In new § 1026.35(c)(3)(i), the final
rule adopts this proposal without
change.
35(c)(3)(ii) Safe Harbor
In the proposed rule, the Agencies
proposed a safe harbor that would
establish affirmative steps creditors can
follow to ensure that they satisfy
statutory obligations under TILA section
129H(a) and (b)(1). 15 U.S.C. 1639h(a)
and (b)(1). This was done to address
compliance uncertainties, which are
discussed in more detail below.
The Agencies are adopting the final
rule substantially as proposed.
Specifically, under new
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii), a creditor would be
deemed to have obtained a written
appraisal that meets the general
appraisal requirements now adopted in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(i) if the creditor:
• Orders the appraiser to perform the
appraisal in conformity with USPAP
and FIRREA title XI, and any
implementing regulations, in effect at
the time the appraiser signs the
appraiser’s certification
(§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(A));
• Verifies through the National
Registry that the appraiser who signed
the appraiser’s certification holds a
valid appraisal license or certification in
the State in which the appraised
property is located as of the date the
appraisal is signed
(§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(B));
• Confirms that the elements set forth
in appendix N to part 1026 are
mortgage loan that is a qualified mortgage.’’ 15
U.S.C. 1639h(f). The Bureau was authorized by the
Dodd-Frank Act to define the term ‘‘qualified
mortgage’’ and has done so in its 2013 ATR Final
Rule. However, the 2013 ATR Final Rule does not
define the types of reverse mortgage loans that
should be considered ‘‘qualified mortgages’’
because, by statute, TILA’s ability-to-repay rules do
not apply to reverse mortgages. See TILA section
129C(a)(8), 15 U.S.C. 1639c(a)(8). Thus the Agencies
are not able to implement the precise statutory
exemption for ‘‘reverse mortgage loans that are
qualified mortgages.’’ Instead, the exemption for
reverse mortgages is based on the Agencies’ express
authority to exempt from TILA’s ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ appraisal rules ‘‘a class of loans,’’ if the
exemption ‘‘is in the public interest and promotes
the safety and soundness of creditors.’’ TILA
section 129H(b)(4)(B), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(4)(B).

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addressed in the written appraisal
(§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(C)); and
• Has no actual knowledge to the
contrary of facts or certifications
contained in the written appraisal
(§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(D)).
The Agencies are also adopting
proposed comments to the safe harbor.
In particular, comment 35(c)(3)(ii)–1
clarifies that a creditor that satisfies the
safe harbor conditions in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(A)–(D) will be
deemed to have complied with the
general appraisal requirements of
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(i). This comment further
clarifies that a creditor that does not
satisfy the safe harbor conditions in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(A)–(D) does not
necessarily violate the appraisal
requirements of § 1026.35(c)(3)(i).
Consistent with the proposal,
appendix N to part 1026 provides that,
to qualify for the safe harbor, a creditor
must check to confirm that the written
appraisal:
• Identifies the creditor who ordered
the appraisal and the property and the
interest being appraised.
• Indicates whether the contract price
was analyzed.
• Addresses conditions in the
property’s neighborhood.
• Addresses the condition of the
property and any improvements to the
property.
• Indicates which valuation
approaches were used, and included a
reconciliation if more than one
valuation approach was used.
• Provides an opinion of the
property’s market value and an effective
date for the opinion.
• Indicates that a physical property
visit of the interior of the property was
performed.
• Includes a certification signed by
the appraiser that the appraisal was
prepared in accordance with the
requirements of USPAP.
• Includes a certification signed by
the appraiser that the appraisal was
prepared in accordance with the
requirements of FIRREA title XI, as
amended, and any implementing
regulations.
As discussed in the proposal, other
than the certification for compliance
with FIRREA title XI, the items in
appendix N were derived from the
Uniform Residential Appraisal Report
(URAR) form used as a matter of
practice in the residential mortgage
industry. The final rule incorporates
without change a proposed comment
clarifying that a creditor need not look
beyond the face of the written appraisal
and the appraiser’s certification to
confirm that the elements in appendix
N are included in the written appraisal.

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
See § 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(C)–1. However, as
also provided in the proposal, the final
rule provides that the safe harbor does
not apply if the creditor has actual
knowledge to the contrary of facts or
certifications contained in the written
appraisal. See § 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(D).

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Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies collectively received 17
comments from 13 trade groups, three
financial institutions, and one bank
holding company that addressed the
proposed safe harbor. Of these, 14
commenters unequivocally supported
the safe harbor. Several commenters
requested clarification of certain issues.
Two commenters recommended that the
Agencies clarify that a lender has not
necessarily violated the appraisal
requirements when an appraisal does
not meet the safe harbor’s requirements.
Another commenter recommended the
final rule provide that a creditor may
outsource the safe harbor requirements
to a third party and that the creditor
would be permitted to rely upon the
third party’s certification. The
commenter also requested confirmation
that creditors could use automated
processes for checking whether the safe
harbor’s criteria were met.
The same commenter stated that the
safe harbor did not indicate whether the
creditor could rely on the face of the
written appraisal report and the
appraiser’s certification. One
commenter stated that the safe harbor
was not clear regarding the scope and
type of information that was required
for some of the criteria. One commenter
requested that the Agencies eliminate
the certification for compliance with
FIRREA.
Two commenters questioned
implementation of the safe harbor and
the creditor’s responsibility under the
safe harbor standard. These commenters
recommended that the Agencies should
use the same appraisal review standards
that exist in FIRREA and the
Interagency Appraisal and Evaluation
Guidelines. One of the commenters
questioned whether a creditor was being
tasked under the safe harbor with
adequate responsibility for review of an
appraisal. This commenter noted that
the proposal appeared to lower the bar
for creditors in connection with
appraisal review responsibilities. The
commenter strongly opposed allowing
creditors to perform appraisal review
functions without necessarily using
licensed or certified appraisers and
recommended requiring lenders to use
certified or licensed appraisers to
perform any substantive appraisal
review functions.

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Discussion
As noted, the safe harbor is being
adopted to address compliance
uncertainties for creditors raised by the
general appraisal requirements.
Specifically, TILA section 129H(b)(1)
requires that appraisals mandated by
section 129H be performed by ‘‘a
certified or licensed appraiser’’ who
conducts a physical property visit of the
interior of the mortgaged property. 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(1). The statute goes on
to define a ‘‘certified or licensed’’
appraiser in some detail. TILA section
129H(b)(3), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(3). The
statute, however, is silent on how
creditors should determine whether the
written appraisals they have obtained
comply with these statutory
requirements.
TILA section 129H(b)(3) defines a
‘‘certified or licensed appraiser’’ as a
person who is (1) certified or licensed
by the State in which the property to be
appraised is located, and (2) performs
each appraisal in conformity with
USPAP and the requirements applicable
to appraisers in FIRREA title XI, and the
regulations prescribed under such title,
as in effect on the date of the appraisal.
15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(3). These two
elements of the definition of ‘‘certified
or licensed appraiser’’ are discussed in
more detail below.
Certified or licensed in the State in
which the property is located. State
certification and licensing of real estate
appraisers has become a nationwide
practice largely as a result of FIRREA
title XI. Pursuant to FIRREA title XI,
entities engaging in certain ‘‘federally
related transactions’’ involving real
estate are required to obtain written
appraisals performed by an appraiser
who is certified or licensed by the
appropriate State. 12 U.S.C. 3339, 3341.
As noted, to facilitate identification of
appraisers meeting this requirement, the
Appraisal Subcommittee of the FFIEC
maintains an on-line National Registry
of appraisers identifying all federally
recognized State certifications or
licenses held by U.S. appraisers.44 12
U.S.C. 3332, 3338.
Performs appraisals in conformity
with USPAP and FIRREA. Again, TILA
section 129H(b)(3) also defines
‘‘certified or licensed appraiser’’ as a
person who performs each appraisal in
accordance with USPAP and FIRREA
title XI, and the regulations prescribed
under such title, in effect on the date of
44 The Agencies proposed to interpret the State
certification or licensing requirement under TILA
section 129H(b)(3) to mean certification or licensing
by a State agency that is recognized for purposes of
credentialing appraisers to perform appraisals
required for federally related transactions pursuant
to FIRREA title XI.

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the appraisal. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(3).
USPAP is a set of standards
promulgated and interpreted by the
Appraisal Standards Board of the
Appraisal Foundation, providing
generally accepted and recognized
standards of appraisal practice for
appraisers preparing various types of
property valuations.45 USPAP provides
guiding standards, not specific
methodologies, and application of
USPAP in each appraisal engagement
involves the application of professional
expertise and judgment.
FIRREA title XI and the regulations
prescribed thereunder regulate entities
engaging in real estate-related financial
transactions that are engaged in,
contracted for, or regulated by the
Federal financial institutions regulatory
agencies.46 See 12 U.S.C. 3339, 3350.
The statute does not specifically
address Congress’s intent in referencing
USPAP and FIRREA title XI. Congress
could have amended FIRREA title XI
directly to expand the scope of the
statute to subject all creditors to its
requirements. Instead, Congress inserted
language into TILA requiring that the
appraisers who perform appraisals in
connection with higher-risk mortgage
loans comply with USPAP and FIRREA
title XI. The statute is silent, however,
as to the extent of creditors’ obligations
under the statute to evaluate appraisers’
compliance.
The Agencies remain concerned that,
practically speaking, a creditor might
not be able to determine with certainty
whether an appraiser complied with
USPAP for a residential appraisal. An
appraisal performed in accordance with
USPAP represents an expert opinion of
value. Not only does USPAP require
extensive application of professional
judgment, it also establishes standards
for the scope of inquiry and analysis to
be performed that cannot be verified
absent substantially re-performing the
appraisal. Conclusive verification of
FIRREA title XI compliance (which
itself incorporates USPAP) poses similar
problems. On an even more basic level,
45 See Appraisal Standards Bd., Appraisal Fdn.,
USPAP (2012–2013 ed.) available at http://
www.uspap.org.
46 As discussed above in the section-by-section
analysis of the definition of ‘‘certified or licensed
appraiser’’ (§ 1026.35(c)(1)(i)), under FIRREA title
XI, the Federal financial institutions regulatory
agencies have issued regulations requiring insured
depository institutions and their affiliates, bank
holding companies and their affiliates, and insured
credit unions to obtain written appraisals prepared
by a State certified or licensed appraiser in
accordance with USPAP for federally related
transactions, including loans secured by real estate,
exceeding certain dollar thresholds. See OCC: 12
CFR Part 34, Subpart C; FRB: 12 CFR part 208,
subpart E, and 12 CFR part 225, subpart G; FDIC:
12 CFR part 323; and NCUA: 12 CFR part 722.

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it may not be possible for a creditor to
determine conclusively whether the
appraiser actually performed the
interior visit required by TILA section
129H(a). Moreover, TILA subjects
creditors to significant liability and risk
of litigation, including private actions
and class actions for actual and
statutory damages and attorneys’ fees.
TILA section 130, 15 U.S.C. 1640. If
TILA section 129H is construed to
require creditors to assume liability
under TILA for the appraiser’s
compliance with these obligations, the
Agencies also remain concerned that it
would unduly increase the cost and
restrict the availability of higher-risk
mortgage loans. Absent clear language
requiring such a construction, the
Agencies did not believe that the statute
should be construed to intend this
result.
As discussed in the proposal, the
Agencies continue to be of the opinion
that the safe harbor will be particularly
useful to consumers, industry, and
courts with regard to the statutory
requirement that the appraisal be
obtained from a ‘‘certified or licensed
appraiser’’ who conducts each appraisal
in compliance with USPAP and FIRREA
title XI. While determining whether an
appraiser is licensed or certified by a
particular State is straightforward,
USPAP and FIRREA provide a broad set
of professional standards and
requirements. The appraisal process
involves the application of subjective
judgment to a variety of information
points about individual properties; thus,
application of these professional
standards is often highly contextspecific. (The Agencies noted in the
proposed rule, however, that a
certification of USPAP compliance, one
of the required safe harbor elements, is
already an element of the URAR form
used as a matter of practice in the
industry.)
Regarding the first element of the safe
harbor, that the creditor ‘‘order’’ that the
appraiser perform the appraisal in
conformity with USPAP and FIRREA,
the Agencies generally understand that
creditors seeking the safe harbor would
include this assignment requirement in
the engagement letter with the
appraiser. See § 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(A).
Regarding specific comments received
on the proposal, the Agencies note that
the proposed staff commentary, now
adopted, specifically addresses some of
the issues the commenters raised. In
particular, comment 35(c)(3)(ii)–1,
discussed above, states that a creditor
who does not satisfy the safe harbor
conditions in § 1026.35(c)(3)(ii) does not
necessarily violate the general appraisal
requirements of § 1026.35(c)(3)(i). In

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addition, the Agencies note that another
proposed element of the commentary,
adopted as comment 35(c)(3)(ii)(C)–1,
states a creditor need not look beyond
the face of the written appraisal and the
appraiser’s certification to confirm that
the elements in appendix N to this
subpart are included in the written
appraisal.
Some commenters sought clarification
on whether the creditor could rely on
the face of the appraisal report, and
what scope and type of information is
required for the appendix N criteria. As
the Agencies discussed in the proposal,
compliance with the appendix N safe
harbor review requires the creditor to
check certain elements of the written
appraisal and the appraiser’s
certification on its face for completeness
and internal consistency. The final rule,
consistent with the proposed rule, does
not require the creditor to make an
independent judgment about or perform
an independent analysis of the
conclusions and factual statements in
the written appraisal. As discussed
above, the Agencies believe that
imposing such obligations on the
creditor could effectively require it to
re-appraise the property. The Agencies
also are retaining the requirement for
the safe harbor that the appraiser certify,
in the appraisal report, the appraiser’s
compliance with both USPAP and
applicable FIRREA title XI regulations,
although one commenter requested
eliminating the certification of
compliance with FIRREA.47 This
certification reflects that TILA requires
creditors to obtain appraisals for
‘‘higher-risk mortgages’’ that are
performed by the appraiser in
conformity with the requirements of
USPAP and applicable FIRREA title XI
regulations. See TILA section
129H(b)(3)(B), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(3)(B).
In response to comments about using
third parties for the review of appendix
N elements, the Agencies realize that
some creditors may want to outsource
the appraisal review function to confirm
that the elements in appendix N are
addressed in the written appraisal.
Nonetheless, the Agencies emphasize
that while a creditor may outsource this
function to a third party as the creditor’s
agent, the creditor remains responsible
for its agent’s compliance with these
requirements, just as if the creditor had
performed the function itself, and the

creditor cannot simply rely on the
agent’s certification. The same principle
applies regarding a public comment
seeking clarification about the use of
automated review processes for the safe
harbor; use of automated processes can
be appropriate, but the creditor remains
responsible for their effectiveness.48
As stated in the proposed rule, the
Agencies are of the opinion that the safe
harbor requirements would provide
reasonable protections to consumers
and compliance guidance to creditors.
For the reasons previously provided and
in light of commenters’ general support,
the Agencies have adopted the safe
harbor provision as proposed.

47 The Agencies are aware that the URAR,
currently used widely in the industry, includes a
pro forma appraiser certification for USPAP
compliance, but not for compliance with FIRREA
Title XI appraisal regulations. Nonetheless, the
URAR form accommodates ‘‘free text’’ additions by
the appraiser, through which appraisers can add an
appropriate FIRREA Title XI certification.

48 The Agencies also note that the Interagency
Appraisal and Evaluation Guidelines provide
comprehensive guidance on creditors’ use of third
parties for appraisal functions for institutions
subject to the appraisal regulations under FIRREA
title XI. See Interagency Appraisal and Evaluation
Guidelines, 75 FR 77450, 77463–77464 (Dec. 10,
2010).

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35(c)(4) Additional Appraisal for
Certain Higher-Risk Mortgage Loans
35(c)(4)(i) In General
Under TILA section 129H(b)(2), a
creditor must obtain a ‘‘second
appraisal’’ from a ‘‘different’’ certified or
licensed appraiser if the higher-risk
mortgage loan will ‘‘finance the
purchase or acquisition of the
mortgaged property from a seller within
180 days of the purchase or acquisition
of such property by the seller at a price
that was lower than the current sale
price of the property.’’ 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). In the proposal, the
Agencies interpreted this requirement to
obtain a ‘‘second appraisal’’ to mean
that the creditor must obtain an
appraisal in addition to the one required
under the general ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ appraisal rules in TILA
section 129H(a) and (b)(1). See 15 U.S.C.
1639h(a) and (b)(1), implemented at
new § 1026.35(b)(1)(i), discussed above.
Thus, a creditor would be required to
obtain two appraisals before extending a
higher-risk mortgage loan to finance a
consumer’s acquisition of the property.
The Agencies proposed to implement
the basic statutory requirement without
material change. Thus, in ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage loan’’ transactions under the
proposal, creditors would have to apply
additional scrutiny to properties being
resold for a higher price within a 180day period.
Using the exemption authority under
TILA section 129H(b)(4)(B), the final
rule adopts the proposal, but with
substantive changes. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(4)(B). Specifically, under new
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i), a creditor may not
extend an HPML that is not otherwise

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exempt from the appraisal requirements
(see section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(2), above, and
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi), below) without
obtaining, prior to consummation, two
written appraisals, if:
• The seller is reselling the property
within 90 days of acquiring it and the
resale price exceeds the seller’s
acquisition price by more than 10
percent; or
• The seller is reselling the property
within 91 to 180 days of acquiring it and
the resale price exceeds the seller’s
acquisition price by more than 20
percent.
The Agencies are adopting a proposed
comment to clarify that an appraisal that
was previously obtained in connection
with the seller’s acquisition or the
financing of the seller’s acquisition of
the property does not satisfy the
requirements to obtain two written
appraisals under § 1026.35(c)(4)(i). As
discussed in more detail below, the
Agencies are also adopting several other
proposed comments to this rule without
substantive change. See comments
35(c)(4)(i)–2 through –6.
Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies received over 50
comments concerning the proposal to
implement the ‘‘second’’ appraisal
requirement under TILA section
129H(b)(2) from trade associations,
banks, credit unions, mortgage lending
corporations, non-profit organizations,
government-sponsored enterprises
(GSEs), and individuals. The
commenters offered responses to some
of the questions the Agencies posed in
the proposal and made suggestions for
exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement. Exemptions and
related public comments are discussed
in the section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi), below.
In the proposal, the Agencies
requested comment on thirteen separate
questions concerning the general
requirement to obtain an additional
appraisal and appropriate exemptions
from this requirement. Public comments
on proposals related to more specific
rules for the additional appraisal are
discussed in the section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(ii)–(v), below.
On the general requirements adopted in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i), the Agencies received
substantive comments on the following
two questions.
Use of the term ‘‘additional
appraisal’’ rather than ‘‘second
appraisal.’’ The Agencies used the term
‘‘additional appraisal’’ rather than
‘‘second appraisal’’ throughout the
proposed rule and commentary because
the term ‘‘second’’ may imply that the

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additional appraisal must be later in
time than the first appraisal. In the
proposal, the Agencies asked whether
commenters agreed with the proposal’s
use of the term ‘‘additional appraisal’’
instead of the statutory term ‘‘second
appraisal.’’ The Agencies received six
comments on this question. The
commenters agreed that the use of the
term ‘‘additional’’ appraisal is
appropriate.
Three commenters requested
clarification on how to distinguish
between appraisals of different
valuations in a lending decision, noting
that the proposal did not specify which
of the two required appraisals a creditor
must rely on in extending a higher-risk
mortgage loan if the appraisals provide
different opinions of value.
Reliance on appraisal for seller’s
purchase of the property. The Agencies
also requested comment on a proposed
comment clarifying that an appraisal
previously obtained in connection with
the seller’s acquisition or the financing
of the seller’s acquisition of the property
cannot be used as one of the two
required appraisals under the
requirement for two appraisals under
TILA section 129H(b)(2). 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2). The Agencies received one
comment on this question, which
supported the Agencies’ approach to
this issue.
Discussion
Consistent with the statute and the
proposal, new § 1026.35(c)(4)(i) requires
a creditor to apply additional scrutiny to
the value of properties securing HPMLs
when they are being resold for a higher
price within a 180-day period. The
Agencies believe that the intent of TILA
section 129H(b)(2), as implemented in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i), is to discourage
fraudulent property ‘‘flipping,’’ a
practice in which a seller resells a
property at an artificially inflated price
within a short time period after
purchasing it, typically after some
minor renovations and frequently
relying on an inflated appraisal to
support the increase in value.49 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2). Consumers who
purchase properties at inflated values
can be financially disadvantaged if, for
example, they incur mortgage debt that
exceeds the value of their dwelling at
the time of the acquisition. The
Agencies recognize that a property may
49 See U.S. House of Reps., Comm. on Fin. Servs.,
Report on H.R. 1728, Mortgage Reform and AntiPredatory Lending Act, No. 111–94, 59 (May 4,
2009) (House Report); Federal Bureau of
Investigation, 2010 Mortgage Fraud Report Year in
Review 18 (August 2011), available at http://
www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publications/mortgagefraud-2010/mortgage-fraud-report-2010.

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be resold at a higher price within a short
timeframe for legitimate reasons, such
as when a seller makes valuable
improvements to the property or market
prices increase. Section 1026.35(c)(4)(i)
requires an additional appraisal
analyzing the property’s resale price to
ensure that the increased sales price is
appropriate.
In the proposal, the Agencies noted
that this approach is generally
consistent with rules promulgated by
HUD to address property flipping in
single-family mortgage insurance
programs of the FHA. See 24 CFR
203.37a; 68 FR 23370, May 1, 2003; 71
FR 33138, June 7, 2006; 77 FR 71099,
Nov. 29, 2012 (FHA Anti-Flipping
Rules, or FHA Rules). In general, under
the FHA Anti-Flipping Rules, properties
that have been resold within 90 days are
ineligible as security for FHA-insured
mortgage financing. See 24 CFR
§ 237a(b)(2). Properties that have been
resold 91 to 180 days from the seller’s
acquisition date are generally ineligible
as security for FHA-insured mortgage
financing if the sales price exceeds the
seller’s price by 100 percent. To obtain
FHA insurance in this case, HUD
requires additional documentation that
must include an additional appraisal.
See 24 CFR 237a(b)(3).
However, under temporary rules in
effect until December 31, 2013, that
waive the existing HUD anti-flipping
regulations during the first 90-day
period described above, FHA insurance
may be obtained for a mortgage secured
by a property resold within 90 days if
certain conditions are met.50 Among
these conditions is a requirement for
additional documentation if the sales
price exceeds the seller’s acquisition
cost by more than 20 percent, including
‘‘a second appraisal and/or supporting
documentation’’ verifying that the seller
completed legitimate renovation, repair
and rehabilitation work on the property
to justify the price increase.51
Use of the term ‘‘additional
appraisal’’ rather than ‘‘second
appraisal.’’ The Agencies are adopting
use of the term ‘‘additional appraisal’’
rather than ‘‘second appraisal’’
throughout the final rule and
commentary, as proposed. The Agencies
are concerned that the term ‘‘second’’
may imply that the additional appraisal
must be later in time than the first
appraisal, when in some cases creditors
might wish to order both appraisals
50 77 FR 71099, 71100 (Nov. 29, 2012). The
waiver rules were first issued in May 2010 and
waived the existing regulations through December
31, 2011. 75 FR 38633 (May 21, 2010). The waiver
was subsequently extended through December 31,
2012. 76 FR 81363 (Dec. 28, 2011).
51 77 FR 71099, 71100–71101 (Nov. 29, 2012).

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simultaneously. In addition, creditors
might not be able to identify easily
which of the two appraisals is the
‘‘second appraisal’’ for purposes of
complying with the prohibition on
charging the consumer for any ‘‘second
appraisal’’ under TILA section
129H(b)(2)(B). 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(B)
(implemented at § 1026.35(c)(4)(v),
discussed in the section-by-section
analysis of that provision, below).
Public commenters supported use of the
term ‘‘additional appraisal,’’ and the
Agencies do not believe that this term
changes the substantive requirements of
the statute.
Regarding concerns expressed by
commenters about which appraisal to
use for the credit decision when the two
appraisals show different values, the
Agencies acknowledge that the
introduction of a second appraisal will
sometimes place creditors in the
position of exercising judgment as to
which appraisal reflects the more robust
analysis and opinion of property value.
The Agencies recognize that creditors
ordering two appraisals from different
certified or licensed appraisers may
likely receive appraisals providing
different opinions. The Agencies
decline to provide additional guidance
on this matter in the final rule, however,
because other rules and regulatory
guidance address the issue and are more
appropriate vehicles for this purpose.
TILA section 129H does not require that
the creditor use any particular appraisal,
and the Agencies believe that a creditor
should retain the discretion to select the
most reliable valuation, consistent with
applicable safety and soundness
obligations and prudential regulatory
guidance. 15 U.S.C. 1639h.
In particular, the Agencies noted in
the proposal that TILA’s valuation
independence rules permit a creditor to
obtain multiple valuations for the
consumer’s principal dwelling to select
the most reliable valuation.52 12 CFR
1026.42(c)(3)(iv). The Interagency
Appraisal and Evaluation Guidelines
also acknowledge that an institution
may find it necessary to obtain another
appraisal or evaluation of a property. In
that case, the Guidelines affirm that the
creditor is ‘‘expected to adhere to a
policy of selecting the most credible
appraisal or evaluation, rather than the
appraisal or valuation that states the
highest [or lowest] value.’’ 53
52 75 FR 66554, 66561 (Oct. 28, 2010) (emphasis
added).
53 75 FR 77450, 77458 (Dec. 10, 2010). The
Guidelines refer creditors to the section of the
Guidelines on ‘‘Reviewing Appraisals and
Evaluations’’ for information on determining and
documenting the credibility of an appraisal or
evaluation. See id. at 77458, 77461–77463.

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Reliance on appraisal for seller’s
purchase of the property. In comment
35(c)(4)(i)–1, the Agencies are adopting
without change a proposed comment
clarifying that an appraisal previously
obtained in connection with the seller’s
acquisition or the financing of the
seller’s acquisition of the property
cannot be used as one of the two
required appraisals under the
‘‘additional’’ appraisal requirement. The
Agencies believe that this clarification is
consistent with the statutory purpose of
TILA section 129H of mitigating fraud
on the part of parties to the transaction.
15 U.S.C. 1639h. As noted, the one
commenter who weighed in on this
issue supported the Agencies’ approach.
Section 1026.35(c)(4)(i) is consistent
with the proposal in requiring the
creditor to obtain the additional
appraisal before consummating the
HPML. TILA section 129H(b)(2) does
not specifically require that the
additional appraisal be obtained prior to
consummation of the ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage,’’ but the Agencies believe that
this timing requirement is necessary to
effectuate the statute’s policy of
requiring creditors to apply greater
scrutiny to potentially flipped
properties that will secure the
transaction. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2).
Section 1026.35(c)(4)(i) is consistent
with the proposal in several other
respects as well. First, the statute
requires an additional appraisal ‘‘if the
purpose of a higher-risk mortgage loan
is to finance the purchase or acquisition
of the mortgaged property,’’ among
other conditions. TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A)
(emphasis added). Accordingly,
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i) requires an additional
appraisal only when the purpose of the
HPML is to finance the acquisition of
the consumer’s principal dwelling—the
requirement does not apply to refinance
loans.
In addition, the final rule replaces the
statutory term ‘‘mortgaged property’’
with the term ‘‘principal dwelling.’’
TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). The Agencies have
made this change to be consistent with
Regulation Z, which elsewhere uses the
term ‘‘principal dwelling,’’ most notably
in the existing definition of HPML. See
existing § 1026.35(a)(1) and the sectionby-section analysis of revised
§ 1026.35(a)(1). Although a property that
the consumer has not yet acquired will
not at that time be the consumer’s actual
dwelling, existing commentary to
Regulation Z explains that the term
‘‘principal dwelling’’ refers to properties
that will become the consumer’s
principal dwelling within a year. See
§ 1026.2(a)(24) and comment 2(a)(24)–3.

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See also 12 CFR 34.202, comment 1
(OCC) and 12 CFR 226.43(a)(3),
comment 1 (Board) (cross-referencing
Regulation Z, which contains the
Bureau’s definition of ‘‘principal
dwelling,’’ and accompanying Official
Staff Interpretations of Regulation Z for
purposes of this rule). When referring to
the date on which the seller acquired
the ‘‘property’’ in § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A)
and (B), however, the Agencies use the
more general term ‘‘property’’ rather
than ‘‘principal dwelling,’’ because the
subject property may not have been
used as a principal dwelling when the
seller acquired and owned it. The
Agencies intend the term ‘‘principal
dwelling’’ and ‘‘property’’ to refer to the
same property.
Criteria for Whether an Additional
Appraisal Is Required—Acquisition
Dates
As noted, the final rule requires a
creditor to obtain two appraisals in two
sets of circumstances: first, the seller is
reselling the property within 90 days of
acquiring it and the resale price exceeds
the seller’s acquisition price by more
than 10 percent (new
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A)); and second, the
seller is reselling the property within 91
to 180 days of acquiring it and the resale
price exceeds the seller’s acquisition
price by more than 20 percent (new
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B)). To determine
whether either set of circumstances
exists and which price threshold
applies, a creditor must determine the
date on which the seller acquired the
property and the date on which the
consumer became obligated to acquire
the property from the seller. These
aspects of the final rule are discussed
below.
Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies asked for public
comment on several questions regarding
the first of these conditions,
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A).
Treatment of non-purchase
acquisitions and use of the term
‘‘acquisition.’’ The proposal generally
used the term ‘‘acquisition’’ instead of
the longer statutory phrase ‘‘purchase or
acquisition’’ to refer to the events in
which the seller purchased or acquired
the dwelling at issue. The Agencies
proposed to use the sole term
‘‘acquisition’’ because this term, as
clarified in a proposed comment
adopted as comment 35(c)(4)-1, includes
acquisition of legal title to the property,
including by purchase. In the proposal,
the Agencies interpreted ‘‘acquisition’’
broadly in order to encompass the broad
statutory phrase ‘‘purchase or
acquisition.’’ Thus, as proposed, the

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
additional appraisal rule would apply to
a consumer’s purchase of a property
previously acquired by the seller
through a non-purchase acquisition,
such as inheritance, divorce, or gift.
In the proposal, the Agencies asked
for comment on whether an additional
appraisal should be required for
consumer acquisitions where the
property had been conveyed to the
seller in a non-purchase transaction and
where, arguably in the consumer’s
purchase, that seller may not have the
same motive to earn a quick,
unreasonable profit on a short-term
investment. The Agencies also
requested comment on how a creditor
should calculate the seller’s
‘‘acquisition price’’ in non-purchase
scenarios. The Agencies offered the
example of a case where the seller
acquired the property by inheritance. In
such a case, the seller’s acquisition price
could be considered ‘‘zero,’’ which
could make a subsequent sale offered at
any price within 180 days subject to the
additional appraisal requirement.
The Agencies also invited comment
on whether the term ‘‘acquisition’’
might be over-inclusive in describing
the consumer’s transaction because nonpurchase acquisitions by the consumer
do not readily appear to trigger the
additional appraisal requirement. For
example, if the consumer acquired the
property by means other than a
purchase, he or she likely would not
seek a mortgage loan to ‘‘finance’’ the
acquisition.
Two commenters, national trade
associations for appraisers, stated that
they had no objections to excluding
non-purchase transactions by either the
seller or consumer from the additional
appraisal requirement. A third
commenter, a bank, affirmatively
supported an exemption for nonpurchase acquisitions, suggesting that
such transactions are less likely to
involve fraudulent flipping schemes.
The Agencies also asked for comment
on whether the term ‘‘acquisition’’ is the
appropriate term to use in connection
with both the seller and mortgage
consumer. In addition, the Agencies
asked whether the term ‘‘acquisition’’
should be clarified to address situations
in which a consumer previously held a
partial interest in the property, and is
acquiring the remainder of the interest
from the seller. As noted in the
proposal, the Agencies do not expect
that fraudulent property flipping
schemes would likely occur in this
context. The Agencies also noted that
existing commentary in Regulation Z
clarifies that a ‘‘residential mortgage
transaction’’ does not include
transactions involving the consumer’s

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principal dwelling when the consumer
had previously purchased and acquired
some interest in the dwelling, even
though the consumer had not acquired
full legal title, such as when one joint
owner purchases the other owner’s joint
interest. See comments 2(a)(24)–5(i) and
–5(ii); see also section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(a)(1) (defining
HPML and discussing the distinctions
between the term ‘‘residential mortgage
transaction’’ in Regulation Z and
‘‘residential mortgage loan’’ in the
Dodd-Frank Act).
The Agencies received three
comments as well on the
appropriateness of using term
‘‘acquisition’’ rather than another term
such as ‘‘purchase.’’ Two commenters
endorsed use of this term, without
elaboration. A third commenter, a
mortgage lending corporation, objected
to the term ‘‘acquisition’’ and proposed
the phrase ‘‘purchase acquisition’’
instead. The commenter suggested that
consumers who acquire property
through inheritance, divorce or other
non-purchase means frequently want to
sell the property quickly; therefore,
application of the additional appraisal
requirement is not appropriate and will
needlessly delay such transactions.
The Agencies received three
comments as well on the question of
whether the additional appraisal should
apply to partial interests in a
transaction. One commenter, a regional
trade association for credit unions,
supported an exemption to cover a
situation in which a consumer holds a
partial interest in property and is
acquiring the remainder of the interest
from the seller. In support of its
position, the commenter cited the
commentary to Regulation Z mentioned
in the proposal (comments 2(a)(24)–5(i)
and –5(ii)), which clarifies that a
‘‘residential mortgage transaction’’ does
not include transactions involving the
consumer’s principal dwelling when the
consumer has a partial interest in the
dwelling, such as when one joint owner
purchases the other’s joint interest. The
other two commenters, national trade
associations for appraisers, opposed
exemptions for partial interest
transactions, given what the
commenters described as the inherent
riskiness of higher-priced loans.
Discussion
Use of the term ‘‘acquisition.’’
Consistent with the proposal, the
Agencies have decided to adopt the
proposal to use the term ‘‘acquisition’’
in place of the statutory phrase
‘‘purchase or acquisition’’ to refer to
acquisitions by both the seller and the
consumer. The Agencies are also

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adopting a proposed comment clarifying
that, throughout § 1026.35(c)(4), the
terms ‘‘acquisition’’ and ‘‘acquire’’ refer
to the acquisition of legal title to the
property pursuant to applicable State
law, including by purchase. See
comment 35(c)(4)–1. However, the
Agencies are adopting a separate
exemption from the additional appraisal
requirement for HPMLs that finance the
purchase of a property ‘‘[f]rom a person
who acquired title to the property by
inheritance or pursuant to a court order
of dissolution of marriage, civil union,
or domestic partnership, or of partition
of joint or marital assets to which the
seller was a party.’’ This exemption and
other exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement are discussed in
more detail in the section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii), below.
‘‘Acquisition’’ by the seller. The final
rule generally applies to transactions in
which the seller had acquired the
property without purchasing it, other
than through divorce or inheritance. For
example, the Agencies are concerned
that fraudulent flipping can easily be
accomplished when one party
purchases a property and quickly deeds
the property to another party (for
example, as a gift), who then sells the
property to an HPML consumer at an
inflated price. If the final rule applied
only to instances in which the seller had
purchased the property, the consumer’s
transaction would not trigger the added
protections of the requirement to obtain
two appraisals. By retaining the broader
terms ‘‘acquisition’’ and ‘‘acquire,’’
rather than a narrower term such as
‘‘purchase,’’ the final rule ensures that
two appraisals will be required to
confirm the property’s true value. See
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(B) (explaining that,
when a price paid by the seller for the
property cannot be determined, two
appraisals are required before an HPML
can be extended). The different
treatment by the rule for transactions
involving seller acquisitions through
inheritance or divorce are explained
more fully in the section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii), below.
‘‘Acquisition’’ by the consumer. The
Agencies believe that the terms
‘‘acquisition’’ or ‘‘acquire’’ to describe
the consumer’s acquisition of the
property as well is desirable for
consistency throughout the rule. The
Agencies do not anticipate that the rule
would apply where the consumer
acquires the property without
purchasing it. As a practical matter, if
the consumer acquired the property by
means other than a purchase, the rule
would not come into play because he or
she likely would not seek a mortgage to

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‘‘finance’’ the acquisition. Moreover, if
the consumer paid a nominal or no
amount to acquire the property, the
additional appraisal requirement would
not likely be triggered—in this case, the
consumer’s price would rarely if ever
exceed the seller’s acquisition price,
which is a condition for triggering the
requirement for two appraisals. See
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B). In terms of whether
and how the rule applies, however, the
outcome of these scenarios would not
change based on use of the term
‘‘acquisition’’ as opposed to a more
precise term such as ‘‘purchase.’’
Seller. As proposed, the final rule
uses the term ‘‘seller’’ throughout
§ 1026.35(c)(4) to refer to the party
conveying the property to the consumer.
The Agencies use this term to conform
to the reference to ‘‘sale price’’ in TILA
section 129H(b)(2)(A). 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). Also, as discussed
above, the Agencies do not foresee
instances in which the rule would apply
if the consumer acquired the property
other than by a purchase transaction.
Agreement. The final rule follows the
proposal in referring to the consumer’s
‘‘agreement’’ to acquire the property
throughout § 1026.35(c)(4). A ‘‘sale
price,’’ as referenced in TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A), is typically contained in
a legally binding agreement or contract
between a buyer and a seller. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). The commenters did not
raise any objections to the use of this
term as proposed.
Acquisition timeframe. As described
above, TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A)
requires creditors to obtain an
additional appraisal for ‘‘higher-risk
mortgages’’ that will finance the
consumer’s purchase or acquisition if
the following two circumstances are
present: (1) The consumer is financing
the purchase or acquisition of the
mortgaged property from a seller within
180 days of the seller’s purchase or
acquisition of the property; and (2) the
current sale price of the property is
higher than the price the seller paid for
the property. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A).
For a creditor to determine whether
the first condition is met, the creditor
has to compare two dates: the date of
the consumer’s acquisition and the date
of the seller’s acquisition. However, the
statute does not provide specific
guidance regarding the dates that a
creditor must use to perform this
comparison. TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A).
To implement this provision, the
Agencies proposed to require that the
creditor compare (1) the date on which
the consumer entered into the
agreement to acquire the property from
the seller, and (2) the date on which the

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seller acquired the property. A proposed
comment provided an illustration in
which the creditor determines the seller
acquired the property on April 17, 2012,
and the consumer’s acquisition
agreement is dated October 15, 2012; an
additional appraisal would not be
required because 181 days would have
elapsed between the two dates.
The Agencies did not receive public
comment on these aspects of the
proposal and adopt them without
change in § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B),
and comment 35(c)(4)(i)(A)–2.
Date the seller acquired the property.
Regarding the date of the seller’s
acquisition, TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A)
refers to the date of that person’s
‘‘purchase or acquisition’’ of the
property being financed by the higherrisk mortgage loan. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). Accordingly,
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B) refer to the
date on which the seller ‘‘acquired’’ the
property. Comment 35(c)(4)(i)–3,
adopted from a proposed comment
without change, clarifies that this refers
to the date on which the seller became
the legal owner of the property under
State law, which the Agencies
understand to be, in most cases, the date
on which the seller acquired title. The
Agencies have interpreted TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A) in this manner because
the Agencies understand that creditors,
in most cases, will not extend credit to
finance the acquisition of a property
from a seller who cannot demonstrate
clear title. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A).
Also, as discussed above, the Agencies
have proposed to use the single term
‘‘acquisition’’ because this term is
generally understood to comprise
acquisition of legal title to the property,
including by purchase.
To assist creditors in identifying the
date on which the seller acquired title
to the property, comment 35(c)(4)(i)–3 is
intended to clarify that the creditor may
rely on records that provide information
as to the date on which the seller
became vested as the legal owner of the
property pursuant to applicable State
law. As provided in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(A) and explained in
comments 35(c)(4)(vi)(A)–1 through –3,
the creditor may determine this date
through reasonable diligence, requiring
reliance on a written source document.
The reasonable diligence standard is
discussed further below under the
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(A).
Date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. Regarding the date
of the consumer’s acquisition, TILA
refers to the date on which the ‘‘higherrisk mortgage’’ consumer purchases or
acquires the mortgaged property, but

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does not provide detail on how to define
the consumer’s acquisition. TILA
section 129H(b)(2)(A), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). The Agencies proposed
to interpret this provision to refer to
‘‘the date of the consumer’s agreement
to acquire the property.’’ A proposed
comment explained that, in determining
this date, the creditor should use a copy
of the agreement provided by the
consumer to the creditor, and use the
date on which the consumer and the
seller signed the agreement. If the
consumer and seller signed on different
dates, the creditor should use the date
on which the last party signed the
agreement.
This comment is incorporated into the
final rule without change as comment
35(c)(4)(i)–4. As explained in the
proposal, the Agencies believe that use
of the date on which the consumer and
the seller agreed on the purchase
transaction best accomplishes the
purposes of the statute. This approach is
substantially similar to existing creditor
practice under the FHA Anti-Flipping
Rule, which uses the date of execution
of the consumer’s sales contract to
determine whether the restrictions on
FHA insurance applicable to property
resales are triggered. See 24 CFR
203.37a(b)(1). The Agencies have not
interpreted the date of the consumer’s
acquisition to refer to the actual date of
title transfer to the consumer under
State law, or the date of consummation
of the HPML, because it would be
difficult if not impossible for creditors
to determine, at the time that they must
order an appraisal or appraisals to
comply with § 1026.35(c), when title
transfer or consummation will occur.
The actual date of title transfer typically
depends on whether a creditor
consummates financing for the
consumer’s purchase and the seller
delivers the deed to the consumer in
exchange for the proceeds from the
mortgage loan. Various factors
considered in the underwriting
decision, including a review of
appraisals, will affect whether the
creditor extends the loan. In addition,
the Agencies are concerned that even if
a creditor could identify a date certain
by which the loan would be
consummated and title would be
transferred to the consumer, the creditor
could potentially set a date that exceeds
the 180-day time period to circumvent
the requirements of § 1026.35(c)(4)(i).
Comment 35(c)(4)(i)–4 also clarifies
that the date on which the consumer
and the seller agreed on the purchase
transaction, as evidenced by the date the
last party signed the agreement, may not
necessarily be the date on which the
consumer became contractually

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
obligated under State law to acquire the
property. It may be difficult for a
creditor to determine the date on which
the consumer became legally obligated
under the acquisition agreement as a
matter of State law. Using the date on
which the consumer and the seller
agreed on the purchase transaction, as
evidenced by their signatures and the
date on the agreement, avoids
operational and other potential issues
because the Agencies expect that this
date would be apparent on its face from
the signature dates on the acquisition
agreement.

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Criteria for Whether an Additional
Appraisal Is Required—Acquisition
Prices
TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A) requires
creditors to obtain an additional
appraisal if the seller had acquired the
property ‘‘at a price that was lower than
the current sale price of the property’’
within the past 180 days. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). To determine whether
this statutory condition has been met, a
creditor would have to compare the
current sale price with the price at
which the seller had acquired the
property. Accordingly, the Agencies
proposed to implement this requirement
by requiring the creditor to compare the
price paid by the seller to acquire the
property with the price that the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire
the property, as specified in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property. Thus, if the price paid by the
seller to acquire the property is lower
than the price in the consumer’s
acquisition agreement by a certain
amount or percentage to be determined
by the Agencies in the final rule, and
the seller had acquired the property 180
or fewer days prior to the date of the
consumer’s acquisition agreement, the
creditor would be required to obtain an
additional appraisal before extending a
higher-risk mortgage loan to finance the
consumer’s acquisition of the
property.54
As noted above, the Agencies are
adopting the general approach proposed
of setting a particular price increase
threshold that triggers the additional
appraisal requirement, and are
specifying the price increase thresholds
as follows: A creditor is required to
obtain two appraisals in two sets of
54 The Agencies proposed a trigger for the
additional appraisal requirement, adopted and
revised in new § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B), as follows:
‘‘The price at which the seller acquired the property
was lower than the price that the consumer is
obligated to pay to acquire the property, as
specified in the consumer’s agreement to acquire
the property from the seller, by an amount equal to
or greater than XX.’’ 77 FR 54722, 54772 (Sept. 5,
2012).

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circumstances—first, when the seller is
reselling the property within 90 days of
acquiring it at a price that exceeds the
seller’s acquisition price by more than
10 percent (new § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A));
and second, when the seller is reselling
the property within 91 to 180 days of
acquiring it at a price that exceeds the
seller’s acquisition price by more than
20 percent (new § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B)).
This aspect of the final rule and related
comments are discussed in greater detail
below.
Price at which the seller acquired the
property. TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A)
refers to a property that the seller
previously purchased or acquired ‘‘at a
price.’’ 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A). The
proposal also referred to the ‘‘price’’ at
which the seller acquired the property;
a proposed comment clarified that the
seller’s acquisition price refers to the
amount paid by the seller to acquire the
property. The proposed comment also
explained that the price at which the
seller acquired the property does not
include the cost of financing the
property. This comment was intended
to clarify that the creditor should
consider only the price of the property,
not the total cost of financing the
property.
The Agencies are adopting these
aspects of the proposal without
substantive change in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B), and
comment 35(c)(4)(i)–5.
Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies asked for comment on
whether additional clarification was
needed regarding how a creditor should
identify the price at which the seller
acquired the property. In particular, the
Agencies also requested comment on
how a creditor would calculate the price
paid by a seller to acquire a property as
part of a bulk sale that is later resold to
a higher-risk mortgage consumer. The
Agencies understand that, in bulk sales,
a sales price might be assigned to
individual properties for tax or
accounting reasons, but asked for public
input on whether guidance may be
needed for determining the sales price
of a property for purposes of
determining whether an additional
appraisal is required. The Agencies also
asked for comment on any operational
challenges that might arise for creditors
in determining purchase prices for
homes purchased as part of a bulk sale
transaction, as well as for views on
whether any challenges presented could
impede neighborhood revitalization in
any way, and, if so, whether the
Agencies should consider an exemption
from the additional appraisal

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requirement for these types of
transactions altogether.
An appraiser trade association stated
that an appraiser’s expertise is
important in valuing properties that are
part of a bulk sale. No other commenters
commented on this question. In view of
the value that appraisers can add in
valuing properties as part of a bulk sale,
and in the absence of requests or
suggestions for additional guidance, the
Agencies are adopting the rule as
proposed with no additional provisions
or clarifications regarding the purchase
price of properties purchased in bulk
sales.
Price the consumer is obligated to pay
to acquire the property. TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A) refers to the ‘‘current sale
price of the property’’ being financed by
a higher-risk mortgage loan. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). The proposal referred to
‘‘the price that the consumer is
obligated to pay to acquire the property,
as specified in the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property from
the seller.’’ The final rule adopts this
language in § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B).
The final rule also adopts a proposed
comment clarifying that the price the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire
the property is the price indicated on
the consumer’s agreement with the
seller to acquire the property that is
signed and dated by both the consumer
and the seller. See comment 35(c)(4)(i)–
6. In keeping with the proposal,
comment 35(c)(4)(i)–6 also explains that
the price at which the consumer is
obligated to pay to acquire the property
from the seller does not include the cost
of financing the property to clarify that
a creditor should only consider the sale
price of the property as reflected in the
consumer’s acquisition agreement.
In addition, the comment refers to
comment 35(c)(4)(i)–4 (providing
guidance on the ‘‘date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property,’’ as
discussed above). The intention of this
cross-reference is to indicate that the
document on which the creditor may
rely to determine the consumer’s
acquisition price will be the same
document on which a creditor may rely
to determine the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property. Also
tracking the proposal, comment
35(c)(4)(i)–6 further explains that the
creditor is not obligated to determine
whether and to what extent the
agreement is legally binding on both
parties. The Agencies expect that the
price the consumer is obligated to pay
to acquire the property will be apparent
from the consumer’s acquisition
agreement.

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations

Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies requested comment on
whether the price at which the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire
the property, as reflected in the
consumer’s acquisition agreement,
provides sufficient clarity to creditors
on how to comply while providing
consumers adequate protection. The
Agencies did not receive comments on
this issue, and is adopting the
proposal’s use of the phrase ‘‘the price
the consumer is obligated to pay to
acquire the property, as specified in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property from the seller.’’

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B)
TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A) provides
that an additional appraisal is required
when the price at which the seller had
purchased or acquired the property was
‘‘lower’’ than the current sale price and
the resale occurs within 180 days of the
seller’s acquisition. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A). TILA does not define
the term ‘‘lower.’’ Thus, as written, the
statute would require an additional
appraisal for any price increase above
the seller’s acquisition price, if the
resale occurred within 180 days of the
seller’s acquisition. As discussed in
more detail below, the Agencies do not
believe that the public interest or the
safety and soundness of creditors would
be served if the law is implemented to
require an additional appraisal for any
increase in price. Accordingly, the
Agencies proposed an exemption to the
additional appraisal requirement for
some threshold increase in the price. As
described above, the proposal contained
a placeholder for the amount by which
the resale price would have to have
exceeded the price at which the seller
had acquired the property.
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B), the
Agencies are adopting a tiered approach
to the proposed exemption for certain
price increases. Specifically:
• Section 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) exempts
from the additional appraisal
requirement HPMLs that finance the
consumer’s purchase of a property
within 90 days of the seller’s acquisition
of the property at a price that does not
exceed 10 percent of the seller’s
acquisition purchase price.
• Section 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B), exempts
from the additional appraisal
requirement HPMLs that finance the
consumer’s purchase of a property
within 91 to 180 days of the seller’s
acquisition of the property at a price
that does not exceed 20 percent of the
seller’s acquisition price.

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Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies solicited comment on
potential exemptions for mortgage
transactions that have a sale price that
exceeds the seller’s purchase price by a
relatively small amount or by a certain
percentage. The Agencies requested
comment on whether a fixed dollar
amount, a fixed percentage, or some
alternate approach should be used to
determine an exempt price increase, and
what specific price threshold would be
appropriate.
The Agencies received a large number
of comments on these questions. The
commenters generally endorsed the
proposed exemption, based either on a
dollar amount, or a percentage of the
seller’s acquisition price. Four
commenters (a bank holding company,
two national trade associations for
mortgage lending companies and
consumer and small-business lenders,
and a large mortgage lending company)
suggested that a 10 percent price
increase exception would be
appropriate. One of these commenters
argued that 10 percent is a customary
standard in the industry because it
represents typical realtor and other
closing costs.
A national trade association for
community banks suggested a minimum
of 15 percent. Two commenters, a
regional trade association for credit
unions and a community bank, argued
that the exception should be at least 25
percent. One large national bank
suggested a threshold of 5 percent.
Another commenter, a credit union,
suggested that an exemption be for the
greater of three percent or a $10,000
increase in the price. A GSE suggested
that the Agencies exempt from the
second appraisal requirement sales that
are subject to an ‘‘anti-flipping’’ clause.
When an investor purchases a property
in short sales from the GSEs, for
example, certain clauses in the sales
contract prohibit the investor from
reselling that property for the first 30
days after the short sale purchase. The
investor is then prohibited from
reselling the property without
justification and permission from the
GSE for the next 31 to 90 days for a
price that exceeds the seller’s price by
more than 20 percent.55 Identical resale
restrictions apply to investors
purchasing property through a short sale
under the Home Affordable Foreclosure
Alternatives (HAFA) program.56 Some
55 See Fannie Mae Single Family Servicing Guide
Announcement SVC 2012–19, page 13; and Freddie
Mac Single Family Seller Servicer Guide, Chapter
B65.40(i).
56 See U.S. Dept. of Treasury, Supplemental
Directive 12–07 (Nov. 1, 2012).

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commenters suggested that the Agencies
incorporate FHA’s regime as the
standard for the higher-risk mortgage
rule.
Discussion
As noted, the Agencies are adopting a
tiered approach to the proposed
exemption from the additional appraisal
requirement of TILA section
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i) for HPMLs that finance
the resale of properties that do not
exceed certain price increases from the
prior sale. Specifically,
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) exempts from the
additional appraisal requirement
HPMLs that finance the consumer’s
purchase of a property within 90 days
of the seller’s acquisition of the property
where the resale price does not exceed
10 percent of the seller’s acquisition
price. Section 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B),
exempts from the additional appraisal
requirement HPMLs that finance the
consumer’s purchase of a property
within 91 to 180 days of the seller’s
acquisition of the property where the
resale price does not exceed 20 percent
of the seller’s acquisition price. In
developing this approach, the Agencies
reviewed public comments as well as
other government standards and rules
designed to curb harmful flipping in
residential mortgage transactions. These
included short sale reselling restrictions
imposed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
and the U.S. Treasury Department,57 as
well as HUD’s Anti-Flipping Rules—
both HUD’s existing regulations (24 CFR
203.37a(b)) and HUD rules currently in
effect that temporarily ‘‘waive’’ existing
regulations and replace them with other
standards.58
The Agencies believe that short sale
reselling restrictions of the GSEs and
Treasury are instructive. Like these
rules, the final rule incorporates a
bifurcated approach to addressing
fraudulent flipping, based on the
number of days between the seller’s
purchase and the consumer’s
purchase.59 The Agencies are not
adopting an exemption for HPMLs
financing sales subject to an antiflipping clause, however. The Agencies
57 See Fannie Mae Single Family Servicing Guide
Announcement SVC 2012–19, page 13; and Freddie
Mac Single Family Seller Servicer Guide, Chapter
B65.40(i); U.S. Dept. of Treasury, Supplemental
Directive 12–07 (Nov. 1, 2012).
58 See, e.g., 77 FR 71099 (Nov. 29, 2012).
59 As noted earlier, the GSE and Treasury short
sale rules ban resales outright for 30 days after the
short sale and also ban them if the sales price
increases by more than 20 percent for resales in the
next 31 to 90 days. See Fannie Mae Single Family
Servicing Guide Announcement SVC 2012–19, page
13; and Freddie Mac Single Family Seller Servicer
Guide, Chapter B65.40(i); U.S. Dept. of Treasury,
Supplemental Directive 12–07 (Nov. 1, 2012).

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
are concerned that such an exemption
would not be sufficiently protective of
the HPML consumers the statute was
intended to protect. If such an
exemption covered only loans subject to
GSE and Treasury anti-flipping clauses,
HPML consumers purchasing homes
from investors who acquired them from
GSEs or Treasury would not receive the
protection of the additional appraisal
requirement. Meanwhile, HPML
consumers purchasing homes from
investors who acquired them from other
creditors or investors would receive the
protection of the additional appraisal
requirement. It is unclear why HPML
consumers in the latter case should
receive these protections and consumers
in the former case should not. In
addition, the purpose of the additional
appraisal requirement in the final rule is
to ensure a second opinion on the value
of a purchased home; the purpose of
anti-flipping clauses generally is to
restrict the transaction entirely. Thus,
these clauses may be instructive, but
should not necessarily determine who
receives the protection of this rule.
If an exemption for HPMLs financing
sales subject to an anti-flipping clause
covered loans subject to anti-flipping
clauses more generally, the Agencies
would be concerned about more HPML
consumers not receiving the protections
of the statute. Moreover, if creditors
were concerned that the additional
appraisal requirement might impede
disposal of their distressed properties,
they could devise ‘‘anti-flipping’’
clauses that would impose only
minimal restrictions on the resale of
those properties, simply to take
advantage of the exemption. The
Agencies recognize the importance to
creditors and investors of being able to
sell distressed properties in a timely
manner to decrease losses. The Agencies
further understand that restrictions on
the resale of distressed properties
purchased from creditors and investors
can affect how quickly creditors and
investors can dispose of these
properties, and that creditors and
investors design resale restrictions
accordingly. However, the appraisal
requirement under this final rule is not
a restriction on resale by the seller; it is
a requirement for additional
documentation regarding the value of
homes purchased by a certain subset of
consumers who finance the transaction
with an HPML.
The Agencies view the FHA AntiFlipping Rules as also instructive for the
final rule. In the preamble to its original
Anti-Flipping Final Rule and waiver
notices after it, HUD states that
‘‘fraudulent property flipping involves
the rapid re-sale, often within days, of

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a recently acquired property.’’ 60 HUD
also states in its original final rule that
‘‘resales executed within 90 days imply
pre-arranged transactions that often
prove to be among the most egregious
examples of predatory lending.’’ 61
Thus, under existing HUD regulations,
FHA insurance is not available for loans
that finance the purchase of a property
within 90 days of the previous sale. See
24 CFR 203.37a(b)(2). HUD’s rule is
based on the conclusion that 90 days is
a reasonable waiting period to ensure
that legitimate rehabilitation and repairs
of a property have occurred.62
HUD has also stated that a 180-day
ban on eligibility for FHA insurance
would have provided a disincentive to
legitimate contractors who improve
houses—thus increasing the stock of
affordable housing.63 Therefore, for
transactions involving resales in the 91–
180 day period, HUD will insure resales
at any price, but requires additional
documentation, which must include a
second appraisal, if the price increase
exceeds the seller’s acquisition price by
100 percent. See 24 CFR 203.37a(b)(3).
The Agencies believe that HUD’s
basic approach—the use of more
restrictive conditions for 90 days,
followed by somewhat lesser
restrictions for the next 90 days—has
merit as an approach to combatting the
kind of flipping with which Congress
seemed concerned.64 The Agencies
recognize that, since issuing the
regulation in 24 CFR 203.37a(b)(3), HUD
has issued rules that temporarily replace
its existing regulations, with the goal of
encouraging investors to rehabilitate
homes and thus help ‘‘stabilize real
estate prices as well as neighborhoods
and communities where foreclosure
activity has been high.’’ 65 Under these
temporary rules, FHA insurance is now
available for loans that finance property
resales within 90 days of the previous
sale, as long as certain conditions are
met. One condition is that ‘‘a second
appraisal and/or supporting
60 See, e.g., 68 FR 23370 (May 1, 2003); 77 FR
71099 (Nov. 29, 2012).
61 68 FR 23370, 23372 (May 1, 2003).
62 See id.
63 See id.
64 See U.S. House of Reps., Comm. on Fin. Servs.,
Report on H.R. 1728, Mortgage Reform and AntiPredatory Lending Act, No. 111–94, 59 (May 4,
2009) (House Report); Federal Bureau of
Investigation, 2010 Mortgage Fraud Report Year in
Review 18 (August 2011), available at http://
www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publications/mortgagefraud-2010/mortgage-fraud-report-2010. See also 71
FR 33138, 33141–33142 (June 7, 2006); HUD,
Mortgagee Letter 2006–14 (June 8, 2006) (‘‘FHA’s
policy prohibiting property flipping eliminates the
most egregious examples of predatory flips of
properties within the FHA mortgage insurance
programs.’’).
65 77 FR 71099 (Nov. 29, 2012).

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documentation’’ is required if the sales
price exceeds the seller’s acquisition
price by more than 20 percent.66
However, the Agencies recognize that
these rules are designed to address a
temporary market condition; the
Agencies believe that the HPML
appraisal rules must be designed to
address property flipping beyond a
temporary market condition.
At the same time, the Agencies
believe that the approach adopted with
respect to the additional appraisal
requirement resembles the FHA waiver
rules in some important ways that
mitigate concerns about chilling
investment. Like the FHA waiver rules,
the final rule does not prohibit HPML
financing of resales within 90 days (by
contrast, the existing FHA regulations
ban FHA insurance on resales within 90
days). Rather, the final rule imposes an
additional condition on the
transaction—namely, that the creditor
must obtain a second appraisal for the
creditor’s use in considering the loan
application and, more specifically, the
collateral value of the dwelling that will
secure the mortgage. The Agencies
believe that this protection is consistent
with congressional intent to provide
additional protections for borrowers of
loans considered by Congress to pose
higher risks to those borrowers.
Consistent with the views expressed by
some commenters, however, the
Agencies have determined that
consumer protection is not served by
requiring a second appraisal in
circumstances where the increase
generally is not indicative of a seller
attempting to profit on a flip. The
Agencies believe it is reasonable to
expect a seller, faced with
circumstances dictating resale of a
dwelling that the seller very recently
acquired, to seek to recoup the seller’s
transaction costs on the purchase and
resale, in addition to the seller’s
acquisition price. These costs may
include fees from the seller’s
acquisition, such as mortgage
application fees, origination points,
escrow and attorney’s fees, transfer
taxes and recording fees, title search
charges and title insurance premiums,
as well as fees incurred in the resale,
such as real estate commissions, seller66 See id. at 71100. A property inspection is also
required. See id. at 71100–71101. For loans
financing resales within 90 days where the sales
price does not exceed the seller’s acquisition price
by more than 20 percent, FHA insurance is
conditioned on the transactions being ‘‘arms-length,
with no identity of interest between the buyer and
seller or other parties participating in the sales
transaction.’’ Id. at 71100. HUD provides several
examples of ways that lenders can ensure that there
is no inappropriate collusion or agreement between
parties. Id.

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paid points, and other sales concessions
on the resale. These costs will vary to
some extent by State and by transaction.
However, the Agencies believe that
providing an allowance of 10 percent
over the seller’s acquisition price
reasonably accommodates these
transaction costs and strikes an
appropriate balance with respect to ease
of administration for purposes of the
rule.
Regarding HPMLs that occur within
91 to 180 days, the final rule provides
that an additional appraisal is required
only if the property price increased by
more than 20 percent of the seller’s
acquisition price. See
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B). In this way, the
final rule provides a modest additional
10 percent allowance for legitimate
repairs, and builds in a 90-day period in
the interest of ensuring enough time to
allow such repairs to be made. At the
same time, the approach preserves
added consumer protections in the first
90 days, when predatory flipping is
most likely to occur. The Agencies
recognize that this element of the final
rule differs from the FHA Anti-Flipping
Rules, which require additional
documentation for a resale from 91 to
180 days only if the price increases by
100 percent of the seller’s acquisition
price. However, FHA insurance applies
to HPMLs and non-HPMLs alike, and
the Agencies believe that Congress
intended special protections to apply to
HPML consumers.
The Agencies believe that requiring
an additional appraisal for HPMLs
financing the purchase of a home being
resold within a 180-day period,
regardless of the amount of the price
increase, could restrict home sales to
HPML consumers, because investors
might be less likely to sell properties to
them. The additional appraisal rules
could potentially affect the safety and
soundness of creditors holding
properties as a result of foreclosure or
deed-in-lieu of foreclosure. This might
arise if potential application of the twoappraisal requirement makes the
properties less desirable for investors to
purchase from financial institutions and
rehabilitate for resale, out of investor
concerns about the potential scope of
the HPML requirement as applied to the
pool of likely purchasers for their
investment properties. This could create
additional losses for creditors holding
these properties. The Agencies do not
believe that these potential negative
impacts would be outweighed by
consumer protections afforded by the
additional appraisal requirement. The
Agencies believe that the approach
adopted by the final rule strikes the
appropriate balance between allowing

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legitimate resales without undue
restrictions and providing HPML
consumers with additional protections
from fraudulent flipping. For these
reasons, the Agencies have concluded
that the exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement reflected in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B) are in the
public interest and promote the safety
and soundness of creditors.
35(c)(4)(ii) Different Certified or
Licensed Appraisers
Under the proposed rule, the two
appraisals required under the proposed
paragraph now adopted as
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i) could not be
performed by the same certified or
licensed appraiser. This proposal was
consistent with TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A), which expressly requires
that the additional appraisal must be
performed by a ‘‘different’’ certified or
licensed appraiser than the appraiser
who performed the other appraisal for
the ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ transaction.
15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A).
As discussed in the proposal, during
informal outreach conducted by the
Agencies, some participants suggested
that the Agencies impose additional
requirements regarding the appraiser
performing the second appraisal for the
higher-risk mortgage loan, such as a
requirement that the second appraiser
not have knowledge of the first
appraisal. Outreach participants
indicated that this requirement would
minimize undue pressure to value the
property at a price similar to the value
assigned by the first appraiser.
The Agencies explained that they did
not propose any additional conditions
on what it means to obtain an appraisal
from a ‘‘different’’ certified or licensed
appraiser because the Agencies expect
that existing valuation independence
requirements would be sufficient to
ensure that the second appraiser
performs an independent valuation.
Rules to ensure that appraisers exercise
their independent judgment in
conducting appraisals exist under TILA
(§ 1026.42), as well as FIRREA title XI.67
In addition, the USPAP Ethics Rule
requires that appraisers ‘‘perform
assignments with impartiality,
objectivity, and independence, and
without accommodation of personal
interests,’’ and includes several
examples of forbidden conduct related
to this rule.68 However, the Agencies
requested comment on whether the rule
67 See OCC: 12 CFR 34.45; Board: 12 CFR 225.65;
FDIC: 12 CFR 323.5; NCUA: 12 CFR 722.5.
68 Appraisal Standards Board, Appraisal
Foundation, Uniform Standards of Professional
Appraisal Practice, 2012–2013 Ed., pp. U–7 through
U–9.

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should include additional conditions on
what it means for the additional
appraisal to be performed by a
‘‘different’’ appraiser. Specifically, the
Agencies sought comment on whether
the final rule should prohibit creditors
from obtaining two appraisals by
appraisers employed by the same
appraisal firm, or who received the
assignments from same appraisal
management company (AMC).
The final rule follows the proposal
and the statute in requiring that the
additional appraisal must be performed
by a ‘‘different’’ certified or licensed
appraiser than the appraiser who
performed the other appraisal for the
HPML transaction. See
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(ii). In the final rule, the
Agencies also adopt a new comment
clarifying what it means to obtain an
appraisal from a ‘‘different’’ certified or
licensed appraiser, discussed below.
Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies received approximately
36 comments relating to requirements
that (1) the additional appraisal be
performed by a ‘‘different’’ certified or
licensed appraiser, discussed
immediately below; (2) the additional
appraisal include analysis of the sales
price differences between the prior and
current home sale transaction (see
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iv), below); and (3) the
creditor may not charge the consumer
for the additional appraisal (see sectionby-section analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(v),
below). These comments were
submitted by banks and bank holding
companies, credit unions, bank and
credit union trade associations, and
appraisal, realtor, and mortgage industry
trade associations.
Of the commenters addressing the
requests for comment on whether
additional conditions should apply
regarding the requirement that a
‘‘different’’ appraiser perform the
additional appraisal, most urged that the
rule allow a creditor to obtain two
appraisals from the same appraisal firm
or AMC, provided that they are
performed by separate appraisers.
Commenters favoring this approach
suggested that allowing a creditor to use
a single appraisal firm or AMC would
reduce costs, ease compliance burdens,
and mitigate concerns regarding the
availability of appraisers, particularly in
rural or sparsely populated areas.
Several commenters noted that the use
of a single appraisal firm or AMC would
not weaken the different appraiser
requirement since each appraisal is
subject to USPAP and appraisal
independence requirements. One
commenter, however, stated the rule

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should prohibit a creditor from hiring
appraisers from the same valuation firm
and, with respect to AMCs, a creditor
should be prohibited from hiring two
appraisers through the same AMC if the
AMC is an affiliate of the creditor.
Discussion
Consistent with the proposal, new
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(ii) provides that the two
appraisals required under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i) may not be performed
by the same certified or licensed
appraiser. The Agencies are also
adopting new comment 35(c)(4)(ii)–1,
clarifying that the requirements that a
creditor obtain two separate appraisals
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)), and that each
appraisal be conducted by a ‘‘different’’
licensed or certified appraiser
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(ii)), indicate that the
two appraisals must be conducted
independently of each other. The
comment explains that, if the two
certified or licensed appraisers are
affiliated, such as by being employed by
the same appraisal firm, then whether
they have conducted the appraisal
independently of each other must be
determined based on the facts and
circumstances of the particular case
known to the creditor.
As discussed in the proposal, the
Agencies believe that the appraisal
independence requirements of TILA
(implemented at § 1026.42) help ensure
that the two appraisals reflect valuation
judgments that are independent of the
creditor’s loan origination interests and
not biased by an appraiser’s personal or
business interest in the property or the
transaction. TILA section 129E, 15
U.S.C. 1639e. In addition, FIRREA title
XI includes rules to ensure that
appraisers exercise their independent
judgment in conducting appraisals, such
as requirements that federally-regulated
depositories separate appraisers from
the lending, investment, and collection
functions of the institution, and that the
appraiser have ‘‘no direct or indirect
interest, financial or otherwise, in the
property.’’ 69 As noted, USPAP’s Ethics
Rule, which applies to appraisers, also
requires that appraisers ‘‘perform
assignments with impartiality,
objectivity, and independence, and
without accommodation of personal
interests,’’ and includes several
examples of prohibited conduct related
to this rule.70 As discussed in the
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(1)(a), compliance with
69 See OCC: 12 CFR 34.45; Board: 12 CFR 225.65;
FDIC: 12 CFR 323.5; and NCUA: 12 CFR 722.5.
70 Appraisal Standards Board, Appraisal
Foundation, Uniform Standards of Professional
Appraisal Practice, 2012–2013 Ed., pp. U–7 through
U–9.

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USPAP is a condition of being a
‘‘certified or licensed appraiser’’ under
TILA’s ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ appraisal
rules implemented in this final rule.
TILA section 129H(b)(3), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(3); § 1026.35(c)(1)(a).
Requirements for valuation
independence for consumer credit
transactions secured by the consumer’s
principal dwelling were adopted under
amendments to TILA in the Dodd-Frank
Act in 2010 and have been in effect
since April of 2011. See 12 CFR
1026.42; 75 FR 66554 (Oct. 28, 2010),
implementing TILA section 129E, 15
U.S.C. 1639e. The requirements in
TILA, which carry civil liability, were
designed to ensure that real estate
appraisals used to support creditors’
underwriting decisions are based on the
appraiser’s independent professional
judgment, free of any influence or
pressure that may be exerted by parties
that have an interest in the transaction.
Existing appraisal independence
requirements expressly prohibit
appraisers, AMCs, or appraisal firms (all
providers of settlement services) from
having an interest in the property or
transaction or from causing the value
assigned to a consumer’s principal
dwelling to be based on any factor other
than the independent judgment of the
person preparing the appraisal. Material
misstatements of the value are also
prohibited for these parties, as is having
a direct or indirect interest in the
transaction, which prohibits these
parties from being compensated based
on the outcome of the transaction.
The Agencies understand that, in light
of these rules, a principal reason that
creditors contract with third-party
AMCs and appraisal firms is to ensure
that the appraisal function is
independent from the loan origination
function, as required by law. In
addition, the creditor remains
responsible for compliance with the
appraisal requirements of § 1026.35(c),
and both the creditor and the creditor’s
third party agent risk liability for
violations of TILA’s appraisal
independence requirements.
At the same time, the Agencies have
concerns about whether the unbiased
appraiser independence will always be
fully realized if, for example, the two
appraisals are performed by appraisers
employed by the same company. The
Agencies recognize that in some cases,
obtaining two appraisals from different
appraisal firms might not be feasible,
and moreover that appraisers working
for the same company are cognizant of
their independence, and indeed might
not even interact at all. Thus, the rule
is intended to allow flexibility in
ordering the two appraisals from the

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same entity. However, as underscored in
comment 35(c)(4)(ii)–1, in all cases the
two appraisers should function
independently of each other to ensure
that in fact two separate and
independent judgments of the property
value are reflected in the required
appraisals. If the creditor knows of facts
or circumstances about the performance
of the additional appraisal by the same
firm indicating that the additional
appraisal was not performed
independently, the creditor should
refrain from extending credit, unless the
creditor obtains another appraisal.
35(c)(4)(iii) Relationship to General
Appraisal Requirements
The proposed rule required that the
additional appraisal meet the
requirements of the first appraisal,
including the requirements that the
appraisal be performed by a certified or
licensed appraiser who conducts a
physical visit of the interior of the
mortgaged property. See new
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(i). The Agencies
expressed in the proposal the belief that
this approach best effectuates the
purposes of the statute. TILA section
129H(b)(1) provides that, ‘‘[s]ubject to
the rules prescribed under paragraph
(4), an appraisal of property to be
secured by a higher-risk mortgage does
not meet the requirements of this
section unless it is performed by a
certified or licensed appraiser who
conducts a physical property visit of the
interior of the mortgaged property.’’ 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(1). The ‘‘second
appraisal’’ required under TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A) is ‘‘an appraisal of
property to be secured by a higher-risk
mortgage’’ under TILA section
129H(b)(1). 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(1),
(b)(2)(A). Therefore, to meet the
requirements of TILA section 129H, the
additional appraisal would be required
to be ‘‘performed by a certified or
licensed appraiser who conducts a
physical visit of the interior of the
property that will secure the
transaction.’’ TILA section 129H(b)(1),
15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(1).
In addition, under TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A), the additional appraisal
must analyze several elements,
including ‘‘any improvements made to
the property between the date of the
previous sale and the current sale.’’ 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A). The Agencies
believe that the purposes of the statute
would be best implemented by requiring
the second appraiser to perform a
physical interior property visit to
analyze any improvements made to the
property. Without an on-site visit, the
second appraiser would have difficulty
confirming that any improvements

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identified by the seller or the first
appraiser were made.
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(iii), the Agencies
are adopting the proposed requirement
that, if the conditions requiring an
additional appraisal are present (see
new § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)), the creditor
must obtain an additional appraisal that
meets the requirements of the first
appraisal, as provided in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(i). In response to some
commenters who expressed confusion
about whether the creditor could rely on
the safe harbor under § 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)
in satisfying the general appraisal
requirements under § 1026.35(c)(3)(i) for
the additional appraisal, the Agencies
are adopting a new comment. New
comment 35(c)(4)(iii)–1 clarifies that
when a creditor is required to obtain an
additional appraisal under
§ 1026(c)(4)(i), the creditor must comply
with the requirements of both
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(i) and § 1026.35(c)(4)(ii)–
(v) for that appraisal. If the creditor
meets the safe harbor criteria in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii) for the additional
appraisal, the creditor complies with the
requirements of § 1026.35(c)(3)(i) for
that appraisal.
35(c)(4)(iv) Required Analysis in the
Additional Appraisal
The proposed rule required that the
additional appraisal include an analysis
of the difference between the price at
which the seller acquired the property
and the price the consumer is obligated
to pay to acquire the property, as
specified in the consumer’s acquisition
agreement. The proposal specified that
the changes in market conditions and
improvements made to the property
must be analyzed between the date of
the seller’s acquisition of the property
and the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property.
These proposed requirements are
consistent with the statute, which
requires that the additional appraisal
‘‘include an analysis of the difference in
sale prices, changes in market
conditions, and any improvements
made to the property between the date
of the previous sale and the current
sale.’’ TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A), 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A).
A proposed comment clarified that
guidance on identifying the date the
seller acquired the property could be
found in the proposed comment now
adopted as comment 35(c)(4)(i)(A)–3.
This comment further stated that
guidance on identifying the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property could be found in the proposed
comment adopted as comment
35(c)(4)(i)(A)–2. The comment also
stated that guidance on identifying the

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price at which the seller acquired the
property could be found in the proposed
comment adopted as comment
35(c)(4)(i)(B)–1 and that guidance on
identifying the price the consumer is
obligated to pay to acquire the property
could be found in the proposed
comment adopted as comment
35(c)(4)(i)(B)–2.
The Agencies requested comment on
these proposed requirements for the
additional appraisal, including the
appropriateness of listing the
requirement to analyze the difference in
sales prices separately from the other
two analytical requirements.
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(iii) and comment
35(c)(4)(iii)–1, the final rule adopts the
proposed regulation text and comment
with only one non-substantive change:
for clarification about the subject of this
subsection of the rule, the title of the
subsection has been changed from
‘‘Requirements for the additional
appraisal’’ to ‘‘Required analysis in the
additional appraisal.’’

substantive change, as discussed above.
Regarding the comment that the
additional appraisal should not include
an analysis of the property price
increase between the seller’s price and
the consumer’s price, but that market
value as reflected in the first appraisal
should be determinative, the Agencies
point out that the analysis in the
additional appraisal required under new
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iii) is mandated by
statute. Moreover, the Agencies believe
that the intent of these requirements is
to ensure that creditor, in considering
the value of the collateral in connection
with its lending decision, is presented
with information focused specifically on
factors that reasonably increase
collateral value in a relatively short
period, such as market changes and
property improvements. These statutory
requirements are designed to serve as a
backstop for consumers against fraud in
flipped transactions and thus are
implemented largely unchanged in the
final rule.

Public Comments on the Proposal
Two commenters addressed this
issue. Of these, one commenter fully
supported the proposed requirements
for the additional appraisal, noting they
are consistent with USPAP. The other
commenter, however, suggested that the
additional appraisal should not be
required to include an analysis of the
sale price paid by the seller and the
acquisition price as set forth in the
borrower’s purchase agreement and
improvements made to the property by
the seller. The commenter argued that
value should be based solely on the
current market value of the property at
the time of the appraisal and sale, of
which the first appraisal should be
determinative.
The Agencies also requested comment
on the appropriateness of using, as
prices that the additional appraisal must
analyze, the terms ‘‘price at which seller
acquired property’’ and ‘‘price
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire
property, as specified in consumer’s
agreement to acquire property from
seller.’’ Further, the Agencies asked for
comment on the appropriateness of
using, as the dates the additional
appraisal must analyze in considering
changes in market conditions and
improvements to property, the terms
‘‘date seller acquired property’’ and
‘‘date of consumer’s agreement to
acquire property.’’ No comments were
received on this issue.

35(c)(4)(v) No Charge for the Additional
Appraisal
Under the proposed rule, if a creditor
must obtain a second appraisal, it may
charge the consumer for only one of the
appraisals. The Agencies proposed a
comment clarifying that this rule means
that the creditor would be prohibited
from imposing a fee specifically for that
appraisal or by marking up the interest
rate or any other fees payable by the
consumer in connection with the
higher-risk mortgage loan. The proposal
was designed to implement TILA
section 129H(b)(2)(B), which provides
that ‘‘[t]he cost of the second appraisal
required under subparagraph (A) may
not be charged to the applicant.’’ 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(B).
The Agencies requested comment on
this proposed approach, and whether
there might be particular ways that the
creditor could identify the appraisal for
which the consumer may not be charged
in cases where, for example, the
appraisals are ordered simultaneously.
The proposed rule and clarifying
comment are adopted without change in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(v) and comment
35(c)(4)(v)–1.

Discussion
After consideration of public
comments, the Agencies believe that the
proposal is appropriate to adopt without

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Public Comments on the Proposal
Most commenters were strongly
opposed to requiring the additional
appraisal to be obtained at the creditor’s
expense. While a number of
commenters acknowledged that the
requirement is statutorily mandated
under Dodd-Frank they were
nevertheless critical of it, cautioning
that the requirement would ultimately
limit the availability of credit to

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consumers. Many commenters indicated
that the cost of an additional appraisal
would make the loan too costly or
unprofitable, leading creditors to cease
offering higher-risk mortgage loans to
riskier borrowers. Several commenters
argued it is unfair for creditors to bear
the cost responsibility of a second
appraisal, where the applicant has no
incentive to go forward with the loan
and there is no guarantee that the loan
will be consummated. Commenters
urged the Agencies to exercise their
exemption authority to permit creditors
to charge consumers a reasonable fee for
the additional appraisal. Alternatively,
one comment letter recommended that
creditors be prohibited from charging a
direct cost for the additional appraisal
but not an indirect cost.
Discussion
As noted, TILA section 129H(b)(2)(B)
provides that ‘‘[t]he cost of the second
appraisal required under subparagraph
(A) may not be charged to the
applicant.’’ 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(B).
Consistent with the statute and the
proposal, § 1026.35(c)(4)(v) provides
that ‘‘[i]f the creditor must obtain two
appraisals under paragraph (c)(4)(i) of
this section, the creditor may charge the
consumer for only one of the
appraisals.’’ As clarified in comment
35(c)(4)(v)–1, adopted without change
from the proposal, the creditor would be
prohibited from imposing a fee
specifically for that appraisal or by
marking up the interest rate or any other
fees payable by the consumer in
connection with the higher-risk
mortgage loan (now HPML).
The proposed comment adopted in
the final rule also explains that the
creditor would be prohibited from
charging the consumer for the
‘‘performance of one of the two
appraisals required under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i).’’ This comment is
intended to clarify that the prohibition
on charging the consumer under
§ 1026.35(b)(4)(v) applies to the cost of
providing the consumer with a copy of
the appraisal, not to charges for the cost
of performing the appraisal. As
implemented by new § 1026.35(c)(6)(iv),
TILA section 129H(c) prohibits the
creditor from charging the consumer for
one copy of each appraisal conducted
pursuant to the higher-risk mortgage
rule. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(c); see also
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(iv), below. As in the
proposal, the final rule does not use the
statutory term ‘‘second’’ appraisal, but
instead refers to the ‘‘additional’’
appraisal because, in practice, a creditor
ordering two appraisals at the same time
may not know which of the two

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appraisals would be the ‘‘second’’
appraisal. The Agencies understand that
the additional appraisal could be
separately identified because it must
contain an analysis of elements in
proposed § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv). The
Agencies also understand that
appraisers may perform such an
analysis as a matter of routine, and that
it may be difficult to distinguish the two
appraisals on that basis.71
In addition, the final rule also tracks
the proposal in prohibiting the creditor
from charging ‘‘the consumer,’’ rather
than, as in the statute, the ‘‘applicant.’’
The Agencies believe that use of the
broader term ‘‘consumer’’ is necessary
to clarify that the creditor may not
charge the consumer for the cost of the
additional appraisal after consummation
of the loan.
Regarding commenters’ requests that
creditors be permitted to charge the
consumer for the additional appraisal,
the Agencies point out that they do not
jointly have authority to provide for
adjustments and exceptions to TILA
under TILA section 105(a), which
belongs to the Bureau alone. 15 U.S.C.
1604(a). The prohibition on charging the
consumer for the additional appraisal is
mandated by statute. The Agencies have
implemented this statutory prohibition
with certain clarifications appropriate to
carry out the statutory mandate
consistently with their general authority
to interpret the statute—specifically
clarifying in commentary that the
creditor is prohibited from imposing a
fee specifically for that appraisal or by
marking up the interest rate or any other
fees payable by the consumer in
connection with the higher-risk
mortgage loan. See § 1026.35(c)(4)(v)
and comment 35(c)(4)(v)–1.
The Agencies recognize that neither
the statute’s plain language nor the final
rule precludes a creditor from spreading
costs of additional appraisals over a
large number of loans and products. The
Agencies believe, however, that
Congress clearly intended to ensure that
the consumer offered an HPML, who
may have limited credit options, not be
exclusively affected by having to bear
this cost in full. The Agencies further
71 See, e.g., USPAP Standards Rule 1–5(b)
(requiring an appraiser to ‘‘analyze all sales of the
subject property that occurred within the three
years prior to the effective date of the appraisal’’);
USPAP Standards Rule 1–4(a) (stating that ‘‘an
appraiser must analyze such comparable sales data
as are available to indicate a value conclusion’’) and
USPAP Standards Rule 1–4(f) (stating that ‘‘when
analyzing anticipated public or private
improvements * * * an * * * appraiser must
analyze the effect on value, if any, of such
anticipated improvements to the extent they are
reflected in market actions.’’

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believe that the final rule is consistent
with this statutory purpose.
35(c)(4)(vi) Creditor’s Determination of
Prior Sale Date and Price
35(c)(4)(vi)(A) Reasonable Diligence
The Agencies proposed to require that
the creditor have exercised reasonable
diligence to support any determination
that an additional appraisal under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i) is not required. (For a
discussion of the factors triggering the
requirement, see the section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B),
above.) Absent an exemption (see
§ 1026.35(c)(2) and (c)(4)(vii)), an
additional appraisal would always be
required for an HPML where the
creditor elected not to conduct
reasonable diligence, could not find the
relevant sales price and sales date
information, or where the information
found led to conflicting conclusions
about whether an additional appraisal
were required. See section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(B), below.
To help creditors meet the proposed
reasonable diligence standard, the
Agencies proposed that creditors be able
to rely on written source documents that
are generally available in the normal
course of business. Accordingly, a
proposed comment clarified that a
creditor has acted with reasonable
diligence to determine when the seller
acquired the property and whether the
price at which the seller acquired the
property is lower than the price
reflected in the consumer’s acquisition
agreement if, for example, the creditor
bases its determination on information
contained in written source documents,
as discussed below.
The proposed comment provided a
list of written source documents, not
intended to be exhaustive, that the
creditor could use to perform reasonable
diligence as follows: A copy of the
recorded deed from the seller; a copy of
a property tax bill; a copy of any
owner’s title insurance policy obtained
by the seller; a copy of the RESPA
settlement statement from the seller’s
acquisition (i.e., the HUD–1 or any
successor form 72); a property sales
history report or title report from a
third-party reporting service; sales price
data recorded in multiple listing
services; tax assessment records or
transfer tax records obtained from local
governments; a written appraisal,
including a signed appraiser’s
72 As explained in a footnote in the proposed
comment, the Bureau’s 2012 TILA–RESPA Proposal
contains a proposed successor form to the RESPA
settlement statement. See § 1026.38 (Closing
Disclosure Form) of the Bureau’s 2012 TILA–
RESPA Proposal, 77 FR 51116 (Aug. 23, 2012).

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certification stating that the appraisal
was performed in conformity with
USPAP, that shows any prior
transactions for the subject property; a
copy of a title commitment report; or a
property abstract.
The proposed comment contained a
footnote explaining that a ‘‘title
commitment report’’ is a document from
a title insurance company describing the
property interest and status of its title,
parties with interests in the title and the
nature of their claims, issues with the
title that must be resolved prior to
closing of the transaction between the
parties to the transfer, amount and
disposition of the premiums, and
endorsements on the title policy. The
footnote also explained that the
document is issued by the title
insurance company prior to the
company’s issuance of an actual title
insurance policy to the property’s
transferee and/or creditor financing the
transaction. In different jurisdictions,
this instrument may be referred to by
different terms, such as a title
commitment, title binder, title opinion,
or title report.
An additional proposed comment
explained that reliance on oral
statements of interested parties, such as
the consumer, seller, or mortgage
broker, do not constitute reasonable
diligence. The Agencies explained in
the proposal that they do not believe
that creditors should be permitted to
rely on oral statements offered by
parties to the transaction because they
may be engaged in the type of fraud the
statutory provision was designed to
prevent.
In new § 1026.35(c)(4)(vi) and
Appendix O, the Agencies are adopting
the reasonable diligence standard and
proposed comments discussed above
without material change. Certain
technical changes to the regulation text
and corresponding comments have been
made for clarity, without substantive
change intended. The Agencies are also
adding a new comment providing
guidance on written source documents
that show only an estimated or assumed
value for the seller’s acquisition price.
Specifically, this new comment clarifies
that, if a written source document
describes the seller’s acquisition price
in a manner that indicates that the price
described is an estimated or assumed
amount and not the actual price, the
creditor should look at an alternative
document to satisfy the reasonable
diligence standard in determining the
price at which the seller acquired the
property. See comment (c)(4)(vi)(A)–1.
The reasons for the final rule and
revisions to the proposal are discussed
in more detail below.

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Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies requested comment on
a number of aspects of the reasonable
diligence standard and accompanying
comments. Specifically, comment was
requested on whether the list of written
source documents now adopted in
comment 35(c)(4)(vi)–1 would provide
reliable information about a property’s
sales history and could be relied on in
making the additional appraisal
determination, provided they indicate
the seller’s acquisition date or the
seller’s acquisition price.
The Agencies also requested comment
on whether a creditor should be
permitted to rely on a signed USPAPcompliant written appraisal prepared
for the transaction to determine the
seller’s acquisition date and price, and
whether a creditor could take any
specific measures to ensure that the
appraiser is reporting prior sales
accurately. The Agencies indicated
particular interest in commenters’ view
on whether, for creditors that are
required to select an independent
appraiser, such as creditors subject to
the Federal financial institutions
regulatory agencies’ FIRREA title XI
rules, the creditor’s selection of an
independent appraiser is sufficient to
address the concern that the appraiser
may be colluding with a seller in
perpetrating a fraudulent flipping
scheme.
Noting that public documents listed
might not include the requisite
information and that there might be
risks inherent in allowing reliance on
seller-provided documents, the
Agencies also asked whether non-public
information sources are likely to be
more easily available or more accurate
than public ones.
Finally, the Agencies requested
comment on the proposed clarification
that reliance on oral statements alone
would not be sufficient to satisfy the
reasonable diligence standard,
specifically on whether circumstances
exist in which oral statements offered by
parties to the transaction could be
considered reliable if documented
appropriately, and how such statements
should be documented to ensure greater
reliability.
General comments on the list of
source documents. Four commenters
responded to general questions about
whether the list of source documents
was appropriate. Several of these
commenters affirmed the Agencies’
understanding that some jurisdictions
have a lengthy delay between the time
a purchase and sale transaction is closed
and the recording of the deed. In those
cases, these commenters averred, that

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delay would preclude using the deed as
a source document since it would not be
available to the creditor for its due
diligence.
One commenter suggested that the
seller be required to provide the source
documents rather than the creditor
having to obtain them from the public
records, although recognizing the
possibility that the seller may
intentionally alter the documents to his
needs. Appraiser trade associations
concurred with the proposal’s ‘‘flexible
approach’’ to due diligence sources in
allowing use of seller-provided
documents. This commenter believed
that this approach would mitigate the
possibility that a lack of access to or
availability of source documents would
result in a ‘‘chilling effect’’ on mortgage
lending. Another commenter noted that
the borrower’s creditor would have
difficulty obtaining copies of documents
from the seller. This commenter
recommended that the rule provide that,
where none of the source documents
provides the required information, the
creditor may provide a certified or
attested document signed by the parties
as sufficient evidence of ‘‘reasonable
diligence.’’
Use of the first appraisal in the
transaction. All three comments relating
to the question of whether the final rule
should allow creditors to use and rely
on the entire contents of USPAPcompliant appraisals prepared by
certified and licensed appraisers
supported allowing this. Nevertheless,
commenters noted that oversight of
appraisal services by users and
regulators would be necessary, as would
vigorous enforcement if appraisers
violate the requirements. One
commenter recommended that creditors
use data from multiple listing services
captured by the appraisal to obtain prior
sales price information. That commenter
also requested clarification in the rule
that where multiple listing documents
have different sales price data, that the
creditor is deemed to have complied
with the rule if it chooses to use any
one.
Additional comments from appraiser
trade associations agreed with allowing
creditors to rely on appraisal
information relating to sellers’
acquisition dates but only so far as that
information is available to the appraiser
in the normal course of business, which
is all that is required of an appraiser
under USPAP. These commenters urged
the Agencies to be careful not to impose
requirements on appraisers relating to
information, data, and analysis that are
not required of appraisers in a typical
USPAP-compliant report.

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Use of seller-provided and other nonpublic documents. Several commenters
recognized that sometimes creditors
have no other reliable sources than
seller-provided or other non-public
documents. Appraiser association
commenters proposed that the Agencies
consider a ‘‘good-faith’’ exception that
would allow creditors to rely on nontraditional sources of information when
more reliable ones are not available.
These commenters reasoned that this
exception would balance the underlying
public policy of supporting ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage loans’’ (now HPMLs) when no
other loan product is available or
feasible, against the risk that creditors
will rely on bad information.
Reliability of oral statements. No
commenters opposed the proposed
comment, adopted as comment
35(c)(4)(vi)–2, clarifying that reliance on
oral statements alone would not satisfy
the reasonable diligence standard.
Appraiser trade associations generally
shared the Agencies’ concern about the
potential risk of relying on information
presented by interested parties.
Discussion
As noted, the Agencies are adopting
the proposed reasonable diligence
standard and associated comments
without material change. The Agencies
believe that this standard is important to
facilitate compliance because it may be
difficult in some cases for a creditor to
know with absolute certainty that the
criteria triggering the additional
appraisal requirement have been met.
See § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B).
Similarly, a creditor may have difficulty
knowing whether it relied on the ‘‘best
information’’ available in making the
determination, which could require that
creditors perform an exhaustive review
of every document that might contain
information about a property’s sales
history and unduly limit the availability
of credit to higher-risk mortgage
consumers.
Regarding the proposed list of source
documents on which creditors may
appropriately rely, now adopted in
Appendix O, the Agencies note that the
first four listed items would be
voluntarily provided directly or
indirectly by the seller, rather than
collected from publicly available
sources. As did commenters, the
Agencies recognize that permitting the
use of these documents presents the risk
that the creditor would be presented
with altered copies. Balanced against
this risk, however, is the concern that
no information sources are publicly
available in non-disclosure jurisdictions
and jurisdictions with significant lag
times before public land records are

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updated to reflect new transactions.73
The Agencies are concerned that, unless
the creditor can rely on other sources,
such as sources provided by the seller,
the higher-risk mortgage transaction
may not proceed at all, or could proceed
only with an additional appraisal
containing a limited form of the analysis
that would be required by TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A). 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A).
The proposed footnote explaining the
term ‘‘title commitment report’’ (Item 9),
described above, is moved in the final
rule to new comment 1 of Appendix O.
As noted, new comment
35(c)(4)(vi)(A)–1 clarifies that, if a
written source document describes the
seller’s acquisition price in a manner
that indicates that the price described is
an estimated or assumed amount and
not the actual price, the creditor should
look at an alternative document to
satisfy the reasonable diligence standard
in determining the price at which the
seller acquired the property.
Regarding a commenter’s
recommendation that a creditor be
permitted to provide a certified or
attested document signed by the parties
as sufficient evidence of ‘‘reasonable
diligence,’’ the Agencies believe that
this allowance could easily be abused
and would not constitute sufficient
diligence. Instead, as discussed in the
section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(B) below, the
Agencies believe that the consumer
protection purposes of the statute are
better served by simply requiring two
appraisals where reliable written
documentation of the sales price and
date are unavailable. Similarly,
regarding questions about multiple
listing documents that have different
sales price data, the Agencies believe
that in cases of conflicting listing price
information, the consumer protection
purposes of the statute are best served
if the creditor obtains better information
from other sources through the exercise
of reasonable diligence and, failing that,
obtains a second appraisal. See sectionby-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(B), below.
On the recommendation that the
Agencies consider a ‘‘good-faith’’
73 During informal outreach conducted by the
Agencies for the proposal, representatives of large,
small, and regional lenders expressed concern that
in some cases, a creditor may be unable to
determine the seller’s date and price due to
information gaps in the public record. The Agencies
also understand that a creditor may not be able to
determine prior transaction data because of delays
in the recording of public records. The Agencies
also understand that certain ‘‘non-disclosure’’
jurisdictions do not make the price at which a seller
acquired a property available in the public records.
These concerned were affirmed by public
comments on the proposal.

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exception that would allow creditors to
rely on non-traditional sources of
information, the Agencies believe that
the ‘‘reasonable diligence’’ standard
alone is more appropriate and addresses
the commenters’ concerns. Under this
standard, a broad array of widely used
public and non-public documents, set
forth in the non-exhaustive list under
comment 35(c)(4)(vi)–1, could be relied
on by creditors. In short, the Agencies
expect that, with the parameters
established in this comment, the rule
will appropriately balance the need to
assure access to HPML credit against the
risk that creditors will rely on bad
information.
Regarding reliance on another
USPAP-compliant appraisal to satisfy
the reasonable diligence standard, the
Agencies are revising the proposed list
to clarify that a creditor would not be
permitted to rely on an appraisal other
than the one prepared for the creditor
for the subject HPML. Specifically, the
Agencies are revising Item 8, which, in
the proposal read as follows: ‘‘A written
appraisal signed by an appraiser who
certifies that the appraisal has been
performed in conformity with USPAP
that shows any prior transactions for the
subject property.’’ In the final rule, this
comment has been revised to read as
follows: ‘‘A written appraisal performed
in compliance with § 1026.35(c)(3)(i) for
the same transaction that shows any
prior transactions for the subject
property.’’ The Agencies are concerned
that, as proposed, this item in the
written source document list could lead
creditors to believe that appraisals
performed for the seller’s acquisition or
other appraisals that might otherwise be
considered ‘‘stale’’ could be relied on.
As revised, the list item allows reliance
specifically on an appraisal performed
in compliance with the HPML appraisal
requirements for the same HPML
transaction. That means that the
appraisal would have to have been
performed by a state-certified or
-licensed appraiser in conformity with
USPAP and FIRREA.
On a related issue, the Agencies
emphasize that allowing the creditor to
rely on the first appraisal for prior sales
information does not require more of
appraisers than does USPAP. Again, the
first appraisal must be performed in
compliance with USPAP and FIRREA.
The Agencies understand that USPAP
Standards Rule 1–5 requires appraisers
to ‘‘analyze all sales of the subject
property that occurred within the three
(3) years prior to the effective date of the
appraisal’’ if that information is
available to the appraiser ‘‘in the normal

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course of business.’’ 74 If the appraiser
did not include that information
because it was not available to the
appraiser under the USPAP standard,
the creditor must turn to another
document under the reasonable
diligence standard.
Overall, due to the many
requirements to which the first
appraisal is subject, including
independence requirements under TILA
(implemented by § 1026.42), and in the
absence of public comments to the
contrary, the Agencies expect that, in
cases where the appraiser has provided
a price, a creditor generally could rely
on the first appraisal prepared for the
HPML transaction to satisfy the
reasonable diligence standard under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(A). The exception
would be circumstances under which
other information obtained by the
creditor makes reliance on the price
unreasonable. See also section-bysection analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(ii),
above.
Comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(A)–2 clarifies
that reliance on oral statements of
interested parties, such as the consumer,
seller, or mortgage broker, does not
constitute reasonable diligence under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(A). This comment is
adopted from the proposal without
change.
Requirement for two appraisals when
sale information is unavailable or
conflicting. Under the proposal, a
creditor that cannot determine the
seller’s acquisition date, or a creditor
that can determine that the date is
within 180 days but cannot determine
the price, would have to obtain an
additional appraisal before originating a
‘‘higher-risk mortgage loan’’ (now
HPML). The proposal included a
comment with two examples of how
this rule would apply: one in which a
creditor is unable to obtain information
on the seller’s acquisition price or date
and the other in which a creditor
obtains conflicting information about
the seller’s acquisition price or date.
Comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(A)–3, discussed
further below, gives two examples of
how the rule applies. This comment was
moved from its placement in the
proposal with no substantive change to
the requirements of the reasonable
diligence standard intended.
Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies requested comment on
whether the enhanced protections for
consumers afforded by requiring an
additional appraisal whenever the
seller’s acquisition date or price cannot
74 Appraisal

Standards Bd., Appraisal Fdn.,
Standards Rule 1–5, USPAP (2012–2013 ed.).

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be determined merit the potential
restraint on the availability of higherrisk mortgage loans. The Agencies also
requested comment on whether
concerns about these potential restraints
on credit availability make it
particularly important to include the
first four source documents listed in the
proposed commentary, even though
they would be seller-provided, and
whether these concerns warrant further
expanding the sources of information
creditors may rely on to satisfy the
reasonable diligence standard under the
proposed rule.
The Agencies did not receive
comments directly responsive to these
questions.
Discussion
In general, the Agencies believe that,
based on recent data provided by FHFA
discussed in the proposal, most
property resales would not trigger the
proposal’s conditions requiring an
additional appraisal.75 However, the
Agencies understand that, in some
cases, a creditor performing typical
underwriting and documentation
procedures may be unable to ascertain
through information derived from
public records whether the conditions
in the additional appraisal requirement
have been triggered. For example, a
creditor may be unable to determine
information about the seller’s
acquisition because of lag times in
recording public records. The Agencies
also understand that some source
documents often report only estimated
amounts of consideration when
describing the consideration paid by the
current titleholder for the property.
Moreover, as noted, several ‘‘nondisclosure’’ jurisdictions do not make
the price at which a seller acquired a
property publicly available. In addition,
the creditor may obtain conflicting
information from written source
documents. In these cases, a creditor
may be unable to determine, based on
its reasonable diligence, whether the
criteria in § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and
(c)(4)(i)(B) have been met.
Comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(A)–3 provides
two examples of how the rule would
apply: one in which a creditor is unable
to obtain information on the seller’s
acquisition price or date and the other
in which a creditor obtains conflicting
information about the seller’s
acquisition price or date. In the first
example, comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(A)–3.i
assumes that a creditor orders and
reviews the results of a title search
75 Based on county recorder information from
select counties licensed to FHFA by DataQuick
Information Systems.

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showing the seller’s acquisition date
occurred between 91 and 180 days ago,
but the seller’s acquisition price was not
included. In this case, the creditor
would not be able to determine whether
the price the consumer is obligated to
pay under the consumer’s acquisition
agreement exceeded the seller’s
acquisition price by more than 20
percent. Before extending an HPML
subject to the appraisal requirements of
§ 1026.35(c), the creditor must either: (1)
Perform additional diligence to obtain
information showing the seller’s
acquisition price and determine
whether two written appraisals in
compliance with § 1026.35(c)(4) would
be required based on that information;
or (2) obtain two written appraisals in
compliance with § 1026.35(c)(4). This
comment also contains a cross-reference
to comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(B)–1, which
explains the modified requirements for
the analysis that must be included in
the additional appraisal. See
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iv); see also section-bysection analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(B).
In the second example, comment
35(c)(4)(vi)(A)–3.ii assumes that a
creditor reviews the results of a title
search indicating that the last recorded
purchase was more than 180 days before
the consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property. This comment also assumes
that the creditor subsequently receives a
written appraisal indicating that the
seller acquired the property fewer than
180 days before the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property. In
this case, unless one of these sources is
clearly wrong on its face, the creditor
would not be able to determine whether
the seller acquired the property within
180 days of the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property from
the seller, pursuant to
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A). Before extending
an HPML subject to the appraisal
requirements of § 1026.35(c), the
creditor must either: (1) Perform
additional diligence to obtain
information confirming the seller’s
acquisition date (and price, if within
180 days) and determine whether two
written appraisals in compliance with
§ 1026.35(c)(4) would be required based
on that information; or (2) obtain two
written appraisals in compliance with
§ 1026.35(c)(4). This comment also
contains a cross-reference to comment
35(c)(4)(vi)(B)–1, which explains the
modified requirements for the analysis
that must be included in the additional
appraisal. See § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv); see
also section-by-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(B).
As under the proposal, in the final
rule, when information about a property
is not available from written source

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documents, creditors extending HPMLs
will routinely incur increased costs
associated with obtaining the additional
appraisal. One risk of this rule is that,
because TILA section 129H(b)(2)(B)
prohibits creditors from charging their
customers for the additional appraisal,
creditors will simply refrain from
engaging in any HPML where sales
history data cannot be obtained. 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(B). See also
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(v) (requiring that the
creditor cannot charge the consumer for
the additional appraisal).
As expressed in the proposal,
however, the Agencies believe that
requiring an additional appraisal where
creditors are unable to obtain the seller’s
acquisition price and date is necessary
to prevent circumvention of the statute.
In particular, the Agencies are
concerned that not requiring an
additional appraisal in cases of limited
information may inadequately address
the problem of fraudulent property
flipping to borrowers of HPMLs in
‘‘non-disclosure’’ jurisdictions, where
prior sales data is routinely unavailable
through public sources. Similarly, the
Agencies are concerned that sellers that
acquire and sell properties within a
short timeframe could take advantage of
delays in the public recording of
property sales to engage in fraudulent
flipping transactions. The Agencies
believe that, where the seller’s
acquisition date in particular is not in
the public record due to recording
delays, it is more reasonable to assume
that the seller’s transaction was
sufficiently recent to be covered by the
rule than not.
35(c)(4)(vi)(B) Inability To Determine
Prior Sale Date or Price—Modified
Requirements for Additional Appraisal
Section 35(c)(4)(vi)(B) provides that if,
after exercising reasonable diligence, a
creditor cannot determine whether the
conditions in § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and
(B) are present and therefore must
obtain two written appraisals under
§ 1026.35(c)(4), the additional appraisal
must include an analysis of the factors
in § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv) (difference in sales
price, changes in market conditions, and
property improvements) only to the
extent that the information necessary for
the appraiser to perform the analysis
can be determined.
For the reasons discussed above, the
Agencies believe that an HPML creditor
should be required to obtain an
additional appraisal if the creditor
cannot determine the seller’s acquisition
date, or if it can determine the date is
within 180 days but cannot determine
the price, based on written source
documents. However, in keeping with

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the proposal, § 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(B) also
provides that the additional appraisal in
this situation would not have to contain
the full analysis required for additional
appraisals of flipping transactions under
TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A),
implemented in the final rule as
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(A)–(C). 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A).
Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies requested comment on
whether an appraiser would be unable
to analyze the difference in the price the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire
the property and the price at which the
seller acquired the property without
knowing when the seller acquired the
property. If such an analysis is not
possible without information about
when the seller acquired the property,
the Agencies requested comment on
whether the rule should assume the
seller acquired the property 180 days
prior to the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property. The
Agencies also requested comment
generally on the proposed approach to
situations in which the creditor cannot
obtain the necessary information and
whether the rule should address
information gaps about the flipping
transaction in other ways.
The Agencies did not receive
comments directly responsive to these
questions.
Discussion
Under the proposal, now adopted in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(B), the additional
appraisal must include an analysis of
the elements that would be required in
proposed § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(A)–(C) only
to the extent that the creditor knows the
seller’s purchase price and acquisition
date. As discussed in the section-bysection analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv),
TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A) requires that
the additional appraisal analyze the
difference in sales prices, changes in
market conditions, and improvements to
the property between the date of the
previous sale and the current sale. 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A). An appraiser
could not perform this analysis if efforts
to obtain the seller’s acquisition date
and price were not successful.
Consistent with the proposal,
comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(B)–1 confirms
that, in general, the additional appraisal
required under § 1026.35(c)(4)(i) should
include an analysis of the factors listed
in § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(A)–(C). However,
the comment also confirms that if,
following reasonable diligence, a
creditor cannot determine whether the
conditions in § 1026.35(c)(4)(i) are
present due to a lack of information or
conflicting information, the required

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additional appraisal must include the
analyses required under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(A)–(C) only to the
extent that the information necessary to
perform the analysis is known. As an
example, comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(B)–1
assumes that a creditor is able,
following reasonable diligence, to
determine that the date on which the
seller acquired the property occurred
between 91 and 180 days prior to the
date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property, but cannot
determine the sale price. In this case,
the creditor is required to obtain an
additional written appraisal that
includes an analysis under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(B) and (c)(4)(iv)(C) of
the changes in market conditions and
any improvements made to the property
between the date the seller acquired the
property and the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property.
However, the creditor is not required to
obtain an additional written appraisal
that includes analysis under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(A) of the difference
between the price at which the seller
acquired the property and the price that
the consumer is obligated to pay to
acquire the property.
The Agencies note that the proposed
rule does not provide commentary with
guidance on the modified requirements
for the additional analysis in a situation
in which the creditor is unable to
determine the date the seller acquired
the property but is able to determine the
price at which the seller acquired the
property. As noted, the Agencies
requested but did not receive public
comments on this aspect of the
proposal. The Agencies are unaware of
situations in which the seller’s
acquisition price, but not the acquisition
date, would be known. In the absence of
public comment on the issue, the
Agencies are not adopting additional
guidance on this theoretical situation.
The Agencies believe that allowing
creditors to comply with a modified
form of the full analysis where a
creditor cannot determine information
about a property based on its reasonable
diligence is a reasonable interpretation
of the statute. If a creditor could not
determine when or for how much the
prior sale occurred, it would be
impossible for a creditor to obtain an
appraisal that complies with the full
analysis requirement of TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A) concerning the change in
price, market conditions, and
improvements to the property. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A).
The Agencies’ approach to situations
in which the creditor cannot obtain the
necessary information, either due to a
lack of information or conflicting

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information, can be summed up as
follows:
• An additional appraisal is required.
• However, to account for missing or
conflicting information, only a modified
version of the full additional analysis
required under TILA section
129H(b)(2)(A), as implemented by
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iv) is required. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(2)(A).
Alternative approaches not chosen by
the Agencies include prohibiting
creditors from extending the HPML
altogether under these circumstances.
As stated in the proposal, however, the
Agencies believe that a flat prohibition
would unduly limit the availability of
higher-risk mortgage loans to
consumers.

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35(c)(4)(vii) Exemptions From the
Additional Appraisal Requirement
TILA section 129H(b)(4)(B) permits
the Agencies to exempt jointly a class of
loans from the additional appraisal
requirement if the Agencies determine
the exemption ‘‘is in the public interest
and promotes the safety and soundness
of creditors.’’ 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(4)(B).
The Agencies did not expressly propose
any exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement, but invited
comment on whether exempting any
classes of higher-risk mortgage loans
from the additional appraisal
requirement (beyond the exemptions in
§ 1026.35(c)(2)) would be in the public
interest and promote the safety and
soundness of creditors. The Agencies
offered a number of examples of
potential exemptions, such as loans
made in rural areas, and transactions
that are currently exempt from the
restrictions on FHA insurance
applicable to property resales in the
FHA Anti-Flipping Rule, including,
among others, sales by government
agencies of certain properties, sales of
properties acquired by inheritance, and
sales by State- and federally-chartered
financial institutions.76 See, e.g., 24 CFR
76 The FHA exceptions to the restrictions on FHA
insurance are as follows:
(1) Sales by HUD of Real Estate-Owned (REO)
properties under 24 CFR part 291 and of single
family assets in revitalization areas pursuant to
section 204 of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C.
1710);
(2) Sales by another agency of the United States
Government of REO single family properties
pursuant to programs operated by these agencies;
(3) Sales of properties by nonprofit organizations
approved to purchase HUD REO single family
properties at a discount with resale restrictions;
(4) Sales of properties that were acquired by the
sellers by inheritance;
(5) Sales of properties purchased by an employer
or relocation agency in connection with the
relocation of an employee;
(6) Sales of properties by state- and federallychartered financial institutions and governmentsponsored enterprises (GSEs);

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203.37a(c). Regarding a possible
exemption for higher-risk mortgage
loans (now HPMLs) made in ‘‘rural’’
areas from the additional appraisal
requirement, the Agencies requested
comment on whether the rule should
use the same definition of ‘‘rural’’ that
was provided in the 2011 ATR
Proposal.77 This same definition of
‘‘rural’’ was also proposed by the Board
regarding Dodd-Frank Act escrow
requirements (2011 Escrows
Proposal).78 This definition is reviewed
in more detail in the section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H),
below.
In the final rule, the Agencies are
adopting exemptions from the
additional appraisal requirement under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i) for extensions of credit
that finance the consumer’s acquisition
of a property:
(1) From a local, State or Federal
government agency
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(A));
(2) From a person that acquired the
property through foreclosure, deed-inlieu of foreclosure or other similar
judicial or non-judicial procedures as a
result of exercising the person’s rights as
a holder of a defaulted mortgage loan
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(B));
(3) From a non-profit entity as part of
a local, State or Federal government
program under which the non-profit
entity is permitted to acquire singlefamily properties for resale from a seller
who acquired title to the property
through the process of foreclosure,
deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, or other
similar judicial or non-judicial
procedure (§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(C));
(4) From a person who acquired title
to the property by inheritance or
pursuant to a court order of dissolution
of marriage, civil union, or domestic
partnership, or of partition of joint or
marital assets to which the seller was a
party (§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(D));
(5) From an employer or relocation
agency in connection with the
relocation of an employee
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(E));
(6) From a servicemember, as defined
in 50 U.S.C. Appx. 511(1), who received
deployment or permanent change of
station orders after the servicemember
(7) Sales of properties by local and state
government agencies; and
(8) Only upon announcement by HUD through
issuance of a notice, sales of properties located in
areas designated by the President as federal disaster
areas. The notice will specify how long the
exception will be in effect.
24 CFR 203.37a(c).
77 76 FR 27390, 28471 (May 11, 2011) (2011 ATR
Proposal).
78 76 FR 11598, 11612 (March 2, 2011) (2011
Escrows Proposal).

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acquired the property
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(G));
(7) Located in an area designated by
the President as a federal disaster area,
if and for as long as the Federal
financial institutions regulatory
agencies, as defined in 12 U.S.C.
3350(6), waive the requirements in title
XI of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989,
as amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and
any implementing regulations in that
area (§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(F)); and
(8) Located in a ‘‘rural’’ county, as
defined in the Bureau’s 2013 Escrows
Final Rule, § 1026.35(b)(2)(iv)(A) (which
is the same definition used in the 2013
ATR Final Rule, § 1026.43(f)(2)(vi) and
comment 43(f)(2)(vi–1)
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H)).
Public Comments on the Proposal
The Agencies received over fifty
comments concerning the questions
asked by the Agencies about appropriate
exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement. Several
commenters opposed requiring two
appraisals under any circumstances.
However, the Agencies note that the
additional appraisal requirement is
mandated by statute. TILA section
129H(b)(2), 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2).
Commenters in general strongly
supported an exemption for loans made
in rural areas. The commenters stated
that there are limited numbers of
licensed and certified appraisers in rural
areas, which would make the additional
appraisal requirement (requiring
appraisals by two independent
appraisers) particularly burdensome in
these areas. In addition, commenters
argued that lenders in rural areas may
be forced to hire appraisers from far
outside the geographic area, which
would increase the time and cost
associated with the transaction. Several
commenters also stated that rural areas
have not historically been sources of
fraudulent real estate flipping activity.
A number of commenters noted that
property prices in rural areas tend to be
lower, so the cost of the second
appraisal is higher as a percentage of the
overall transaction. Two commenters,
national trade associations for
appraisers, opposed the exemption for
rural loans, suggesting that it is not
difficult to find two appraisers to value
rural properties.
As for how to define ‘‘rural,’’ one
commenter, a national trade association
for community banks, suggested that the
agencies use a definition of ‘‘rural’’ that
is consistent with the definition used in
rules addressing the use of escrow
accounts. See 2011 Escrows Proposal,
discussed below, revised and adopted in

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the 2013 Escrows Final Rule.79 Another
commenter, a financial holding
company, suggested that the final rule
exempt lenders located in areas where
the State appraiser licensing or
certification roster shows five or fewer
unaffiliated appraisers within a
reasonable distance, such as 50 miles or
less. A large bank further recommended
that the final rule exempt loans secured
by properties in low-density appraiser
markets, such as states with fewer than
500 appraisers or counties with fewer
than five appraisers.
A large number of commenters also
supported an exemption for transactions
that are currently exempted from the
restrictions on FHA insurance
applicable to property resales in the
FHA Anti-Flipping Rule. The
commenters argued that these categories
of transactions do not present the same
risk to consumers and therefore do not
require the additional anti-flipping
consumer protections.
Two commenters, national trade
associations for appraisers, objected to
adding any exemptions to the additional
appraisal requirement, and suggested
that there should be a strong
presumption that an additional
appraisal is necessary to protect
consumers and to promote the safety
and soundness of financial institutions.
A number of commenters suggested
other exemptions or endorsed
exemptions from the entire rule already
in the proposal. These are as follows.
• Three commenters (a national trade
association for the banking industry, a
State trade association for the banking
industry, and a bank holding company)
suggested an exemption from the second
appraisal requirement in cases when the
initial appraisal is performed by an
appraiser who was selected from the
creditor’s list of qualified appraisers.
The commenters stated that eliminating
the seller’s ability to influence the
selection of the appraiser in this fashion
would be sufficient to protect the
borrower from the risk of an artificiallyinflated appraisal, thereby addressing
the fraudulent ‘‘flipping’’ concern the
statute seeks to address.
• Two commenters (a nonprofit
organization and State credit union
association) suggested an exemption for
active duty military personnel who
receive permanent change of duty
station orders.
• A number of commenters
(including national trade associations
for the mortgage finance and retail
banking industry) suggested exemptions
79 See also 2011 ATR Proposal at 28471, revised
and adopted in the 2013 ATR Final Rule,
§ 1026.43(f)(2)(vi) and comment 43(f)(2)(vi–1).

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for certain non-purchase transactions,
such as gifts, transfers in connection
with trusts, transfers that do not
generate capital gains, and intra-family
transfers for estate planning purposes,
on grounds that these transactions are
not ‘‘profit seeking.’’ Several
commenters suggested that transfers in
connection with a divorce decree be
included in this category as an
exemption.
• Many commenters (including two
national trade associations for the
mortgage finance and retail banking
industry, a national trade association for
the banking industry, a national trade
association for community banks, a
national trade association for credit
unions, four regional associations for
credit unions, a large national bank, a
financial holding company, and a
community bank) endorsed exemptions
for construction and bridge loans, on
grounds that these are temporary loans
and that consumers are not exposed to
risk at the level comparable to other
residential loans that Congress targeted
in the statute. These commenters also
argued that the additional appraisal
requirement would be impractical for
construction loans, given the inability to
conduct interior inspections.
• Two commenters (a community
bank and a credit union) suggested an
exemption for non-purchase
acquisitions and transfers where the
consumer previously held a partial
interest in the property and cited to
Regulation Z (commentary on the
definition of residential mortgage
transaction) as support.
Discussion
In response to widespread support for
adopting exemptions consistent with
exemptions from the restrictions on
FHA financing in the FHA AntiFlipping Rule, the Agencies are
adopting several exemptions from the
additional appraisal requirement
generally consistent with exemptions in
the FHA Anti-Flipping Rule under 24
CFR 203.37a(c). These are extensions of
credit that finance the consumer’s
acquisition of a property:
• From a local, State or Federal
government agency
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(A); see also 24 CFR
203.37a(c)(1), (2) and (7)).
• From an entity that acquired the
property through foreclosure, deed-inlieu of foreclosure or other similar
judicial or non-judicial procedures as a
result of exercising the person’s rights as
a holder of a defaulted mortgage loan
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(B); see also 24 CFR
203.37a(c)(6)).
• From a non-profit entity as part of
a local, State or Federal government

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10403

program under which the non-profit
entity is permitted to acquire singlefamily properties for resale from a seller
who acquired the property through
foreclosure, deed-in-lieu of foreclosure,
or other similar judicial or non-judicial
procedure (§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(C); see
also 24 CFR 203.37a(c)(3)).
• From a seller who acquired the
property pursuant to a court order of
dissolution of marriage, civil union or
domestic partnership, or of partition of
joint or marital assets to which the seller
was a party (§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(D); see
also 24 CFR 203.37a(c)(4)).
• From an employer or relocation
agency in connection with the
relocation of an employee
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(E); see also 24 CFR
203.37a(c)(4)).
• Located in an area designated by
the President as a federal disaster area,
if and for as long as the Federal
financial institutions regulatory
agencies, as defined in 12 U.S.C.
3350(6), waive the requirements in title
XI of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989,
as amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and
any implementing regulations in that
area (§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(F); see also 12
CFR 203.37a(c)(4)).
In addition, the Agencies are adopting
an exemption for extensions of credit to
finance the consumer’s purchase of
property being sold by a servicemember,
as defined in 50 U.S.C. Appx. 511(1), if
the servicemember receives deployment
or permanent change of station orders
after the servicemember purchased the
property (§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(G)).
Finally, the Agencies are adopting an
exemption for HPMLs in rural areas
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H)). The exemption
would apply to HPMLs secured by
properties in counties considered
‘‘rural’’ under definitions promulgated
by the Bureau in the 2013 ATR Final
Rule and 2013 Escrows Final Rule—
specifically, properties located within
the following Urban Influence Codes
(UICs), established by the United States
Department of Agriculture’s Economic
Research Services (USDA–ERS): 4, 6, 7,
8, 9, 10, 11, or 12. These UICs generally
correspond with areas outside of
metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs)
and Micropolitan Statistical Areas,
defined by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). For reasons
discussed in more detail in the sectionby-section analysis of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H) and the DoddFrank Act Section 1022(b)(2) analysis in
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION below,
rural properties located in micropolitan
statistical areas that are not adjacent to
an MSA (UIC 8) are also included in the
exemption.

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Each of these exemptions is discussed
in turn below.

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35(c)(4)(vii)(A)
Acquisitions of Property From Local,
State or Federal Government Agencies
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(A), the
Agencies are adopting an exemption for
HPMLs financing consumer acquisitions
of property being sold by a local, State
or Federal government agency. This
exemption generally corresponds with
exemptions in the FHA Anti-Flipping
Rule for loans financing the purchase of
an ‘‘REO’’ (real estate owned) property
being sold by HUD or another U.S.
government agency (see 12 CFR
203.37a(c)(1) and (2)) and a broad
exemption for sales of properties by
local and State government agencies
(see 12 CFR 203.37a(c)(7)). The
Agencies do not believe that purchases
of properties being sold by local, State
or Federal government agencies present
the fraudulent flipping risks that the
special ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’ appraisal
rules in TILA section 129H were
intended to address. 15 U.S.C. 1639h.
Typically, these types of sales are in
connection with government programs
involving the sale of property obtained
through foreclosure or by deed-in-lieu of
foreclosure, which can promote
affordable housing and neighborhood
revitalization. Government agency sales
may also be related to foreclosures due
to tax liability or related reasons.
Without an exemption, most consumer
acquisitions involving these types of
sales would be subject to the additional
appraisal requirement because the
government agency typically would
have ‘‘acquired’’ the property (for
example, in a foreclosure or by deed-inlieu of foreclosure) for the outstanding
balance of the government’s lien (plus
costs), which is generally less than the
value of the property; thus, the price
paid to the government agency by the
consumer would typically be
substantially higher than the
government agency’s acquisition
‘‘price.’’ In addition, these sales might
occur relatively soon after the
government agency acquired the
property, particularly if the acquisition
resulted from a foreclosure or tax sale.
The Agencies believe that requiring
an HPML creditor to obtain two
appraisals to finance transactions
involving the purchase of property from
government agencies could interfere
with beneficial government programs.
The Agencies further do not believe that
this interference is warranted for these
transactions, which do not involve a
profit-motivated seller and thus do not
present the kinds of flipping concerns

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that the statute is intended to address.
The Agencies believe that an exemption
for HPMLs financing the sale of
property by a local, State, or Federal
government agency is in the public
interest because it allows beneficial
government programs to go forward as
intended. By reducing costs for creditors
that might offer HPMLs to finance these
transactions, the exemption helps
creditors to strengthen and diversify
their lending portfolios, thereby
promoting the safety and soundness of
creditors as well.
35(c)(4)(vii)(B)
Acquisitions of Property Obtained
Through Foreclosure and Related Means
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(B), the Agencies
are adopting an exemption for HPMLs
financing the purchase of a property
from a person that had acquired the
property through foreclosure, deed-inlieu of foreclosure, or other similar
judicial or non-judicial procedures as a
result of exercising the person’s rights as
a holder of a defaulted mortgage loan.
This exemption generally corresponds
with an exemption from the FHA AntiFlipping Rule for loans financing the
purchase of properties sold by Stateand Federally-chartered financial
institutions and GSEs (see 12 CFR
203.37a(c)(6)). The Agencies recognize
that this exemption might overlap with
the exemption in § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(A)
for sales by government agencies, which
might sell properties that the agencies
acquire in connection with liquidating a
mortgage. However, the Agencies
believe that a separate exemption for
sales by government agencies is
advisable because government agencies
might have other reasons for acquiring
a property that they then determined
was advisable to sell, such as property
acquired through exercise of the
government’s eminent domain powers.
The exemption covers HPMLs that
finance the acquisition of a home from
a ‘‘person’’ who has acquired title of the
property through foreclosure and related
means. ‘‘Person’’ is defined in
Regulation Z to mean ‘‘a natural person
or an organization, including a
corporation, partnership,
proprietorship, association, cooperative,
estate, trust, or government unit.’’
§ 1026.2(a)(22). Thus, consistent with
the FHA Anti-Flipping Rule
exemptions, the exemption in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(B) covers purchases
of properties being sold by State- and
Federally-chartered financial
institutions, as well as by GSEs such as
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the
Federal Home Loan Banks. In addition,
the exemption covers HPML loans

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financing property acquisitions from
non-bank mortgage companies, servicers
that administer loans held in the
portfolios of financial institutions or in
pools of mortgages that underlie private
and government or GSE asset-backed
securitizations, and, less commonly,
private individuals. The Agencies
believe that a more inclusive exemption
for foreclosures better reflects the way
that mortgage loans are held and
serviced in today’s market.
Several commenters pointed out that
the sale of REO properties to consumers
and potential investors contributes
significantly to revitalizing
neighborhoods and stabilizing
communities. They expressed concerns
that the additional appraisal
requirement might unduly interfere
with these sales, which could have a
number of negative effects. First,
holders of the mortgages might be forced
to hold properties after foreclosure
longer than is financially optimal,
increasing losses; some public
commenters indicated that waiting six
months so that the additional appraisal
requirement would not apply would be
far too long. Second, holders who want
or need to clear these properties off of
their books might be forced to accept
lower prices offered by investors, which
would also increase losses. When the
holder in this situation is a creditor
such as a bank or other financial
institution, increased losses can have a
negative effect on its safety and
soundness. Third, incentives for
investors to buy and rehabilitate
properties could be reduced, which
could be counterproductive to
community development and the
revitalization of the housing market.
Finally, more consumers might have to
forego opportunities for
homeownership.
For all of these reasons, the Agencies
believe that the exemption in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(B) is in the public
interest and promotes the safety and
soundness of creditors.
35(c)(4)(vii)(C)
Acquisitions of Property From Certain
Non-Profit Entities
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(C), the Agencies
are adopting an exemption for HPMLs
financing the purchase of a property
from a non-profit entity as part of a
local, State, or Federal government
program under which the non-profit
entity is permitted to acquire singlefamily properties for resale from a seller
who acquired the property through
foreclosure or similar means. Comment
35(c)(4)(vii)(C)–1 clarifies that, for
purposes of 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(C), a

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‘‘non-profit entity’’ refers to a person
with a tax exemption ruling or
determination letter from the Internal
Revenue Service under section 501(c)(3)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986
(12 U.S.C. 501(c)(3)).80 This exemption
generally builds on an exemption from
the FHA Anti-Flipping Rule for loans
financing the purchase of properties
from nonprofit organizations approved
to purchase HUD REO single-family
properties at a discount with resale
restrictions (see 12 CFR 203.37a(c)(3)).
Consistent with the FHA AntiFlipping Rule exemptions, the
exemption in § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(C)
would cover nonprofit organizations
approved to purchase HUD REO singlefamily properties. In addition, the
exemption would cover purchases of
these types of properties from nonprofit
organizations as part of other local, State
or Federal government programs under
which the non-profit entity is permitted
to acquire title to REO single family
properties for resale.
For reasons similar to those discussed
under the exemption for loan holders
selling a property acquired through
liquidating a mortgage
(§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(B)), the Agencies
believe that the exemption for HPMLs
financing the acquisitions described in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(C) is in the public
interest and promotes the safety and
soundness of creditors. The exemption
is intended in part to help holders such
as banks and other financial institutions
sell properties held as a result of
foreclosure or deed-in-lieu of
foreclosure, thereby removing them
from their books. This can minimize
losses, which improves institutions’
safety and soundness. The exemption is
also intended to facilitate neighborhood
revitalization for the benefit of
communities and individual consumers.
Government programs involving
purchases and sales of REO property by
non-profits can foster positive
community investment and help
investors dispense with loss-generating
properties efficiently and in a manner
that maximizes public benefit. The
Agencies do not believe that these types
of sales to consumers by non-profits
involve serious risks of fraudulent
flipping, and thus do not believe that
TILA’s additional appraisal requirement
was intended to apply to these
transactions. For these reasons, the
Agencies believe that the exemption in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(C) is in the public
80 ‘‘Person’’ is defined in Regulation Z as ‘‘a
natural person or an organization, including a
corporation, partnership, proprietorship,
association, cooperative, estate, trust, or
government unit.’’ § 1026.2(a)(22).

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interest and promotes the safety and
soundness of creditors.
35(c)(4)(vii)(D)
Acquisitions From Persons Acquiring
the Property Through Inheritance or
Dissolution of Marriage, Civil Union, or
Domestic Partnership
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(D), the Agencies
are adopting an exemption for HPMLs
financing the purchase of a property
that was acquired by the seller by
inheritance or pursuant to a court order
of dissolution of marriage, civil union,
or domestic partnership, or of partition
of joint or marital assets to which the
seller was a party. The exemption
would include HPMLs financing the
acquisition by a joint owner of the
property of a residual interest in that
property, if the joint owner acquired
that interest by inheritance or
dissolution of a marriage, civil union, or
domestic partnership. This exemption
generally corresponds with an
exemption from the FHA Anti-Flipping
Rule for purchases of properties that
had been acquired by the seller by
inheritance (see 12 CFR 203.37a(c)(4)).
As discussed in the section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(i), above, an
exemption for HPMLs that finance the
purchase of a property acquired by the
seller through a non-purchase
transaction was widely supported by
commenters.
In response to comments, the
Agencies have decided to expand the
FHA Anti-Flipping Rule exemption for
loans financing the purchase of a
property from a seller who had acquired
it by inheritance, to include properties
acquired as the result of a dissolution of
a marriage, civil union, or domestic
partnership. The Agencies are not aware
that sales of properties so acquired have
been the source of fraudulent flipping
activity and note that no commenters
suggested that this type of flipping
occurs. In addition, the Agencies do not
believe that Congress intended to cover
purchases of property acquired by
sellers in this manner with the ‘‘higherrisk mortgage’’ additional appraisal
requirement. The Agencies believe that
consumer protection from fraudulent
flipping is aided by the requirement that
the acquisition of property through
dissolution of a marriage or civil union
must be part of a court order, which can
be easily confirmed and helps ensure
that the original transfer was for
legitimate purposes and not merely to
defraud a subsequent purchaser.
As for the exemption for HPMLs
financing the purchase of a property
acquired by the seller as an inheritance,
the Agencies similarly do not see the

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risk of fraudulent flipping that Congress
intended to address occurring in these
transactions. Finally, in both the case of
inheritance and that of divorce or
dissolution, the seller has acquired the
property (or full ownership of the
property) under adverse circumstances;
the Agencies see no reason as a public
policy matter to impose further burden
on the seller attempting to sell property
obtained in this manner. With respect to
promoting the safety and soundness of
creditors, the Agencies note that a seller
attempting to sell property obtained via
inheritance or dissolution of marriage
may not be in a position to satisfy the
mortgage obligation associated with the
property. As a result, creditors could be
subject to losses, which can negatively
affect the safety and soundness of the
creditors.
For these reasons, the Agencies
believe that the exemptions in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(D) are in the public
interest and promote the safety and
soundness of creditors.
35(c)(4)(vii)(E)
Acquisitions of Property From
Employers or Relocation Agencies
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(E), the Agencies
are adopting an exemption for HPMLs
financing the purchase of a property
from an employer or relocation agency
that had acquired the property in
connection with the relocation of an
employee. This exemption mirrors an
identical exemption from the FHA AntiFlipping Rule. See 12 CFR
203.37a(c)(5)). As with other
exemptions adopted in the final rule
that correspond with similar FHA AntiFlipping Rule exemptions, the Agencies
concur with FHA’s longstanding
conclusion that these types of
transactions do not present significant
fraudulent flipping risks. Rather, the
circumstances of the transaction provide
evidence that the impetus for the resales
stems from bona fide reasons other than
the seller’s efforts to profit from a flip.
The Agencies believe that these
transactions benefit both employees and
employers by helping to ensure that
employees can relocate as needed for
business reasons in an efficient manner.
The Agencies also believe that the
exemption can benefit HPML consumers
and creditors by reducing costs
otherwise associated with purchasing
and extending credit to finance the
purchase of these properties. In
addition, due to reduced burden
involved with the sale of the home, the
Agencies believe the exemption will
promote the purchase of homes by
employers. This, in turn, promotes the
safety and soundness of the employees’

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creditors by ensuring that the
employees’ mortgage obligations will be
met.
For these reasons, the Agencies
believe that the exemption in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(E) is in the public
interest and promotes the safety and
soundness of creditors.
35(c)(4)(vii)(F)

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Acquisitions of Property From
Servicemembers With Deployment or
Permanent Change of Station Orders
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(F), the Agencies
are adopting an exemption from the
additional appraisal requirement for
HPMLs financing the purchase of a
property being sold by a servicemember,
as defined in 50 U.S.C. Appx. 511(1),
who received a deployment or
permanent change of station order after
acquiring the property. This exemption
is not in the FHA Anti-Flipping Rule.
The exemption was suggested by some
commenters in response to a request for
recommendations for other appropriate
exemptions, however. The Agencies
believe that many of the reasons for the
exemptions in the final rule based on
the FHA Anti-Flipping Rule support a
servicemember exemption as well. For
example, as with the exemption for
HPMLs financing the sale of a property
by an employer or relocation agency in
connection with the relocation of an
employee, the exemption for HPMLs
financing the sale of a property by a
servicemember with permanent
relocation orders facilitates the efficient
transfer of servicemembers.
Without this exemption,
servicemembers might have more
limited options for eligible buyers. For
reasons discussed earlier, some
creditors might be reticent about
lending to an HPML consumer in a
transaction that would trigger the
additional appraisal requirement. This
could result in servicemembers being
forced to retain mortgages that are
difficult for them to afford when they
must also support themselves and their
families in a new living arrangement
elsewhere. In turn, the positions of
creditors and investors on those existing
mortgages could be compromised by
servicemembers not being able to meet
their mortgage obligations.
The Agencies do not believe that this
exemption would be used frequently.
Regardless, the Agencies believe that an
exemption for HPMLs financing the
purchase of the property in that instance
is in the public interest and promotes
the safety and soundness of creditors.

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35(c)(4)(vii)(G)

35(c)(4)(vii)(H)

Acquisitions of a Property in a Federal
Disaster Area

Acquisitions of Properties in Rural
Counties
In § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H), the
Agencies are adopting an exemption
from the additional appraisal
requirement for HPMLs that finance the
purchase of a property in a ‘‘rural’’
county, as defined in
§ 1026.35(b)(iv)(A), which is a county
assigned one of the following Urban
Influence Codes (UICs), established by
the United States Department of
Agriculture’s Economic Research
Services (USDA–ERS): 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,
11, or 12. These UICs correspond to
areas outside of MSAs as well as most
micropolitan statistical areas; the
definition would also include properties
located in micropolitan statistical areas
that are not adjacent to an MSA. This
rural county exemption is not an
exemption in the FHA Anti-Flipping
Rule. However, the Agencies received
requests to consider an exemption for
loans in rural areas during informal
outreach for the proposal, as well as
from public commenters.
In the proposal, the Agencies did not
propose an exemption for loans secured
by properties in ‘‘rural’’ areas from all
of the Dodd-Frank Act ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ appraisal rules, but requested
comment on an exemption for these
loans from the additional appraisal
requirement. As discussed earlier,
commenters widely supported an
exemption for loans secured by
properties in rural areas, citing several
reasons: a lack of appraisers; the
disproportionate cost of an extra
appraisal, based on commenters’ view
that property values tend to be lower in
rural areas than in non-rural areas; the
assertion that many lenders in rural
areas hold the loans in portfolio and
therefore are more mindful of ensuring
that properties securing their loans are
valued properly; the assertion that
lenders in rural areas tend to need to
price loans higher for legitimate reasons,
so a disproportionate amount of their
loans (compared to those of larger
lenders) will be subject to the appraisal
rules and thus these lenders will bear an
unfair burden that they are less
equipped than larger lenders to bear;
and the assertion that property flipping
is rare in rural areas.
The analysis in the proposal of the
impact of the proposed rule in rural
areas corroborated commenters’ concern
that a larger share of loans in rural areas
tend to be HPMLs than in non-rural
areas.81 Although many small and rural

In § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(G), the Agencies
are adopting an exemption for HPMLs
financing the purchase of a property
located in an area designated by the
President as a federal disaster area, if
and for as long as the Federal financial
institutions regulatory agencies, as
defined in 12 U.S.C. 3350(6), waive the
requirements in title XI of the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989, as amended
(12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and any
implementing regulations in that area.
This exemption generally corresponds
to an exemption in the FHA AntiFlipping Rule for loans financing the
purchase of properties located in areas
designated by the President as federal
disaster areas, if HUD has announced
that these transactions will not be
subject to the restrictions. See 12 CFR
203.37a(c)(8).
The Agencies believe that this
exemption appropriately facilitates the
repair and restoration of disaster areas
to the benefit of individual consumers,
communities, and credit markets. The
Agencies also recognize that disasters
might result in some consumers being
unable to meet their mortgage
obligations. As a result, creditors could
be subject to losses, which could
negatively affect the safety and
soundness of the creditors. The
Agencies believe that this exemption
would help creditors extend HPMLs
that finance the purchase of properties
in disaster areas without undue burden,
thus enabling the creditors to improve
their lending positions more effectively.
As noted, the Agencies specified that
the exemption would take effect only if
and for as long as the Federal financial
institutions regulatory agencies also
waive application of the FIRREA title XI
appraisal rules for properties in the
disaster area. The Agencies believe that
this provision helps protect consumers
from fraudulent flipping by giving the
Federal financial institutions regulatory
agencies, all of which are parties to this
final rule, authority to monitor the area
and determine when appraisal
requirements should be reinstated.
For these reasons, the Agencies have
concluded that the exemption in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(G) for the purchase
of properties in disaster areas is in the
public interest and promotes the safety
and soundness of creditors.

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81 In the proposal, ‘‘rural’’ was defined as a loan
made outside of a micropolitan or metropolitan

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lenders are excluded from HMDA
reporting, tabulations of rural loans by
HMDA reporters may be informative
about patterns of rural HPML usage. As
conveyed in the proposal, 10 percent of
rural first-lien purchase-money loans
were HPMLs in 2010 compared to 3
percent of non-rural first-lien purchase
loans.82 Based on this information, the
Bureau concluded that rural borrowers
may be more likely to incur the cost of
an additional appraisal requirement
than non-rural consumers.
Regarding appraiser availability,
analysis conducted for the proposal
indicated that more than two appraisers
are located in all but 22 counties
nationwide (13 of which are in
Alaska).83 An appraiser was considered
‘‘located’’ in a county if the appraiser’s
home or business address listed on the
Appraisal Subcommittee’s National
Appraiser Registry was in that county.
Public commenters pointed out,
however, that while many rural areas
might have more than two appraisers,
these few appraisers are often busy and
not readily available. One reason may be
that many rural counties cover large
areas, perhaps making it more difficult
to arrange timely appraisals in such
areas. As noted, a financial holding
company suggested that the final rule
exempt lenders located in areas where
the State appraiser licensing or
certification roster shows five or fewer
unaffiliated appraisers within a
reasonable distance, such as 50 miles or
less. A large bank further recommended
that the final rule exempt loans secured
by properties in low-density appraiser
markets, such as states with fewer than
500 appraisers or counties with fewer
than five appraisers. The final rule does
not adopt an exemption based on the
number of appraisers within a particular
geographic area or radius of the property
securing the HPML. The Agencies
believe that a simpler approach is
consistent with the objectives of the
statute, facilitates compliance, and
reduces burden on creditors.
Other than the commenters who
suggested a ‘‘radius’’ or low-density
approach for the rural exemption, only
one other commenter offered
suggestions on how to define rural. This
statistical area. See 77 FR 54722, 54752 n. 108
(Sept. 5, 2012).
82 77 FR 54722, 54752 (Sept. 5, 2012). Similar
percentages for rural and non-rural first-lien
purchase HPML lending are reflected in 2011
HMDA data. See Robert B. Avery, Neil Bhutta,
Kenneth B. Brevoort, and Glenn Canner, ‘‘The
Mortgage Market in 2011: Highlights from the Data
Reported under the Home Mortgage Disclosure
Act,’’ FR Bulletin, Vol. 98, no. 6 (Dec. 2012)
http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/bulletin/2012/
PDF/2011_HMDA.pdf.
83 See 77 FR 54722, 54752–54753 (Sept. 5, 2012).

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commenter recommended that the
Agencies adopt a definition of ‘‘rural’’
that is consistent with the definition
used in rules addressing the use of
escrow accounts. See 2013 Escrows
Final Rule, § 1026.35(b)(2)(iv); see also
2013 ATR Final Rule, § 1026.43(f)(2)(vi)
and comment 43(f)(2)(vi–1). The
Agencies specifically requested
comment on whether the definition of
‘‘rural’’ used in any exemption adopted
should be the same as the definition in
the 2011 ATR Proposal and 2011
Escrows Proposal. These exemptions are
described below.
2011 Escrows Proposal. Since 2010,
Regulation Z, implementing TILA, has
required creditors to establish escrow
accounts for taxes and insurance on
HPMLs. See 12 CFR 1026.35(b)(3). The
Dodd-Frank Act subsequently amended
TILA to codify and augment the escrow
requirements in Regulation Z. See
Dodd-Frank Act §§ 1461 and 1462,
adding 15 U.S.C. 1639d. The Board
issued the 2011 Escrows Proposal to
implement a number of these
provisions.
Among other amendments, one new
section of TILA authorizes the Board
(now, the Bureau) to create an
exemption from the requirement to
establish escrow accounts for
transactions originated by creditors
meeting certain criteria, including that
the creditor ‘‘operates predominantly in
rural or underserved areas.’’ 15 U.S.C.
1639d(c).
Accordingly, the 2011 Escrows
Proposal proposed to create an
exemption for any loan extended by a
creditor that makes most of its first-lien
HPMLs in counties designated by the
Board as ‘‘rural or underserved,’’ has
annual originations of 100 or fewer firstlien mortgage loans, and does not
escrow for any mortgage transaction it
services.
Definition of ‘‘Rural’’
In the 2011 Escrows Proposal, the
Board proposed to define ‘‘area’’ as
‘‘county’’ and to provide that a county
would be designated as ‘‘rural’’ during
a calendar year if:
* * * it is not in a metropolitan statistical
area or a micropolitan statistical area, as
those terms are defined by the U.S. Office of
Management and Budget, and either (1) it is
not adjacent to any metropolitan or
micropolitan area; or (2) it is adjacent to a
metropolitan area with fewer than one
million residents or adjacent to a
micropolitan area, and it contains no town
with 2,500 or more residents.

See 76 FR 11598, 11610–13 (March 2,
2011); proposed 12 CFR
1026.45(b)(2)(iv)(A).

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Further, the Board proposed to clarify
in Official Staff Commentary to this
provision that, on an annual basis, the
Board would ‘‘determine[] whether each
county is ‘rural’ by reference to the
currently applicable Urban Influence
Codes (UICs), established by the United
States Department of Agriculture’s
Economic Research Service (USDA–
ERS). Specifically the Board classifies a
county as ‘‘rural’’ if the USDA–ERS
categorizes the county under UIC 7, 10,
11, or 12.’’ See proposed comment
45(b)(2)(iv)–1.
The Board explained its proposed
definition of ‘‘rural’’ in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION to the
proposal as follows:
The Board is proposing to limit the
definition of ‘‘rural’’ areas to those areas most
likely to have only limited sources of
mortgage credit. The test for ‘‘rural’’ in
proposed § 226.45(b)(2)(iv)(A), described
above, is based on the ‘‘urban influence
codes’’ numbered 7, 10, 11, and 12,
maintained by the Economic Research
Service (ERS) of the United States
Department of Agriculture. The ERS devised
the urban influence codes to reflect such
factors as counties’ relative population sizes,
degrees of ‘‘urbanization,’’ access to larger
communities, and commuting patterns. The
four codes captured in the proposed ‘‘rural’’
definition represent the most remote rural
areas, where ready access to the resources of
larger, more urban communities and mobility
are most limited. Proposed comment
45(b)(2)(iv)–1 would state that the Board
classifies a county as ‘‘rural’’ if it is
categorized under ERS urban influence code
7, 10, 11, or 12.

Id. at 11612.
2011 ATR Proposal. The Dodd-Frank
Act also amended TILA to impose new
requirements that creditors consider a
consumer’s ability to repay a mortgage
loan secured by the consumer’s
principal dwelling. See Dodd-Frank Act
section 1411, adding 15 U.S.C. 1639c.
As part of these amendments, the DoddFrank Act created a new class of loans
called ‘‘qualified mortgages’’ and
provided that creditors making qualified
mortgages would be presumed to have
met the new ability to repay
requirements. See id. section 1412.
Under the Act, balloon mortgages can be
considered qualified mortgages if they
meet certain criteria, including that the
creditor ‘‘operates predominantly in
rural or underserved areas.’’ Id.
In May 2011, the Board issued the
2011 ATR Proposal to implement these
provisions.
In the ATR Proposal, the Board’s
proposed definition of ‘‘rural’’ and
accompanying explanation in the
Official Staff Commentary and
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION are
identical to the definition and

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explanation quoted above in the 2011
Escrows Proposal. See 76 FR 27390,
27469–72 (May 11, 2011); proposed
§ 1026.43(f)(2)(i) and comment 43(f)(2)–
1.
As discussed in more detail in the
2013 ATR Final Rule and 2013 Escrows
Final Rule, most commenters on the
proposals for those rulemakings
objected to this definition of ‘‘rural’’ as
too narrow (it covers approximately 2
percent of the U.S. population). The
narrow scope of the definition of ‘‘rural’’
was viewed as especially onerous
because the scope was narrowed even
further by a number of additional
conditions on the exemption imposed
by the statute.84 As explained more fully
in the 2013 ATR Final Rule and 2013
Escrows Final Rule, the Bureau is
finalizing a more broad definition of
‘‘rural,’’ acknowledging that the
exemption will nonetheless be
narrowed by the additional conditions.
The Bureau is defining ‘‘rural’’ as
UICs 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, or 12. These
codes comprise all areas outside of
MSAs and outside of all micropolitan
statistical areas except micropolitan
statistical areas that are not adjacent to
MSAs. According to current U.S. Census
data, approximately 10 percent of the
U.S. population lives in these areas.
Exemption for HPMLs secured by
properties in rural counties from the
additional appraisal requirement. The
Agencies believe that the definition of
‘‘rural’’ county used by the Bureau is
appropriate for the exemption from the
requirement to obtain an additional
appraisal under § 1026.35(c)(4)(i) for
loans in rural areas. In addition, the
Agencies view consistency across
mortgage rules in defining rural county
as desirable for compliance and
enforcement. Thus, the exemption in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H) cross-references
the definition of rural county in the
HPML escrow provisions of revised
§ 1026.35(b) (see 2013 Escrows Final
Rule, § 1026.35(b)(2)(iv)). (The same
definition of rural county is adopted by
the Bureau in the 2013 ATR Final rule,
§ 1026.43(f)(2)(vi) and comment
84 For the exemption from the escrow
requirement, the statute states that the Board (now,
the Bureau) may exempt a creditor that: ‘‘(1)
Operates predominantly in rural or underserved
areas; (2) together with all affiliates, has total
annual mortgage loan originations that do not
exceed a limit set by the [Bureau]; (3) retains its
mortgage loan originations in portfolio; and (4)
meets any asset size threshold and any other criteria
the [Bureau] may establish . * * *’’ TILA section
129D(c), 15 U.S.C. 1639d(c); see also TILA section
129C(b)(2)(E), 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(2)(E) (granting the
Bureau authority to deem balloon loans ‘‘qualified
mortgages’’ under certain circumstances, including
that the loan is extended by a creditor described
meeting the same conditions set forth for the
exemption from the escrow requirement).

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43(f)(2)(vi–1).) The Agencies have
considered several factors in
determining how to define the scope of
the exemption.
First, the Agencies believe that
creditors must be readily able to
determine whether a particular
transaction qualifies for the exemption.
This will be possible because the
Bureau will annually publish on its Web
site a table of the counties in which
properties would qualify for this
exemption. Comment 35(c)(4)(vii)(H)–1
cross-references comment 35(b)(2)(iv)–1,
which clarifies that the Bureau will
publish on its Web site the applicable
table of counties for each calendar year
by the end of that calendar year. The
comment further clarifies that a
property securing an HPML subject to
§ 1026.35(c) is in a rural county under
§ 1026(c)(4)(vii)(H) if the county in
which the property is located is on the
table of rural counties most recently
published by the Bureau. The comment
provides the following example: for a
transaction occurring in 2015, assume
that the Bureau most recently published
a table of rural counties at the end of
2014. The property securing the
transaction would be located in a rural
county for purposes of
§ 1026(c)(4)(vii)(H) if the county is on
the table of rural counties published by
the Bureau at the end of 2014. The
Agencies anticipate that loan officers
and others will be able to look on the
Bureau Web site to identify whether the
county in which the subject property is
located is on the list.
Second, the Agencies endeavored to
create an exemption tailored to address
key concerns raised by commenters
requesting a rural exemption, based on
data findings by the Agencies. The
principal concerns that the Agencies
identified among commenters were that:
first, adequate numbers of appraisers
might not be available in rural areas for
creditors to comply with the additional
appraisal requirement and; second, the
cost of obtaining the additional
appraisal might deter some creditors
from making HPMLs in these areas,
many of which might already be
underserved, reducing credit access for
rural consumers. As noted in the
proposed rule and discussed below, the
potential reduction in credit access
might be disproportionally greater in
rural areas than in non-rural areas
because the proportion of HPMLs is
higher in rural as opposed to non-rural
areas.
For the reasons explained below, the
Agencies believe that the exemption for
loans in rural areas as defined in the
final rule is appropriately tailored to
address these and related concerns. By

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better ensuring credit access and
lowering costs among creditors
extending HPMLs in rural areas,
including small community banks, the
exemption is expected to benefit the
public and promote the safety and
soundness of creditors. See TILA
section 129H(b)(4)(B), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(b)(4)(B).
Appraiser availability. As noted,
commenters indicated that in some rural
areas it can be difficult to find
appraisers who are both competent to
appraise a particular rural property and
also readily available. The cost-benefit
analysis conducted by the Bureau for
the proposal focused in part on
estimating appraiser availability in
particular areas and identified counties
in which fewer than two appraisers with
requisite credentials indicated having a
business or home address.85 However,
commenters noted and the Agencies
confirmed based on additional outreach
for this final rule that not all appraisers
whose home or business address is in a
particular geographic area are
competent to appraise properties in that
area. Thus, to inform the final rule, the
Bureau expanded its research from that
conducted for the proposal.
For the final rule, the Bureau
computed how many appraisers showed
that they had a home or business
address within a 50-mile radius of the
center of each census tract in which an
HPML loan was reported in the 2011
HMDA data.86 The 50-mile radius test
was intended to be a proxy for the
potential service area for an appraiser in
a more rural area and would cover
properties located in roughly an hour’s
drive of an appraiser’s home or office
location.
On this basis, the Bureau found that,
of 262,989 HMDA-reported HPMLs in
2011, 603 had fewer than five appraisers
within a 50-mile radius of the center of
the tract in which the securing property
was located; 484 of these loans were in
areas covered by the final rule’s rural
exclusion. Based on FHFA data, the
Bureau estimates that 5 percent of these
HPMLs were potentially covered by the
statute’s additional appraisal
85 See

77 FR 54722, 54752–54753 (Sept. 5, 2012).
appraisers accounted for in the Bureau’s
analysis of the National Appraiser Registry were
listed on the Registry as ‘‘active,’’ ‘‘AQB
Compliant’’ and either licensed or certified. The
Registry is available at https://www.asc.gov/
National-Registry/NationalRegistry.aspx. ‘‘AQB
Compliant’’ means that the appraiser met the Real
Property Appraisal Qualification Criteria as
promulgated by the Appraisal Qualifications Board
on education, experience, and examination. See
Appraisal Subcommittee of the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council, https://www.asc.
gov/Frequently-Asked-Questions/FrequentlyAsked
Questions.aspx#AQB%20Compliant%20meaning.
86 The

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
requirement because they were
purchase-money HPMLs secured by
properties sold within a 180-day
window.87 A lower proportion would
have been flips with a price increase.
See TILA section 129H(b)(2)(A), 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(A). But taking solely
the number of flips without regard to
price increase or other exemptions (see
§ 1026.35(c)(2) and (c)(4)(vii)), an
estimated 30 HPML transactions that
were flips had fewer than five
appraisers within a 50-mile radius of the
center of the census tract in which they
were located (5 percent of 603 HPMLs).
Twenty-four of these would have been
covered by the rural exemption as
defined in the final rule (5 percent of
484 HPMLs).
On this basis, the Agencies have
concluded that the exemption is
reasonably tailored to exclude from
coverage of the additional appraisal
requirement the loans for which
appraiser availability might be an issue.
Credit access. Commenters also raised
concerns about credit access,
emphasizing that a larger proportion of
loans in rural areas are HPMLs than in
non-rural areas. Commenters suggested
that the additional appraisal
requirement could deter some creditors
from extending HPML credit. See
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(v) and corresponding
section-by-section analysis.
The additional appraisal requirement
entails several compliance steps. After
identifying that a loan is an HPML
under § 1026.35(a), a creditor will need
to assess whether the HPML is exempt
from the appraisal requirements entirely
under § 1026.35(c)(2). If the loan is not
exempt as a qualified mortgage or other
type of transaction exempt under
§ 1026.35(c)(2), the creditor will need to
determine whether the HPML is one of
the transactions that is exempt from the
additional appraisal requirement under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii). If the HPML is not
exempt from the additional appraisal
requirement, the creditor will need to
determine whether the requirement to
obtain an additional appraisal is
triggered based on the date and, if
necessary, price of the seller’s
acquisition of the property securing the
HPML. See § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B).
(Alternatively, the creditor could
assume that the requirement applies and
order two appraisals without taking
each of these steps.) If the requirement
is triggered, the creditor must obtain an
additional appraisal performed by a
certified or licensed appraiser, the cost
87 Based on county recorder information from
select counties licensed to FHFA by DataQuick
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of which cannot be charged to the
consumer. See id. and § 1026.35(c)(4)(v).
If these compliance obligations would
deter some creditors from extending
HPMLs, the impact on credit access
might be greater in rural areas as
defined in the final rule than in nonrural areas, because a significantly larger
proportion of residential mortgage loans
made in rural areas are HPMLs than in
non-rural areas. Again, based on 2011
HMDA data, 12 percent of rural firstlien, purchase-money loans were
HPMLs compared to four percent of
non-rural first-lien, purchase-money
loan.88 That is, recent data indicates that
HPMLs occur three times as often in the
rural setting.
Thus, an important consideration for
the Agencies in determining the scope
of the exemption was the comparative
number of creditors extending HPMLs
in various geographic areas. To this end,
the Agencies considered, based on
HMDA data, the number of creditors
reported to have extended HPML credit
in the geographic units defined by the
12 UICs. (For more details, see the
Section 1022(b)(2) cost-benefit analysis
in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
below.) The Agencies believe that in the
areas with a greater number of lenders
reporting that they extended HPMLs,
the additional appraisal requirement
will have a lower impact on credit
access.
HMDA data for 2011 show that a
sharp drop-off in the number of
creditors reporting to extend HPML
credit occurs in micropolitan statistical
areas not adjacent to MSAs (UIC 8),
compared to MSAs and micropolitan
statistical areas that are adjacent to
MSAs.89 Specifically, 10 creditors
reported that they extended HPMLs in
a median county classified as UIC 8 in
2011; by contrast, in the median
counties of the UICs with the next
highest populations (UICs 2, 3, 5), the
number of creditors reporting that they
extended HPMLs was 24, 18, and 16,
respectively. The drop-off in numbers of
HPML creditors continues for UICs
representing non-MSAs and nonmicropolitan statistical areas.90
88 Robert B. Avery, Neil Bhutta, Kenneth B.
Brevoort, and Glenn Canner, ‘‘The Mortgage Market
in 2011: Highlights from the Data Reported under
the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act,’’ FR Bulletin,
Vol. 98, no. 6 (Dec. 2012) http://www.federal
reserve.gov/pubs/bulletin/2012/PDF/2011_HMDA.
pdf.
89 More detail about the population densities
represented by the 12 UICs is provided in the
Section 1022(b)(2) analysis in Part V of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
90 Ten creditors reported extending HPML credit
in 2011 in UICs 6 and 4; six in UIC 11; seven in
UIC 9; six in UIC 7; four in UIC 10; and three in
UIC 12.

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The Agencies also looked at the
estimated number of flips in areas
encompassed by the rural exemption of
the final rule to determine whether the
consumer protections lost might
outweigh the benefits of the exemption.
As explained in greater detail in the
Section 1022(b)(2) analysis, the Bureau
estimates that, based on HMDA data,
122,806 purchase-money HPMLs were
made in 2011; 21,370 of those were in
the areas covered by the rural exclusion.
As noted, the Bureau estimates that the
proportion of purchase-money HPMLs
involving properties sold within 180
days is 5 percent.91 Thus, of HPMLs in
rural counties as defined in the final
rule, an estimated 5 percent would have
been flips. This number does not
account for any other exemptions from
the HPML appraisal rules that might
apply to these HPMLs under
§ 1026.35(c)(2) or (c)(4)(vii). It also does
not account for the price increase
thresholds defining a transaction
covered under the additional appraisal
requirement in this final rule. See
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B) and
corresponding section-by-section
analysis.
The Agencies believe that the
exemption for HPMLs secured by rural
properties appropriately balances credit
access and consumer protection. As the
data above suggests, the estimated
number of HPML consumers that would
not receive the protections of an
additional appraisal due to this
exemption is very small. Moreover, the
Agencies note that affected HPML
consumers would still receive the
consumer protections afforded by the
general requirement for an interiorinspection appraisal performed by a
certified or licensed appraiser. See
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(i).
In sum, the Agencies believe that the
exemption in § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(G) will
help ensure that creditors in rural areas
are able to extend HPML credit without
undue burden, which will in turn
mitigate any detrimental impacts on
access to credit in rural areas that might
result absent the exemption. The
Agencies further believe that the
exemption is appropriately tailored to
ensure that needed consumer
protections regarding appraisals are in
place in areas where they are needed.
For all of the reasons explained above,
the Agencies have concluded that the
exemption in § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H) is
in the public interest and promotes the
safety and soundness of creditors.
91 Based on county recorder information from
select counties licensed to FHFA by DataQuick
Information Systems.

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35(c)(5) Required Disclosure

Public Comments on the Proposal

35(c)(5)(i) In General

The Agencies received approximately
20 comments pertaining to the proposal
on the text, timing, and form of the
HRM appraisal notice. The comments
came from banks and bank holding
companies, credit unions, bank and
credit union trade associations, an
appraisal industry trade association,
GSEs, consumer advocates, and an
industry service provider. Regarding the
text of the disclosure, the Agencies
requested comment on the proposed
language and whether additional
changes should be made to the language
to further enhance consumer
comprehension.
Combining ECOA/TILA notices. A
bank and service provider commented
that the proposed text was clear and
easy to understand. A major bank, a
credit union trade association, and GSEs
supported the proposal to streamline
and integrate the ECOA appraisal notice
and the TILA appraisal notice into a
single notice. The credit union trade
association noted this harmonization
would increase the likelihood
consumers would read and understand
the notice. No commenters objected to
the integration of the ECOA and TILA
notices.
Use of ‘‘promptly’’ for the timing of
disclosure of appraisals. Several
commenters—a bank and two bank
trade associations at the State level—
expressed concern that the term
‘‘promptly’’ in the proposed notice was
not defined, and that the failure to
define the term could lead to consumer
confusion as well as disputes. One
commenter suggested that the term
‘‘promptly’’ be defined as within three
days before closing, which the
commenter indicated would be
consistent with Regulation B.
Use of the term ‘‘appraisal,’’ without
reference to ‘‘valuations.’’ A major bank
suggested that the term ‘‘valuations’’
should be added to the text of the
notice, because disclosure of valuations
also is required by ECOA (and the 2012
ECOA Appraisals Proposal, finalized in
the 2013 ECOA Appraisals Final Rule).
Because consumers may be unfamiliar
with the term ‘‘valuation,’’ the bank also
suggested that the notice include a list
of documents that constitute a
‘‘valuation,’’ and several other
statements regarding how valuations
may be conducted and used by the
lender. A GSE also suggested that the
term ‘‘valuations’’ appear in the notice,
so that when copies of valuations are
provided under ECOA consumers
would not mistake them for appraisals.
Statement that the appraisal will be
provided even if the loan does not close.

Title XIV of the Dodd-Frank Act
added two new appraisal-related
notification requirements for
consumers. First, TILA section 129H(d)
states that, at the time of the initial
mortgage application for a higher-risk
mortgage loan, the applicant shall be
‘‘provided with a statement by the
creditor that any appraisal prepared for
the mortgage is for the sole use of the
creditor, and that the applicant may
choose to have a separate appraisal
conducted at the expense of the
applicant.’’ 15 U.S.C. 1639h(d). The
Agencies interpret TILA section 129H(d)
to provide the elements that a disclosure
imposed by regulation should address.
In addition, new section 701(e)(5) of the
Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA)
similarly requires a creditor to notify an
applicant in writing, at the time of
application, of the ‘‘right to receive a
copy of each written appraisal and
valuation’’ subject to ECOA section
701(e). 15 U.S.C. 1691(e)(5); see also 77
FR 50390 (Aug. 21, 2012) (2012 ECOA
Appraisals Proposal) and the Bureau’s
final ECOA appraisals rule (2013 ECOA
Appraisals Final Rule).92 Read together,
the revisions to TILA and ECOA require
creditors to provide two appraisal
disclosures to consumers applying for a
higher-risk mortgage loan secured by a
first lien on a consumer’s principal
dwelling.
The Agencies proposed text for the
notice required by TILA section 129H
that was intended to incorporate the
statutory elements, using language
honed through consumer testing
designed to minimize confusion both
with respect to the language on its face,
as well as when read in conjunction
with appraisal notices required under
the ECOA. Under the proposal, the TILA
section 129H notice stated: ‘‘We may
order an appraisal to determine the
property’s value and charge you for this
appraisal. We will promptly give you a
copy of any appraisal, even if your loan
does not close. You can pay for an
additional appraisal for your own use at
your own cost.’’
As explained more fully below, in
§ 1026.35(c)(5), the Agencies are
adopting the proposed disclosure
provision with one change—in effect,
including the word ‘‘promptly’’ in the
disclosure is optional.
92 The Bureau released the 2013 ECOA Appraisals
Final Rule on January 18, 2013, under Docket No.
CFPB–2012–0032, RIN 3170–AA26, at http://
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A bank trade association at the State
level commented on the part of the
notice stating that the appraisal would
be provided ‘‘even if your loan does not
close.’’ The commenter suggested that
consumers need to be informed that the
creditor is not ‘‘compelled to order an
appraisal if it is determined that the
loan will not be consummated prior to
appraisal order process.’’ This
commenter suggested adding the
qualifier, ‘‘if an appraisal was
obtained.’’
Ability of creditor to levy certain
charges. One bank commenter
expressed concern that the proposed
notice did not condition the right of the
borrower to receive a copy of the
appraisal upon the borrower’s payment
for the appraisal. A credit union trade
association suggested that the notice
clarify that the borrower may be charged
for any ‘‘additional copies’’ of the
appraisal that are requested by the
borrower.
Potential for consumer expectations
regarding creditor use of the applicantordered appraisal. Several
commenters—national and State
banking trade associations, a major
credit union trade association, and an
appraisal industry trade association—
expressed concern over the text
informing the applicant of the
applicant’s right to order his or her own
appraisal for his or her own use. These
commenters noted that the proposed
notice did not clearly state what use, if
any, a creditor could make of a
borrower-ordered appraisal.
• Three commenters suggested that
the notice clarify that the borrowerordered appraisal would not be used by
the creditor. One of these commenters
stated that Federal guidelines prohibited
use of the borrower-ordered appraisal as
the appraisal for the transaction. The
bank trade associations argued that the
creditor is prohibited by law from
‘‘considering’’ the borrower-ordered
appraisal (pointing, for example, to the
Appraisal and Evaluation Interagency
Guidelines 93). Similarly, a national
credit union trade association suggested
that the notice clarify that a borrowerordered appraisal ‘‘will not be taken
into consideration.’’
• By contrast, another State bank
trade association suggested a less
categorical clarification, that the lender
93 The Interagency Guidelines state: ‘‘An
institution’s use of a borrower-ordered or borrowerprovided appraisal violates the [FIRREA title XI]
appraisal regulations. However, a borrower can
inform an institution that a current appraisal exists,
and the institution may request it directly from the
other financial services institution.’’ 75 FR 77450,
77458 (Dec. 10, 2010).

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‘‘has no obligation to use or review any
borrower-ordered appraisal.’’
Discussion
Section 1026.35(c)(5) of the final rule
provides that, unless an exemption from
the HPML appraisal rules applies under
§ 1026.35(c)(2) (discussed in the
corresponding section-by-section
analysis above), a creditor shall disclose
the following statement, in writing, to a
consumer who applies for an HPML:
‘‘We may order an appraisal to
determine the property’s value and
charge you for this appraisal. We will
give you a copy of any appraisal, even
if your loan does not close. You can pay
for an additional appraisal for your own
use at your own cost.’’ Section
1026.35(c)(5) further provides that
compliance with the disclosure
requirement in Regulation B, 12 CFR
§ 1002.14(a)(2) satisfies the
requirements of this paragraph. Under
§ 1026.35(c)(5)(ii) in the final rule, this
disclosure shall be delivered or placed
in the mail no later than the third
business day after the creditor receives
the consumer’s application for a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to
§ 1026.35(c). In the case of a loan that
is not a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to § 1026.35(c) at the time of
application, but becomes a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to
§ 1026.35(c) after application, the
disclosure shall be delivered or placed
in the mail not later than the third
business day after the creditor
determines that the loan is a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to
§ 1026.35(c).
Combining ECOA/TILA notices. As
noted, there was strong industry support
for harmonizing the ECOA/TILA notice
language. Consumer testing also
supported this harmonization, as
discussed in the proposal. The Agencies
therefore retain the proposed approach
of harmonizing the TILA appraisal
notice with language for the ECOA
notice.
Use of ‘‘promptly’’ for the timing of
disclosure of appraisals. The Agencies
have decided to give creditors the
option of providing the HPML appraisal
disclosure with or without the word
‘‘promptly.’’ Specifically, the final rule
clarifies that a creditor may comply
with the HPML appraisal disclosure
requirement—which does not
incorporate ‘‘promptly’’—by providing
the disclosure required under ECOA’s
Regulation B, which does. Indeed, this
is the only difference between the two
notices. The model language for the
Bureau’s final rule implementing
ECOA’s appraisal disclosure
requirement in Regulation B

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incorporates ‘‘promptly’’ to conform to
statutory language in ECOA. See ECOA
section 701(e)(1), 15 U.S.C. 1691(e)(1);
see also 2013 ECOA Appraisals Final
Rule, 12 CFR part 1002, Appendix C
(model form C–9). Specifically, ECOA
requires that a creditor of a first-lien
dwelling-secured mortgage provide the
applicant with a copy of each written
appraisal and other valuation
‘‘promptly, and in no case later than
three days prior to closing of the loan,
whether the creditor grants or denies the
applicant’s request for credit or the
application is incomplete or
withdrawn.’’ ECOA section 701(e)(1), 15
U.S.C. 1691(e)(1). TILA’s ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ appraisal requirements in
section 129H(c) do not use the word
‘‘promptly’’ in describing the timing
requirement for creditors to provide a
copy of the appraisal. Instead, the
timing requirement is defined only as
‘‘at least 3 days prior to the transaction
closing date.’’ 15 U.S.C. 1639h(c).
In the final rule, the Agencies are not
requiring HPML creditors to include
‘‘promptly’’ in the HPML appraisal
notice under § 1026.35(c)(5)(i) because
‘‘promptly’’ is not the legal standard for
providing a copy of the appraisal in
TILA section 129H(c). 15 U.S.C.
1639h(c).
At the same time, the Agencies
recognize that all first-lien dwellingsecured mortgages, including first-lien
HPMLs, are subject to the ECOA
disclosure and appraisal copy
requirements. Therefore, under the final
rule, first-lien HPML creditors who wish
to provide a single notice to comply
with both TILA and ECOA can do so by
using the ECOA notice with the word
‘‘promptly’’ into the disclosure.
Subordinate-lien HPMLs are subject
only to TILA’s rules on appraisal copies,
not ECOA’s, so the timing requirement
of ‘‘promptly’’ does not apply to
creditors of subordinate-lien HPMLs.
Therefore, under the final rule,
subordinate-lien HPML creditors have
the option of providing a disclosure
without the word ‘‘promptly;’’ however,
the final rule also makes it clear that any
creditor, whether of a first- or
subordinate-lien HPML, complies with
the HPML appraisal disclosure
requirement by complying with the
disclosure requirement under ECOA’s
Regulation B. As noted, the model
language for the ECOA/Regulation B
disclosure includes the word
‘‘promptly.’’
Use of term ‘‘appraisal,’’ without
reference to ‘‘valuations.’’ For several
reasons, the Agencies have decided to
retain the term ‘‘appraisal’’ in the
disclosure notice and not refer to
‘‘valuations.’’ First, the duty to disclose

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valuations in addition to appraisals
arises under ECOA, not TILA. The
Bureau sought comment on the issue in
its proposed ECOA appraisal rule and is
not requiring the use of the term
‘‘valuation’’ in its final version of that
rule. See 77 FR 50390, 50396 (Aug. 21,
2012); 2013 ECOA Appraisals Final
Rule § 1002.14(a)(1) and appendix C,
Form C–9. The Agencies do not believe
that the issue is appropriately addressed
in a rule implementing the TILA
requirement expressly relating only to
‘‘appraisals.’’
The Agencies also note that, as
discussed more fully in the Bureau’s
2013 ECOA Appraisals Final Rule,
consumer comprehension would not
necessarily be enhanced by use of the
term ‘‘valuation.’’ In consumer testing
by the Bureau, for example, a settlement
statement whose ‘‘appraisal’’ section did
not refer to valuations generally was
viewed as less confusing than one that
did refer to valuations. Including the
term ‘‘valuations’’ in the HPML
appraisal notice also might confuse
subordinate-lien borrowers and
creditors, because neither TILA nor
ECOA requires disclosure of valuations
for subordinate-lien loans.
Statement that the appraisal will be
provided even if the loan does not close.
The Agencies are retaining the proposed
language that the consumer will receive
a copy of the appraisal ‘‘even if your
loan does not close.’’ This reflects the
statutory requirement of providing a
copy of each appraisal ‘‘conducted,’’ a
requirement the Agencies interpret as
applying whether or not the loan
ultimately is consummated. TILA
section 129H(c) and (d), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(c) and (d).
The Agencies decline to add a
qualifier suggested in public comments
explaining that the creditor might not
order an appraisal if the creditor
determines that the applicant will not
qualify for a loan before the appraisal is
ordered. The Agencies do not believe
that this clarification, while true, is
necessary for the disclosure. The
proposed notice, now adopted, states
that the creditor ‘‘may’’ order an
appraisal. This language indicates that
the creditor is not always required to
order an appraisal. Further, the
proposed text, now adopted, states that
the creditor will provide a copy of ‘‘any
appraisal.’’ This additional language
also underscores the possibility that in
some situations (such as if the loan will
not close), an appraisal might not be
ordered.
Ability of creditor to levy certain
charges. The Agencies decline to add
language to the disclosure indicating
that the consumer’s right to receive a

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copy of the appraisal is conditioned on
payment for the appraisal. TILA does
not condition the consumer’s right to
receive a copy of each appraisal in an
HPML transaction on payment for the
appraisal. See TILA section 129H(c), 15
U.S.C. 1639h(c). Moreover, a statement
to this effect would directly contradict
the statutory prohibition against
charging for any second appraisal
required by the HPML appraisal rule.
See TILA section 129H(b)(2)(B), 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2)(B), implemented in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(v), discussed above.
Such a statement would also further
complicate the disclosure, potentially
increasing consumer confusion.
Regarding whether a creditor may
condition the consumer’s right to
receive a copy of an appraisal for a firstlien HPML transaction that is also
subject to ECOA, the Agencies believe
that the issue is more properly
addressed in the 2013 ECOA Appraisals
Final Rule.94
The Agencies also decline to revise
the appraisal notice to state that the
creditor may charge the consumer for
additional copies. The proposed notice,
as adopted, refers to the obligation to
provide ‘‘a copy,’’ singular. Consumer
testing did not suggest consumers were
likely to believe that they had a right to
multiple free copies, and it is unclear
that borrowers frequently or even
regularly request multiple copies of the
appraisals. The Agencies believe that
consumer understanding is best
enhanced by keeping the disclosure as
simple as possible, in part by excluding
nonessential information.
Potential for consumer expectations
regarding creditor use of a borrowerordered appraisal. The proposed
disclosure stated: ‘‘You can pay for an
additional appraisal for your own use at
your own cost.’’ As noted, several
commenters expressed concerns that
this statement might create
misunderstandings about whether the
creditor has an obligation to consider an
appraisal ordered by a consumer. Some
commenters suggested additional
language to address the issue.
The Agencies are not adopting
additional language for the disclosure
on this issue. Consumer testing on
iterations of the disclosure language did
not indicate that the proposed notice
would mislead borrowers into believing
that creditors are required to consider
94 Regulation B currently does not require a
creditor to provide an appraisal before the borrower
pays for it. 12 CFR 1002.14(a)(2)(ii). The Bureau’s
2012 ECOA Appraisals Proposal would have
eliminated this aspect of Regulation B, however.
See 77 FR 50390, 50403 (Aug. 21, 2012). The
Bureau adopted this change in the 2013 ECOA
Appraisals Final Rule. See new § 1002.14(a)(1).

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borrower-ordered appraisals. The
language concerning use of a borrowerordered appraisal evolved during the
consumer testing, to reduce confusion.
One version of language the Bureau
tested contained no suggestion as to the
use of borrower-ordered appraisals:
‘‘You can choose to pay for your own
appraisal of the property.’’ 95 Consumers
participating in the testing had
difficulty understanding the purpose of
this language; moreover, industry
testing participants noted a concern that
consumers might take it to mean that
the consumer could order the
consumer’s own appraisal to be used by
the creditor in lieu of the creditorordered appraisal.96 The Bureau
subsequently modified the language to
add the ‘‘for your own use’’ language,97
and this is the language the Agencies
proposed. The Agencies believe that the
phrase, ‘‘for your own use,’’ is succinct
and enhances consumer understanding
that an appraisal ordered by the
consumer is not a substitute for the
appraisal ordered by the creditor.
In addition, the Agencies do not wish
to include language in a disclosure that
might inadvertently discourage
consumers from questioning the
appraisal report ordered by the creditor
and providing the creditor with any
supporting information that may be
relevant to the question of the property’s
value.
The Agencies also recognize that
creditors are subject to existing Federal
regulatory and supervisory regulations
and requirements that provide
additional guidance to creditors about
appropriate and inappropriate use of
borrower-ordered appraisals. To affirm
these existing requirements, the final
rule states in comment 35(c)(5)(i)–2 that
nothing in the text of the consumer
notice required by § 1026.35(c)(5)
should be construed to affect, modify,
limit, or supersede the operation of any
legal, regulatory, or other requirements
or standards relating to independence in
the conduct of appraisers or the
prohibitions against use of borrowerordered appraisals by creditors.
Finally, comment 35(c)(5)(i)–1 reflects
without change a proposed comment
clarifying that when two or more
consumers apply for a loan subject to
this section, the creditor is required to
give the disclosure to only one of the
consumers. This interpretation is
consistent with the statutory language
95 Kleimann Communication Group, Inc., Know
Before You Owe: Evolution of the Integrated TILARESPA Disclosures (July 9, 2012), at 254–56 (Round
9, Version 1).
96 Id.
97 This language was included in the disclosure
testing in Round 10.

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requiring the creditor to provide a
disclosure to ‘‘the applicant.’’ This
interpretation is also consistent with
comment 14(a)(2)(i)–1 in Regulation B,
which interprets the requirement in
§ 1002.14(a)(2)(i) that creditors notify
applicants of the right to receive copies
of appraisals. 12 CFR 1002.14(a)(2) and
comment 14(a)(2)(i)–1. This aspect of
existing Regulation B is retained in the
Bureau’s 2013 ECOA Appraisals Final
Rule, in § 1002.14(a)(1) and comment
14(a)–1.
35(c)(5)(ii) Timing of Disclosure
TILA section 129H(d) requires that
the appraisal notice be provided at the
time of the application. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(d). Consistent with this
requirement, and recognizing that the
‘‘higher-risk’’ status of the proposed
loan would not necessarily be
determined at the precise moment of the
application, the Agencies proposed to
require that the TILA section 129H
notice ‘‘be mailed or delivered not later
than the third business day after the
creditor receives the consumer’s
application.’’ The proposed requirement
also stated that, if the notice is not
provided to the consumer in person, the
consumer is presumed to have received
the notice three days after its mailing or
delivery.
The final rule adopts this provision
with two changes. First, the final rule
omits the proposed language providing
that ‘‘[i]f the disclosure is not provided
to the consumer in person, the
consumer is presumed to have received
the disclosure three business days after
they are mailed or delivered.’’ While
commenters did not address the issue,
the Agencies have concluded that the
date of consumer receipt in this context
is not relevant. By contrast, as discussed
in the section-by-section analysis for
§ 1026.35(c)(6), below, the Agencies
emphasize in the final rule the
relevance of the date that a consumer
receives the copy of the appraisal.
Second, the final rule provides that, in
the case of an application for a loan that
is not an HPML at the time of
application, but whose rate is set at an
HPML level after application, the
disclosure must be delivered or placed
in the mail not later than the third
business day after the creditor
determines that the loan is an HPML.
Public Comments on the Proposal
In the proposal, the Agencies asked
for comment on whether providing the
notification at some other time would be
more beneficial to consumers, and how
the notification should be provided
when an application is submitted by
telephone, facsimile, or electronically.

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
The Agencies further asked whether, in
cases such as in-person or telephone
applications, the notice should be
provided at the time the application is
received, or as part of the application.
The Agencies also requested comment
on whether a creditor who has a
reasonable belief that the transaction
will not be a ‘‘higher-risk mortgage
loan’’ (now, HPML) at the time of
application, but later determines that
the applicant only qualifies for an
HPML, should be allowed an
opportunity to give the notice at some
later time in the application process.
Timing issues for the HPML appraisal
notice. The majority of commenters—
banks, major industry trade
associations, and a software and
document service provider—supported
a timing requirement that would allow
them to integrate the HPML appraisal
notice into the TILA-RESPA Loan
Estimate (as proposed in the 2012 TILARESPA Proposal 98), using the same
disclosure timing requirement as
proposed for that disclosure—within
three business days after the
application. This timing requirement is
consistent with the Agencies’ proposal
for the HPML disclosure. These
commenters offered three reasons why
an earlier deadline would be
inappropriate:
• The trade associations and the
service provider noted that the lender
cannot charge an appraisal fee before
the TILA Good Faith Estimate (GFE) is
disclosed and the consumer elects to
proceed. See § 1026.19(a)(1)(ii) As a
result, there is no value to an appraisal
notice that precedes the TILA GFE.
• One of the banks asserted that it
would be difficult for a creditor to
comply with a deadline for the notice
that is any earlier than the TILA GFE
disclosure deadline, because the rate
and therefore ‘‘higher-risk mortgage’’
status of a loan is not typically known
earlier. Similarly, the service provider
also added that it would be unrealistic
to expect the creditor to determine the
status while the applicant is submitting
the application.
• The service provider also noted that
consumers prefer integrated disclosures.
Two community banks and a State
bank trade association submitted
substantially identical comments
opposing the three-business-day
deadline, however. These commenters
argued that complying with the notice
requirement in the first few days after
the application will slow the loan
approval process and increase loan
costs. These commenters called instead
for a 10 business day deadline.
98 77

FR 51116 (Aug. 23, 2012).

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No commenters responded to the
question in the proposed rule of
whether the notice should be provided
at the time the application is received,
or as part of the application.
Potential need for a mechanism to
provide the notice later. Two banks, a
credit union trade association at the
State level, and a service provider
supported including a method in the
rule for a creditor to comply with the
disclosure requirement if the loan is
determined to be an HPML after the
time of application. For example, if the
rate were not locked, HPML status could
arise later in the application process
when the rate is set. One large bank
noted, however, that if the language in
the notice under this rule is the same as
in the ECOA notice, then there would be
no need to allow this type of cure right
for loans that are subject to ECOA (i.e.,
first-lien dwelling-secured HPMLs).
Discussion
Again, under § 1026.35(c)(5)(ii) of the
final rule, the disclosure required under
§ 1026.35(c)(5)(i) shall be delivered or
placed in the mail no later than the
third business day after the creditor
receives the consumer’s application for
a higher-priced mortgage loan subject to
§ 1026.35(c). In the case of a loan that
is not a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to § 1026.35(c) at the time of
application, but becomes a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to
§ 1026.35(c) after application, the
disclosure must be delivered or placed
in the mail not later than the third
business day after the creditor
determines that the loan is a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to
§ 1026.35(c).
Timing issues for the HPML appraisal
notice. In § 1026.35(c)(5)(ii), the final
rule adopts the proposed timing
requirement of three business days after
application. Congress did not define the
statutory phrase ‘‘at the time of the
application’’ when describing when the
HRM appraisal notice must be provided.
The Agencies believe that the threebusiness-day timeframe in the proposed
rule is a reasonable and appropriate
interpretation of the statute. As noted,
commenters generally supported a
timeframe that would allow for
including the notice in the proposed
combined TILA-RESPA Loan Estimate,
which would be provided within three
business days after the application. No
commenter suggested that the Agencies
should mandate either an earlier or
separate notice. Industry commenters
correctly pointed out that the appraisal
charge cannot be levied prior to the
TILA GFE (and, as proposed, the TILARESPA Loan Estimate) being provided

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10413

in any event. As a result, it appears
unlikely that creditors would order
appraisals before this time, so
consumers would not appear to have a
significant need to receive the appraisal
notice either earlier or separately from
the GFE or Loan Estimate. Adding new
separate notices could increase the
volume of information consumers
receive, and potentially decrease
consumer understanding.
The Agencies decline to adopt a
timing requirement of more than three
business days after application, as some
commenters suggested. The statute
requires that the disclosure be provided
‘‘at application,’’ and a three-businessday timing requirement implementing
this would be consistent with the
application-related disclosure
requirements of other residential
mortgage rules, most notably the current
GFE and proposed TILA-RESPA Loan
Estimate discussed above. See, e.g.,
§ 1026.19(a)(1)(i); 77 FR 51116 (Aug. 23,
2012).
Potential need for a mechanism to
provide the notice later. As one
commenter noted, clarification may be
needed on how a creditor could comply
with the notice requirement when the
loan becomes an HPML more than three
days after application due to the higherpriced rate being set at a later date. As
one commenter noted, this clarification
would not be necessary for first-lien
loans. ECOA, as implemented in
Regulation B of the Bureau’s 2013 ECOA
Appraisals Final Rule, requires notice
within three business days after
application for all first-lien dwellingsecured loans, regardless of whether
they are HPMLs. ECOA section
701(e)(5), 15 U.S.C. 1691(e)(5); 2013
ECOA Appraisals Final Rule
§ 1002.14(a)(1). Further, the HPML
appraisal notice is integrated with the
ECOA appraisal notice. See 2013 ECOA
Appraisals Final Rule, § 1002.14(b) and
appendix C, Form C–9. As the final rule
makes clear, by complying with the
ECOA notice requirement, the creditor
would automatically comply with the
HPML appraisal notice requirement,
even if the creditor had not yet
determined that the loan would be an
HPML. Again, § 1026.35(c)(5)(i)
provides that ‘‘[c]ompliance with the
disclosure requirement in Regulation B
§ 1002.14(a)(2) satisfies the
requirements of [the HPML appraisal
disclosure requirement of
§ 1026.35(c)(5)(i)].’’
By contrast, the ECOA appraisal
notice requirement does not apply to
subordinate-lien loans. Thus, for
subordinate-lien mortgage creditors, a
rate increase that occurs more than three
business days after application (i.e.,

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after the required HPML appraisal rule
disclosure should have been given)
could trigger the HPML notice
requirement. Accordingly, the Agencies
are adopting additional regulation text
providing that a creditor may issue the
HPML appraisal notice within three
business days of determining the rate.
35(c)(6) Copy of Appraisals
35(c)(6)(i) In General
Consistent with TILA section 129H(c),
the proposal required that a creditor
must provide a copy of any written
appraisal performed in connection with
a higher-risk mortgage loan (now HPML)
to the applicant. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(c). A
proposed comment clarified that when
two or more consumers apply for a loan
subject to this section, the creditor is
required to give the copy of required
appraisals to only one of the consumers.
The Agencies received no comments
on these aspects of the proposal and, in
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(i) and comment
35(c)(6)(i)–1, adopt them without
change.

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35(c)(6)(ii) Timing
TILA section 129H(c) requires that the
appraisal copy must be provided to the
consumer at least three days prior to the
transaction closing date. 15 U.S.C.
1639h(c). The proposal required
creditors to provide copies of written
appraisals no later than ‘‘three business
days’’ prior to consummation of the
higher-risk mortgage loan (now HPML).
The Agencies did not receive public
comment on this aspect of the proposal,
but are making certain changes to the
proposal, explained below. Specifically,
the Agencies have revised the proposed
timing requirement to include a timing
rule for loans that are not consummated.
Thus, under new § 1026.35(c)(6)(ii),
creditors must provide a copy of an
appraisal required under
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(i):
• No later than three business days
prior to consummation of the higherpriced mortgage loan; or
• In the case of a loan that is not
consummated, no later than 30 days
after the creditor determines that the
loan will not be consummated.
For consistency with the other
provisions of Regulation Z, the proposal
also used the term ‘‘consummation’’
instead of the statutory term ‘‘closing’’
that is used in TILA section 129H(c). 15
U.S.C. 1639h(c). The term
‘‘consummation’’ is defined in
§ 1026.2(a)(13) as the time that a
consumer becomes contractually
obligated on a credit transaction. The
Agencies have interpreted the two terms
as having the same meaning for the

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purpose of implementing TILA section
129H. 15 U.S.C. 1639h. The Agencies
did not receive comment on this aspect
of the proposal, and adopt the proposed
term ‘‘consummation’’ in
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(ii).
As noted, TILA’s requirement for
when a creditor must give a copy of the
appraisal to the consumer is ‘‘at least 3
days prior to the transaction closing
date.’’ TILA section 129H(c), 15 U.S.C.
1639h(c). Thus, the timing requirement
is clear for consummated loans.
The Agencies interpret the statute,
however, to require that a copy of the
appraisal also be given to HPML
applicants when their loans do not close
because they are denied or withdrawn,
or for any other reason. In reaching this
interpretation, the Agencies note that
TILA section 129H specifies that the
appraisal copy shall be provided ‘‘to the
applicant,’’ without suggesting that only
applicants whose loans are closed are
entitled to a copy. In addition, the
requirement refers to appraisals that are
‘‘conducted,’’ a term whose meaning is
independent of whether the loan closes.
In the case of applicants’ loans that do
not close, the Agencies are adopting a
requirement that the appraisal be
provided ‘‘no later than 30 days after the
creditor determines that the loan will
not be consummated.’’
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(ii)(A). The Agencies
believe that this timing requirement is a
reasonable interpretation of the statute,
which is silent on the matter. The
timing requirement is clear, which the
Agencies believe will reduce
compliance burden and risks for
creditors, and generally consistent with
longstanding timing requirements for
providing copies of appraisals under
existing Regulation B, 12 CFR
1002.14(a)(2)(ii). The approach is also
reflected in the Bureau’s 2013 ECOA
Appraisals Final Rule in § 1002.14(a)(1).
In addition, as stated in the proposal,
the Agencies believe that requiring that
the appraisal be provided three
‘‘business’’ days in advance of
consummation is a reasonable
interpretation of the statute and is
consistent with the Agencies’
interpretation of the statutory term
‘‘days’’ used in the Bureau’s 2013 ECOA
Appraisals Final Rule, which
implements the appraisal requirements
of new ECOA section 701(e)(1). See 15
U.S.C. 1691(e)(1). The Agencies did not
receive comment on this aspect of the
proposal, and adopt the proposed
language ‘‘no later than three business
days prior to consummation’’ in
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(ii).
To ensure that the consumer actually
receives the appraisal in advance of
consummation so that the consumer can

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use it to inform the consumer’s credit
decision, comment 35(c)(6)(ii)–1
explains that, for purposes of the
requirement to provide a copy of the
appraisal three days before
consummation, ‘‘provide’’ means
‘‘deliver.’’ This comment further
explains that delivery occurs three
business days after mailing or delivering
the copies to the last-known address of
the applicant, or when evidence
indicates actual receipt by the applicant
(which, in the case of electronic receipt
must be based upon consent that
complies with the Electronic Signatures
in Global and National Commerce Act
(E-Sign Act) (15 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.)),
whichever is earlier. Comment
35(c)(6)(ii)–2 clarifies that, for
appraisals prepared by the creditor’s
internal appraisal staff, the date of
‘‘receipt’’ is the date on which the
appraisal is completed.
Finally, comment 35(c)(6)(ii)–3
clarifies that the ECOA provision
allowing a consumer to waive the
requirement that the appraisal copy be
provided three business days before
consummation, does not apply to
higher-priced mortgage loans subject to
§ 1026.35(c). ECOA section 701(e)(2), 15
U.S.C. 1691(e)(2), implemented in the
2013 ECOA Appraisals Final Rule,
Regulation B § 1002.14(a)(1). The
comment further clarifies that a
consumer of a higher-priced mortgage
loan subject to § 1026.35(c) may not
waive the timing requirement to receive
a copy of the appraisal under
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(i).
35(c)(6)(iii) Form of Copy
Section 1026.31(b) currently provides
that the disclosures required under
subpart E of Regulation Z may be
provided to the consumer in electronic
form, subject to compliance with the
consumer consent and other applicable
provisions of the E-Sign Act. In the
proposal, the Agencies stated their
belief that it is also appropriate to allow
creditors to provide applicants with
copies of written appraisals in
electronic form if the applicant consents
to receiving the copies in this form.
Accordingly, the proposal provided that
any copy of a written appraisal may be
provided to the applicant in electronic
form, subject to compliance with the
consumer consent and other applicable
provisions of the E-Sign Act.
Public Comments on the Proposal
Two commenters—a bank holding
company and a credit union—requested
that the final rule not impose the E-Sign
Act requirement of consumer consent to
receiving HPML appraisals
electronically. The first commenter

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indicated that challenges with the ESign Act compliance may result in
issuing a duplicate copy in paper form.
The second commenter indicated that
these challenges may lead institutions to
refuse to provide appraisal copies
electronically (to the detriment of those
consumers who prefer to receive them
this way). A third commenter—a credit
union trade association—supported the
option of electronic delivery, but did
not challenge the proposed E-Sign
consent requirement.

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Discussion
The E-Sign Act generally requires
that, before written consumer
disclosures are made electronically, the
consumer receive certain prescribed
notices and consent to the electronic
disclosures in a manner that reasonably
demonstrates the ability to access the
information that will be disclosed
electronically. The E-Sign Act generally
applies to statutes that require consumer
disclosures ‘‘in writing.’’ 15 U.S.C.
7001(c)(1). It is unclear from the
comments whether this E-Sign consent
requirement would place a significant
burden on creditors. The Agencies
continue to believe that the proposed
clarification that the E-Sign Act applies
to providing copies of the appraisal is
appropriate and notes that it is
consistent with the Bureau’s approach
in the 2013 ECOA Appraisals Final
Rule. Thus, in § 1026.35(c)(6)(iii), this
clarification is adopted as proposed.
35(c)(6)(iv) No Charge for Copy of
Appraisal
TILA section 129H(c) provides that a
creditor shall provide one copy of each
appraisal conducted in accordance with
this section in connection with a higherrisk mortgage to the applicant without
charge. 15 U.S.C. 1639h(c). In the
proposal, the Agencies interpreted this
provision to prohibit creditors from
charging consumers for providing a
copy of written appraisals required for
higher-risk mortgage loans. Accordingly,
the proposal provided that a creditor
must not charge the consumer for a copy
of a written appraisal required to be
provided to the consumer pursuant to
new § 1026.35(c)(6)(i).
A proposed comment clarified that
the creditor is prohibited from charging
the consumer for any copy of a required
appraisal, including by imposing a fee
specifically for a required copy of an
appraisal or by marking up the interest
rate or any other fees payable by the
consumer in connection with the
higher-risk mortgage loan.
The Agencies received no comments
on this aspect of the proposal and adopt
the proposed regulation text and

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comment without change in
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(iv) and comment
35(c)(6)(iv)–1.
35(c)(7) Relation to Other Rules
Section 1026.35(c)(7) clarifies that the
final rule was adopted jointly by the
Agencies. This provision states that the
Board is codifying the HPML appraisal
rules at 12 CFR 226.43 et seq.; the
Bureau is codifying the HPML appraisal
rules at 12 CFR 1026.35(a) and (c); and
the OCC is codifying the HPML
appraisal rules at 12 CFR Part 34 and 12
CFR Part 164. Section 1026.35(c)(7)
further clarifies that there is no
substantive difference among the three
sets of rules.
The NCUA and FHFA are adopting
the rules as published in the Bureau’s
Regulation Z at 12 CFR 1026.35(a) and
(c), by cross-referencing these rules in
12 CFR 722.3 and 12 CFR Part 1222,
respectively. The FDIC is adopting the
Bureau’s Regulation Z at 12 CFR
1026.35(a) and (c) without a crossreference.
As noted above at the beginning of the
section-by-section analysis, § 1026.35(a)
is re-published in the final rule for ease
of reference, and the joint rulemaking
authority extends to § 1026.35(c).
V. Bureau’s Section 1022(b)(2) Analysis
of the Dodd-Frank Act
Overview
In developing the final rule, the
Bureau has considered potential
benefits, costs, and impacts to
consumers and covered persons.99 The
Bureau is issuing this final rule jointly
with the Federal financial institutions
regulatory agencies and FHFA, and has
consulted with these agencies, HUD,
and the FTC, including regarding
consistency with any prudential,
market, or systemic objectives
administered by such agencies. The
Bureau also has considered the
comments filed by industry, consumer
groups, and others as described in the
section-by-section analysis. Data
received from commenters relating to
potential benefits and costs, such as the
cost of an appraisal, is discussed below.
As discussed above, the final rule
implements section 1471 of the DoddFrank Act, which establishes appraisal
requirements for certain HPMLs.
Consistent with the statute, the final
99 Specifically, Section 1022(b)(2)(A) calls for the
Bureau to consider the potential benefits and costs
of a regulation to consumers and covered persons,
including the potential reduction of access by
consumers to consumer financial products or
services; the impact on depository institutions and
credit unions with $10 billion or less in total assets
as described in section 1026 of the Act; and the
impact on consumers in rural areas.

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rule allows a creditor to originate a
covered HPML transaction only if the
following conditions are met:
• The creditor obtains a written
appraisal;
• The appraisal is performed by a
certified or licensed appraiser; and
• The appraiser conducts a physical
property visit of the interior of the
property.
In addition, as required by the Act,
the final rule requires a creditor in a
covered HPML transaction to obtain an
additional written appraisal, at no cost
to the borrower, if the transaction has
each of the following characteristics
(subject to certain exemptions, as
discussed below):
• The HPML will finance the
acquisition of the consumer’s principal
dwelling;
• The seller acquired the property
within 180 days prior to the consumer’s
purchase agreement (measured from the
date of the consumer’s purchase
agreement); and
• The consumer is acquiring the
home for a price that exceeds the price
at which the seller acquired the home
by more than 10 percent (if the seller
acquisition was within 90 days of the
consumer’s purchase agreement) or by
more than 20 percent (if the seller
acquisition was within the past 91 to
180 days of the consumer’s purchase
agreement).
The additional written appraisal, from
a different licensed or certified
appraiser, generally must include the
following information: an analysis of the
difference in sale prices (i.e., the price
at which the seller acquired the
property and the price at which the
consumer would acquire the property as
set forth in the consumer’s purchase
agreement), changes in market
conditions, and any improvements
made to the property between the date
of the previous sale and the current sale.
The final rule also requires that
within three days of the application, the
creditor provide the applicant with a
brief disclosure statement that the
creditor may charge the applicant for an
appraisal, that the creditor will provide
the applicant a copy of any appraisal,
and that the applicant may choose to
have a separate appraisal conducted at
the expense of the applicant. Finally,
the final rule requires that the creditor
provide the consumer with a free copy
of any written appraisals obtained for
the transaction at least three (3) business
days before consummation, or within 30
days of determining the transaction will
not be consummated.
In many respects, the final rule
codifies mortgage lenders’ current
practices. In outreach calls to industry,

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all respondents reported requiring the
use of full-interior appraisals in 95
percent or more of first-lien
transactions 100 and providing copies of
appraisals to borrowers as a matter of
course if such a loan is originated.101
The convention of using full-interior
appraisals on first liens has been
developing to improve underwriting
quality, and the implementation of this
rule would assure that the practice
would continue even under different
market conditions.
The Bureau notes that many of the
provisions in the final rule implement
self-effectuating amendments to TILA.
The costs and benefits of these
provisions arise largely or in some cases
entirely from the statute and not from
the rule that implements them. This rule
provides benefits compared to allowing
these TILA amendments to take effect
without implementing regulations,
however, by clarifying parts of the
statute that are ambiguous. Greater
clarity on these issues covered by the
rule should reduce the compliance
burdens on covered persons by reducing
costs for attorneys and compliance
officers as well as potential costs of
over-compliance and unnecessary
litigation.102
Section 1022 permits the Bureau to
consider the benefits, costs, and impacts
of the final rule solely compared to the
state of the world in which the statute
takes effect without an implementing
regulation. To provide the public better
information about the benefits and costs
of the statute, however, the Bureau has
chosen to consider the benefits, costs,
and impacts of the major provisions of
the final rule against a pre-statutory
baseline (i.e., the benefits, costs, and
impacts of the relevant provisions of the
Dodd-Frank Act and the regulation
combined).103
The Bureau has relied on a variety of
data sources to analyze the potential
benefits, costs, and impacts of the final
rule.104 However, in some instances, the
100 Respondents include a large bank, a trade
group of smaller depository institutions, a credit
union, and an independent mortgage bank.
101 Respondents include a large bank, a trade
group of smaller depository institutions, and an
independent mortgage bank.
102 While it is possible that some clarifications
would put greater burdens on creditors as compared
to what the statute would ultimately be found to
mandate, the Bureau believes that the rule’s
clarifying provisions generally mitigate burden.
103 The Bureau has discretion in any rulemaking
to choose an appropriate scope of analysis with
respect to potential benefits and costs and an
appropriate baseline. The Bureau, as a matter of
discretion, has chosen to describe a broader range
of potential effects to more fully inform the
rulemaking.
104 The estimates in this analysis are based upon
data and statistical analyses performed by the

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requisite data are not available or are
quite limited. Data with which to
quantify the benefits of the rule are
particularly limited. As a result,
portions of this analysis rely in part on
general economic principles to provide
a qualitative discussion of the benefits,
costs, and impacts of the rule.
The primary source of data used in
this analysis is data collected under the
Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA).105 Because the latest wave of
Bureau. To estimate counts and properties of
mortgages for entities that do not report under the
Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA), the Bureau
has matched HMDA data to Call Report data and
National Mortgage Licensing System (NMLS) and
has statistically projected estimated loan counts for
those depository institutions that do not report
these data either under HMDA or on the NCUA call
report. The Bureau has projected originations of
higher-priced mortgage loans for depositories that
do not report HMDA in a similar fashion. These
projections use Poisson regressions that estimate
loan volumes as a function of an institution’s total
assets, employment, mortgage holdings, and
geographic presence. Neither HMDA nor the Call
Report data have loan level estimates of debt-toincome (DTI) ratios that, in some cases, determine
whether a loan is a qualified mortgage. To estimate
these figures, the Bureau has matched the HMDA
data to data on the historic-loan-performance (HLP)
dataset provided by the FHFA. This allows
estimation of coefficients in a probit model to
predict DTI using loan amount, income, and other
variables. This model is then used to estimate DTI
for loans in HMDA.
105 HMDA, enacted by Congress in 1975, as
implemented by the Bureau’s Regulation C requires
lending institutions annually to report public loanlevel data regarding mortgage originations. For more
information, see http://www.ffiec.gov/hmda. It
should be noted that not all mortgage lenders report
HMDA data. The HMDA data capture roughly 90–
95 percent of lending by the FHA and 75–85
percent of other first-lien home loans, in both cases
including first liens on manufactured homes (which
in some cases are subject to the final rule). HUD,
Office of Policy Development and Research (2011),
‘‘A Look at the FHA’s Evolving Market Shares by
Race and Ethnicity,’’ U.S. Housing Market
Conditions (May), pp. 6–12. Depository institutions
(including credit unions) with assets less than $40
million (in 2011), for example, and those with
branches exclusively in non-metropolitan areas and
those that make no home purchase loan or loan
refinancing a home purchase loan secured by a first
lien on a dwelling, are not required to report under
HMDA. Reporting requirements for non-depository
institutions depend on several factors, including
whether the company made fewer than 100 home
purchase loans or refinancings of home purchase
loans, the dollar volume of mortgage lending as
share of total lending, and whether the institution
had at least five applications, originations, or
purchased loans from metropolitan areas. Robert B.
Avery, Neil Bhutta, Kenneth P. Brevoort & Glenn B.
Canner, The Mortgage Market in 2011: Highlights
from the Data Reported under the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act, 98 Fed. Res. Bull., December 2012,
n.6. In addition, HMDA data used in this analysis
does not include transactions secured by properties
located in U.S. territories, or refinance transactions
where the existing loan is already a refinance or a
subordinate lien. Although the TILA HRM rule
would apply to otherwise covered HPMLs in these
categories, the Bureau does not believe there are a
high number of transactions in these categories. To
the extent this gap understates costs, that effect will
be at least partially offset by the overstatement
resulting from including other data on transactions
that are not subject to the rule.

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complete data available is for loans
made in calendar year 2011, the
empirical analysis generally uses the
2011 market as the baseline. Data from
the 4th quarter 2011 bank and thrift Call
Reports,106 the 4th quarter 2011 credit
union call reports from the NCUA, and
de-identified data from the National
Mortgage Licensing System (NMLS)
Mortgage Call Reports (MCR) 107 for the
4th quarter of 2011 also were used to
identify financial institutions and their
characteristics. Most of the analysis
relies on a dataset that merges this
depository institution financial data
from Call Reports with the data from
HMDA including HPML counts that are
created from the loan-level HMDA
dataset. The unit of observation in this
analysis is the entity: if there are
multiple subsidiaries of a parent
company, then their originations are
summed and revenues are total
revenues for all subsidiaries.
Other portions of the analysis rely on
property-level data regarding parcels
and their related financing from
DataQuick 108 and on data on the
location of certified appraisers from the
Appraisal Subcommittee Registry.109
106 Every national bank, State member bank, and
insured nonmember bank is required by its primary
Federal regulator to file consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income, also known as Call Report
data, for each quarter as of the close of business on
the last day of each calendar quarter (the report
date). The specific reporting requirements depend
upon the size of the bank and whether it has any
foreign offices. For more information, see http://
www2.fdic.gov/call_tfr_rpts/.
107 The NMLS is a national registry of nondepository financial institutions including mortgage
loan originators. Portions of the registration
information are public. The Mortgage Call Report
data are reported at the institution level and include
information on the number and dollar amount of
loans originated, and the number and dollar amount
of loans brokered. The Bureau noted in its Summer
2012 mortgage proposals that it sought to obtain
additional data to supplement its consideration of
the rulemakings, including additional data from the
NMLS and the NMLS Mortgage Call Report, loan
file extracts from various lenders, and data from the
pilot phases of the National Mortgage Database.
Each of these data sources was not necessarily
relevant to each of the rulemakings. The Bureau
used the additional data from NMLS and NMLS
Mortgage Call Report data to better corroborate its
estimate the contours of the non-depository
segment of the mortgage market. The Bureau has
received loan file extracts from three lenders, but
at this point, the data from one lender is not usable
and the data from the other two is not sufficiently
standardized nor representative to inform
consideration of the final rule. Additionally, the
Bureau has thus far not yet received data from the
National Mortgage Database pilot phases. The
Bureau also requested that commenters submit
relevant data. All probative data submitted by
commenters are discussed in this final rule.
108 DataQuick is a database of property
characteristics on more than 120 million properties
and 250 million property transactions.
109 The National Registry is a database containing
selected information about State certified and
licensed real estate appraisers and is publicly

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Tabulations of the DataQuick data are
used for estimation of the frequency of
properties being sold within 180 days of
a previous sale. The Appraisal
Subcommittee’s Registry is used to
describe the availability of appraisers.
Potential Benefits of the Rule for
Covered Persons and Consumers
In a mortgage transaction, the
appraisal helps the creditor avoid
lending based on an inflated valuation
of the property, and similarly helps
consumers avoid borrowing based upon
an inflated valuation. Assuming that
full-interior appraisals conducted by a
certified or licensed appraiser are more
accurate than other valuation methods,
the rule would improve the quality of
home valuations for those transactions
where such an appraisal would not be
performed currently. While the
appraisal is used by the creditor, the
improved valuation also can prevent
inflated valuations that would lead
consumers to borrowing that would not
be supported by their true home value,
as well as deflated valuations (such as
those that do not value an interior
which is of different than average
quality) that can lead consumers to be
eligible for a narrower class of loan
products that are priced less
advantageously. The requirement that a
second appraisal be conducted in
certain circumstances would further
reduce the likelihood of an inflated
sales price for those transactions.
Benefits to covered persons.
Transactions where the collateral is
overvalued expose the creditor to higher
default risk. By tightening valuation
standards for a class of transactions that
are already priced as higher-risk
transactions, the rule may reduce both
the risk of default for creditors, as well
as more accurately value the collateral
available to the creditor in the event of
default. Furthermore, by requiring the
use of full interior appraisals in
transactions involving covered HPMLs,
the statute prevents creditors from
attempting to compete on price by using
less costly and possibly less accurate
valuation methods in underwriting.
Eliminating the ability to use lower-cost
valuation methods, and thereby
eliminating price competition on this
component of the transaction, may
benefit firms that prefer to employ more
thorough valuation methods.
Benefits to consumers. The final rule
ensures that covered HPML transactions
will have a written interior appraisal,
and in some cases a second written
interior appraisal, and that consumers
available at https://www.asc.gov/National-Registry/
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will receive an appraisal notice and a
copy of these appraisals. These
requirements will mostly benefit
consumers whose transactions would
not already have written interior
appraisals a copy of which they receive.
The benefits enjoyed by these
consumers are described below.
Individual consumers engage in real
estate transactions infrequently, so
developing the expertise to value real
estate is costly and consumers often rely
on experts, such as real estate agents, as
well as on list prices, to make price
determinations. These methods may not
lead a consumer to an accurate
valuation of a property they intend to
purchase. For example, there is
evidence that real estate agents sell their
own homes for significantly more than
other similar homes, which suggests
that consumers may not be able to
accurately price the homes that they are
selling.110 Other research, this time in a
laboratory setting, provides evidence
that individuals are sensitive to anchor
values when estimating home prices.111
In such cases, an independent signal of
the value of the home should benefit the
consumer. Having a professional
valuation as a point of reference may
help consumers who are applying for a
HPML to gain a more accurate
understanding of the home’s value and
improve overall market efficiency,
relative to the case where the knowledge
of true valuations is more limited.112
While the consumer can order an
appraisal voluntarily at any time, an
especially valuable time for the
consumer to receive a copy of an
appraisal is before closing an HPML—
whether it is for a home purchase, a
refinance, or a home improvement.
Undoubtedly, some consumers are
aware of the benefits of an appraisal,
and could have decided for themselves
whether they want to pay for it if one
was not required or otherwise prepared
and provided under standard industry
practice. However, other consumers
may be unaware of the benefits of an
110 Levitt, Steven and Chad Syverson. ‘‘Market
Distortions When Agents are Better Informed: The
Value of Information In Real Estate Transactions.’’
The Review of Economics and Statistics 90 no. 4
(2008): 599–611.
111 Scott, Peter and Colin Lizieri. ‘‘Consumer
House Price Judgments: New Evidence of
Anchoring and Arbitrary Coherence.’’ Journal of
Property Research 29 no. 1 (2012): 49–68.
112 For example, in Quan and Quigley’s
theoretical model where buyers and sellers have
incomplete information, trades are decentralized,
and prices are the result of pairwise bargaining,
‘‘[t]he role of the appraiser is to provide information
so that the variance of the price distribution is
reduced.’’ Quan, Daniel and John Quigley. ‘‘Price
Formation and the Appraisal Function in Real
Estate Markets.’’ Journal of Real Estate Finance and
Economics 4 (1991): 127–146.

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appraisal in terms of improving
accuracy of a home valuation, and to
these consumers the rule is especially
valuable in an HPML transaction that
would not otherwise include an
appraisal. Moreover, even the
consumers who are aware of the benefits
would not be able to use the selfordered appraisal for any transactions
with creditors, since those require
creditor-ordered valuations.
The Bureau believes that ensuring
HPML borrowers receive appraisals
ensures that they will have more
accurate information about the value of
their dwelling, and therefore about their
net worth and whether they have any
equity in their dwelling. For
transactions that would already include
the appraisal, the rule ensures that in
similar transactions consumers will
continue to have an appraisal; for other
transactions, the rule will result in the
appraisal. In either case, more accurate
information leads to better decisions
and can lead to more investment in the
property in some cases by removing the
uncertainty over the value of the
dwelling. The appraisal may also help
to inform the consumer of whether they
may be overpaying for the property with
a new home purchase, about to invest
more into a property that might be
valued at less than they think with a
home improvement loan, or about to
pay the refinance cost on a property that
they should sell instead. The latter two
points are especially valuable for
consumers who are in negative equity,
or ‘‘underwater’’ situations (where the
loan amount exceeds the value of the
dwelling). A consumer who finds out
that she is not underwater, when she
thought that she might have been, has
an incentive to continue investing in the
property and make sure that she does
not lose it in foreclosure or otherwise
default. Conversely, a consumer who
finds out that he is underwater, when he
thought that he might not have been,
might have second thoughts about any
investments, and will potentially want
to pursue loss mitigation options or, if
they do not succeed and the consumer
is facing financial difficulties or default,
agree on a short-sale or on a deed-in-lieu
of foreclosure with the creditor.
Aside from the aforementioned
decisions, depending on the alternative
valuation, an appraisal can help the
consumer to lower their property tax, to
forgo private mortgage insurance (PMI),
and to choose the correct property value
for insurance purposes. A lower loan-tovalue (LTV) ratio might also result in a
lower interest rate on the loan, all else
equal, as discussed further below.
Again, the final rule ensures these
benefits are available to consumers in

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transactions that do not currently have
appraisals or provide copies to
applicants.
If a borrower is prepared to pay an
inflated price for a property, then an
appraisal that reflects its value more
accurately may prevent the transaction
from being completed at the inflated
price and consequently, at a higher loan
amount, which would be more costly to
the consumer who, in the case of an
HPML borrower, also may have fewer
resources to repay the loan. This is
particularly true when considering that
transactions subject to the rule will be
those HPMLs that are not qualified
mortgages, and which therefore may
involve higher points, greater fees, or a
higher debt-to-income ratio, among
other differences. In addition to the
direct costs of paying more than the true
value for a property, buying an
overvalued property is associated with
higher risk of default. If a property that
is sold shortly after its previous sale is
more likely to have an inflated price,
since it may have been purchased the
first time with the intention to improve
the property quickly and resell it for a
profit, the additional appraisal
requirement also would help ensure an
accurate estimate of the value of the
property. This would be particularly
true in transactions involving fraudulent
flipping using an inadequate or
improperly performed first appraisal.113
Ensuring a more accurate valuation of a
flipped property might be especially
valuable to a consumer when borrowing
an HPML (due to its higher price). In the
case of subordinate-lien transactions,
the full-interior appraisal requirement
may prevent borrowers on HPMLs from
extracting too much equity if their
property is overvalued by other
valuation methods. Accordingly, the
appraisals required by the final rule
could reduce the chance consumers
would be in a negative equity or near
negative equity situation, which can
limit refinancing and selling
opportunities.
At the same time, if a borrower is
prepared to take out an HPML based
upon the creditor’s use of a valuation
other than an interior appraisal, that
valuation may be less likely to take into
account unique characteristics of the
subject property, such as its setting in
the immediate neighborhood, its views,
the quality of the exterior or the
residential structure, or its interior
condition. For borrowers where direct
assessments of those characteristics
113 Congress

has noted a concern, for example,
that parties to a flipping transaction ‘‘can often find
an appraiser to inflate the home’s value.’’ H.Rep.
111–94 (May 4, 2009) at 59.

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would have improved the valuation, the
price of the loan may be based upon an
LTV ratio that is overstated, and the
loan may be overpriced to the extent
that higher LTVs correlate with higherpriced loans.
The final rule also may support
greater consumer choice in HPML
transactions, to the extent new creditors
treat the appraisals required as portable.
For example, the FHA has taken steps
to ensure appraisal portability in the
situation of an ‘‘applicant who has
gotten to the appraisal stage of the home
loan process, but’’ the applicant decides
he or she is ‘‘dissatisfied with [the]
lender and decide[s] to find a new
one.’’ 114 The final rule ensures that if
consumers would not otherwise have an
appraisal in HPML transactions for
which they have applied, then they will
have an appraisal that may be able to be
used in alternative transactions that the
consumer may pursue.
Codifying HPML valuation standards
across the industry likely would
simplify the shopping process for
consumers who receive HPML offers.
First, for consumers in HPML
transactions that would not have
otherwise included an appraisal, the
appraisals required by the rule may help
to improve consumers’ understanding of
the determinants of the value of the
property that they intend to purchase. In
cases where a loan is denied due to an
appraiser valuing the property at less
than the contract price, the appraisal
will include support for its findings of
the lower value, which may help the
consumer in future negotiations or
property searches. Second, codifying
appraisal standards across the industry
would simplify the shopping process for
consumers by making the process of
applying for HPMLs more consistent
between lenders. Full-interior appraisals
typically cost more than other valuation
methods, and appraisal costs are often
passed on to consumers. Consumers
may not understand the differences
between different valuation methods or
know that different creditors will use
different methods, and therefore may
benefit from the standardization the rule
can be expected to promote.
The final rule also will ensure that
borrowers in covered HPML
transactions involving subordinate liens
receive a notice informing them about
the appraisal process, of their ability to
order their own appraisal, and that they
will receive copies of any appraisals at
least three business days prior to the
114 See FHA FAQ ‘‘Are FHA Home Loan
Appraisals Portable?’’ available at http://
www.fha.com/fha_article.cfm?id=350, citing FHA
Mortgagee Letter 09–29 (Sept. 18, 2009) (stating that
FHA programs allow for appraisal portability).

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consummation. Under ECOA section
701(e) and its implementing rules,
applicants in transactions secured by a
first lien on a dwelling will receive this
notice and a copy of an appraisal; under
this provision in the statute and the
Bureau’s 2013 ECOA Appraisals Final
Rule, which takes effect on January 18,
2014, these requirements do not apply
to subordinate lien transactions,
however. The final rule fills this gap for
borrowers on covered HPMLs, ensuring
they are better informed prior to
entering into subordinate lien loans,
such as for home improvement purposes
and other common purposes.
Potential Costs of the Rule for Covered
Persons
The costs of the rule, which are
predominantly related to compliance,
are more readily quantifiable than the
benefits and can be calculated based on
the mix of loans originated by an entity
and the number of employees at that
entity. These compliance costs may be
considered as the discrete tasks that
would be required by the rule. These
can be separated into costs that are
associated with the origination of a
single HPML and the costs of reviewing
and implementing the regulation.
Costs per HPML. The costs of the rule
for covered persons that derive from
requirements to obtain appraisals
depend on the number of appraisals that
would be conducted, above and beyond
current practice, and the degree to
which those costs are passed to
consumers. For HMDA reporters, counts
of HPMLs that are purchase-money
loans, first-lien refinance loans, or
closed-end subordinate lien loans are
computed from the loan-level HMDA
data. Accepted statistical methods are
used to project loan counts for nonHMDA reporting depository
institutions.115 Estimates of the number
of loan officers are calculated from
similar projections of applications per
institution.
The calculation of costs for IMBs uses
a slightly different approach.116
Consistent with the results from HMDAreporting IMBs, the Bureau estimates
the costs to IMBs by multiplying a cost
per loan by the total number of loans
originated by IMBs. To obtain a count of
full-time equivalent employees, this
number is imputed for HMDA-reporting
IMBs based on the number of
115 Poisson regressions are run, projecting loan
volumes in these categories on the natural log of
characteristics available in the Call Reports (total 1–
4 family residential loan volume outstanding, fulltime equivalent employees, and assets), separately
for each category of depository institutions.
116 ‘‘Independent Mortgage Bank’’ refers to nondepository mortgage lenders.

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applications (assuming 1.38 days per
loan application).117
Based on these data sources, the
Bureau estimates that there were
approximately 292,000 HPMLs in 2011.
Of these, the Bureau estimates that
146,000 were purchase-money
mortgages, 116,000 were first-lien
refinancings, and 30,000 were closedend subordinate lien mortgages that
were not part of a purchase
transaction.118 Due to the exemptions
from the rule, only a subset of HPMLs
will be covered by the rule. Qualified
mortgages, for example, are exempt from
the final rule, as are reverse mortgages,
loans for initial construction, temporary
bridge loans, and new manufactured
housing sales.119 Conservatively, the
Bureau is preparing this estimate based
upon a loan count without subtracting
construction loans, temporary bridge
loans, loans for new manufactured
housing, or reverse mortgages. While
these loans are exempt from the final
rule, the data sources do not separately
break them out and nationallyrepresentative data on the number of
loans that fall into these specific
categories and also meet the HPML
definition is not available.120
Subtracting only those HPMLs that
would be qualified mortgages under
Regulation Z, § 1026.43(e) 121 results in
117 Sumit Agarwal and Faye Wang, Perverse
Incentives at the Banks? Evidence from Loan
Officers (Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Working
Paper 2009–08).
118 Purchase-money mortgages include
subordinate-lien HPMLs that were part of a
purchase transaction. The Bureau assumes that
these loans were part of a transaction where the
first-lien mortgage was not a HPML; to the extent
that any of these subordinate-lien purchase-money
HPMLs were part of a transaction where the first
lien mortgage was a HPML the costs imposed by the
rule would be double-counted. First-lien
refinancings include loans classified as first-lien
‘‘home improvement’’ loans in HMDA.
119 Very conservatively, the PRA burden estimates
for Agencies other than the Bureau do not estimate
and exclude the number of HPMLs that are
qualified mortgages. By contrast, based upon data
available to it, the Bureau does so in this section
1022 analysis and its Regulatory Flexibility Act
certification.
120 Similarly, no subtractions are made for boats,
trailers, or mobile homes, which also are exempt
from the final rule. The Bureau also notes that
HMDA data includes same-creditor refinances with
lower rates and new payment schedules, within the
meaning of 12 CFR 1026.20(a)(2). For purposes of
this analysis, the Bureau assumes the final rule
applies to those transactions, which the HMDA data
also does not segregate. This assumption also
accounts for the fact that these transactions would
not be qualified mortgages, under Regulation Z
comment 43(a)–1 adopted in the 2013 ATR Final
Rule.
121 The final rule exempts all loans that would
meet one or more of the definitions of qualified
mortgage in § 1026.43(e). See also 2013 ATR Final
Rule, available at http://consumerfinance.gov.
These loans are therefore excluded from the HPML
count.

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a loan count of approximately 26,000
HPMLs that are not qualified mortgages,
12,000 of which were purchase-money
mortgages, 12,000 of which were firstlien refinancings, and 2,000 of which
were closed-end subordinate lien
mortgages that were not part of a
purchase transaction. These are the
number of loans originated annually
that the Bureau conservatively estimates
currently would be subject to the final
rule.
The Bureau estimates that the
probability that full-interior appraisals
are conducted as part of current practice
is 95 percent for purchase-money
transactions, 90 percent for refinance
transactions, and 5 percent for
subordinate lien mortgage
transactions.122 The Bureau therefore
estimates that the proposal would lead
to full-interior appraisals for
approximately 3,800 HPML originations
annually that would not otherwise have
a full-interior appraisal.123 A portion of
these HPMLs also would be subject to
the requirement that lenders obtain a
second full-interior appraisal in
situations where the home that would
secure the higher-risk mortgage is being
resold at or within 180 days at a higher
price that exceeds the seller’s
acquisition price by 10 percent (if the
seller acquired the property within 90
days) or 20 percent (if the seller
acquired the property within 91 to 180
days). Based on FHFA estimates from
DataQuick noted in the proposal, the
Bureau estimates that the proportion of
sales that are resales within 180 days is
5 percent. A significant number of
HPMLs financing resales would not be
subject to the second appraisal
requirement, however, due to the price
increase thresholds discussed above and
to various exemptions from the second
appraisal requirement. For purposes of
estimating the number of HPMLs that
are subject to the second appraisal
requirement, however, the Bureau
conservatively only excludes the
estimated number of loans subject to the
exemption for rural loans.124 The rural
122 As other Agencies noted in the proposed rule,
federal regulations do not require interior appraisals
in some cases, such as for transactions below
$250,000. To the extent creditors in those
transactions elect not to order interior appraisals,
those transactions would fall within the 5 percent
of purchase-money transactions, 10 percent of
refinance transactions, and 95 percent of
subordinate lien transactions in which the Bureau
assumes no interior appraisal is currently
performed.
123 (5%*12,249) + (10%*11,950) + (95%*2,091) =
3,794.
124 The Bureau has not been able to locate
nationally-representative data on the number of
HPMLs that are flips that fall within other
categories of transactions that are exempt from the
second appraisal requirement.

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exemption excludes 20.6 percent of the
relevant market by transaction volume,
according to the 2011 HMDA data. The
Bureau therefore estimates that this
provision of the rule would apply to
approximately 500 HPMLs annually.125
Accordingly, the Bureau estimates that
the number of HPMLs subject to only
one new interior appraisal under the
rule would be 3,800, and the number of
HPMLs subject to a second interior
appraisal under the rule would be 500,
resulting in a combined addition of
4,300 interior appraisals to HPML
transactions each year. This combined
addition is the estimated total effect of
the rule on the number of appraisals
each year.126
The following discussion considers
estimated compliance costs in the order
in which they arise in the mortgage
origination process. First, the rule
requires that the creditor furnish the
applicant with the disclosure required
by § 1026.35(c)(5)(i).127 The cost of this
disclosure—at most, delivery of a single
piece of paper with a standardized
disclosure that could be delivered with
125 (12,249*5%*(100%

¥ 20.6%)) = 486.
Bureau believes that under the 2013 ATR
Final Rule creditors generally will be able to
determine at the outset of the application process
whether the loan will be a qualified mortgage. Some
creditors may, for their own risk management and
at their option, over-comply during the application
process to mitigate any risk that due to an error the
loan as closed or handled post-closing ultimately
would not be a qualified mortgage. For example,
under the temporary qualified mortgage provision
related to GSEs, a creditor may determine early in
the application process that a proposed HPML
would be a qualified mortgage because it meets the
criteria for purchase or guarantee by a GSE
consistent with comment 43(e)(4)(iii)-4 in the
Bureau’s 2013 ATR Final Rule, but later find that
the loan is rejected by the GSE as ineligible for
reasons unrelated to the HPML rule. For the loan
to be a qualified mortgage, it is not necessary that
the loan ultimately be purchased or guaranteed by
the GSE. But if the original eligibility determination
were invalid, then this could create a risk that the
loan would not meet the definition of a qualified
mortgage. Such a loan potentially still could meet
the definition of qualified mortgage on other bases
than being eligible for purchase or guarantee by a
GSE. But if not, then under this final rule,
origination of such a loan would have been a
violation if the creditor did not comply with the
requirements for HPML appraisals and no other
exemption applied. While these situations may be
infrequent, some creditors may seek to over-comply
in order to mitigate the risk they may pose. The
Bureau does not believe over-compliance, to control
for the risk of an erroneous determination by the
creditor that the loan was a qualified mortgage,
would lead to creditors ordering a significant
number of new appraisals above those estimated
here.
127 Creditors must disclose the following
statement, in writing, to a consumer who applies for
a higher-risk mortgage loan: ‘‘We may order an
appraisal to determine the property’s value and
charge you for this appraisal. We will give you a
copy of any appraisal, even if your loan does not
close. You can also pay for an additional appraisal
for your own use at your own cost.’’
126 The

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other documents or disclosures—would
be very low.128
Second, the rule requires the creditor
to verify whether a loan is a HPML.
However, the Bureau believes this
activity does not to introduce any
significant costs beyond the regular cost
of business because creditors already
must compare APRs to APOR for a
variety of compliance purposes under
existing Regulation Z 129 or to determine
if a loan is subject to the protections of
the Home Ownership and Equity
Protection Act of 1994 (HOEPA).130
The third step is an optional one. If
a creditor decides to seek to be eligible
for the safe harbor provided for in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii), the creditor likely
would take certain steps in the process
of ordering and reviewing a full-interior
appraisal as prescribed by the rule. The
review process is described in the
Appendix N of the rule, and the Bureau
assumes it will be performed by a loan
officer and to take 15 minutes on
average (including the very brief time
needed to send a copy to the applicant,
as discussed below).131 Assuming an
average total hourly labor cost of loan
officers of $48.29, the cost of review per
additional appraisal is $12.07.132 With
an estimated total number of annual
additional appraisals—pursuant to both
the first and second appraisal
requirements—of 4,300, the total cost of
128 The Bureau notes that creditors in first lien
transactions making a disclosure required by
Bureau rules implementing ECOA section 701(e)
also would automatically satisfy the disclosure
requirement under this rule; the final rule. In
addition, the disclosure is included in the proposed
Loan Estimate as part of the 2012 TILA–RESPA
Proposal (see 2012 TILA–RESPA Proposal,
(published July 9, 2012), available at http://
files.consumerfinance.gov/f/
201207_cfpb_proposed-rule_integrated-mortgagedisclosures.pdf.); if that proposal were adopted, the
cost of providing the disclosure would be part of
the overall costs of implementing that disclosure.
129 12 CFR 1026.35.
130 15 U.S.C. 1639.
131 One community bank commenter stated that
this estimate was too low, but did not explain the
amount of time it believed would be required to
review the appraisal under the rule. In any event,
the 15 minute assumption is on average. Some
appraisals would be assumed to take more time,
and others less. To the extent an appraisal is
deficient, and is sent for revision and then further
review by the creditor upon revision, this is not
assumed to be a cost imposed by the rule and rather
is part of a standard underwriting process.
132 (.25* $48.29) = $12.07. The hourly wage rate
is based on the higher of the loan officer wages at
depository institutions of $31.69 and at nondepository institution of $32.16. Wages comprised
66.6 percent of compensation for employees in
credit intermediation and related fields in Q4 2011,
according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Series
ID CMU2025220000000D,CMU2025220000000P,
available at http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ect/#tables. All
the hourly wage rates below are computed similarly
from the same source.

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reviewing those appraisals is $58,000
(rounded to the nearest thousand).133
In purchase transactions financed by
a covered HPML, creditors also will
need to determine whether a second
appraisal would be required based upon
prior sales or acquisitions involving the
property that would secure the loan.
This would require labor costs to
determine, through reasonable
diligence, whether the seller acquired
the property in the past 180 days, and
if so, at a price that is sufficiently lower
than the contract sale price for the
current transaction to trigger the second
appraisal requirement. The rule
provides that reasonable diligence can
be performed through reliance on
written source documents, which may
include, among others, the 10 types of
documents listed in new Appendix O to
Part 1026. The Bureau believes creditors
typically already obtain many of the
common source documents for other
purposes during the application process
for a purchase-money HPML. The
Bureau estimates that reasonable
diligence would take, on average, 15
minutes of staff time. Because an
estimated 95 percent of covered HPML
transactions are not flips at all, in many
cases this may be determined from the
available documentation more quickly
than 15 minutes, simply by determining
that the seller’s acquisition occurred
more than 180 days before the
borrower’s purchase agreement. Of the 5
percent that are flips, creditors may take
more time to analyze price differences
versus the thresholds in the rule. Thus
the 15 minute estimation is an average.
The dollar cost per covered HPML loan
is therefore $12.07.134 With total annual
non-QM HPMLs that are purchase
transactions of 12,000, the total cost per
year is estimated to be $148,000
(rounded to the nearest thousand).135
The Bureau believes based on
outreach that the direct costs of
conducting appraisals would be passed
through to consumers, except in the
case of an additional appraisal that
would be required by § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)
(requiring an additional appraisal for
properties that are the subject of certain
180-day resales).136 Based on a
nationally-representative dataset of the
cost of appraisals, which as a standard
133 ($12.07*4,280) = $58,000 (rounded to the
nearest thousand).
134 (.25*$45.80) = $11.45.
135 ($12.07*12,249) = $148,000 (rounded to the
nearest thousand).
136 The final rule, in § 1026.35(c)(4)(v), prohibits
the creditor from charging the consumer for the cost
of the additional appraisal. For purposes of
estimating the cost the rule imposes on creditors,
the Bureau assumes that the creditors will not pass
through any of the cost of the second appraisal to
the consumers.

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matter include interior inspections per
the URAR form discussed in the sectionby-section analysis in this final rule, the
Bureau believes that the average cost of
each full-interior appraisal is $350.137
As noted above, the Bureau estimates
that 486 second full-interior appraisals
would be required each year under the
rule, for a total cost to creditors of
$170,000 (rounded to the nearest
thousand).138
Finally, the rule also requires that free
copies of appraisals be provided to
borrowers at least three business days
before the loan is consummated (or
within 30 days of determining the loan
will not be consummated). In outreach
prior to the proposal stage, market
participants, including a large bank,
representatives from a national
community banking trade association,
and a large independent mortgage
bank 139 told the Bureau that, in cases
where loans are consummated, copies of
appraisals that are ordered are provided
to consumers 100 percent of the time.
Indeed, GSEs also generally require that,
as a condition of eligibility for their
purchase of a loan, copies of appraisals
be provided to consumers promptly
upon completion but no later than three
days before consummation.140 The
Bureau therefore believes that for
covered HPML first lien transactions,
the requirement to provide copies in the
rule imposes no additional costs; any
cost due to providing copies for the
small proportion of first lien
transactions that do not currently obtain
and provide copies of appraisals is
estimated not to be significant. The only
other costs of providing copies of the
appraisals would be for the 2,000 new
appraisals in subordinate lien
transactions that the Bureau estimates
would be caused by the rule on an
137 Based upon the industry dataset used in the
proposal, the Bureau calculates the median for the
United States overall is $350, the average is $351,
and standard deviation is $92. The $350 estimated
cost also falls within the range of $225 to $750 cited
by industry comments, most of which referred to
costs between $300 and $600. While the proposal
had assumed a $600 cost, that cost was at the
highest state median (Alaska) in the industry
dataset. Upon further review, the Bureau believes
that $350 is a more accurate estimate of the average
cost and that using a $600 cost would, while being
conservative, also overestimate the cost. In any
event, the estimated costs do not change
significantly using a $600 estimate, as noted in the
Bureau’s Regulatory Flexibility Analysis below.
138 (350*486) = $170,000 (rounded to the nearest
thousand).
139 Interviews conducted on May 15, 2012 and
May 24, 2012.
140 Fannie Mae Selling Guide, ‘‘Appraiser
Independence Requirements’’ (Oct. 15, 2010) (Part
III), available at https://www.fanniemae.com/
content/fact_sheet/air.pdf; Freddie Mac, Single
Family Seller/Servicer Guide, Vol. 1, Exhibit 35,
Appraiser Independence Requirements (October 15,
2010) (same).

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annual basis. As noted in the PRA
section of the final rule, the time to send
the copy can be assumed to be part of
the 15 minutes of time needed on
average to review the appraisal. Given
the number of extra copies that would
need to be provided, and the provision
in the final rule that allows these copies
to be provided electronically based
upon consent under the E-Sign Act, the
Bureau believes that this cost is not
significant.
As noted above, the Bureau assumes
that costs of many of the new first
appraisals would be borne directly by
the consumers. This increase in costs
charged to HPML borrowers could deter
some consumers from agreeing to
HPMLs. In these cases, however,
creditors could agree to fold the
appraisal cost into the cost of the loan.
To the extent consumers would still be
deterred from borrowing, creditors also
could waive the cost of the appraisal
and absorb it, or otherwise reduce
origination fees.
Costs per institution or loan officer.
Aside from the per-loan costs just
described, the Bureau has estimated that
each institution would incur the onetime cost of reviewing the regulation,
and one-time training costs for loan
officers to become familiar with the
provisions of the rule.141
141 As stated in the proposal, the Bureau estimates
that on average one lawyer and a variable number
of compliance officers at each institution will
review the regulation for 1.5 hours each person.
Compliance officer review is assumed to vary by
size and type of the institution, and it is assumed
that in some cases there is no compliance officer
review: one compliance officer at each independent
mortgage bank; two compliance officers at each
depository institution larger than $10 billion in
assets; and half a compliance officer (on average) at
each depository institution smaller than $10 billion
in assets. Total hourly labor costs are estimated to
be: $116.08 for attorneys and $52.04 for compliance
officers. Actual review time will vary by institution.
At some institutions that do not originate non-QM
HPMLs, review time may be lower as lawyers and
compliance officers may review secondary trade
press or other free sources of information. By
contrast, for those institutions that originate nonQM HPMLs, the review time may be greater as it
may include activities to prepare for
implementation, such as training. As also stated in
the proposal, the Bureau estimates that on average
an additional 0.5 hours of training time will be
added to regular training programs for each loan
officer. Here again, training time will vary
depending on whether the officer is involved in
origination of non-QM HPMLs. One community
bank commenter stated that the estimate in the
proposal of 30 minutes for training time was too
low, but did not explain the amount of time it
believed would be required for training. Training
time per officer may be lower than average for many
loan officers to the extent they do not or are not
likely to originate non-QM HPMLs, and closer to or
potentially more than average in some cases for
those who do or may originate such loans (because
those officers would need to be trained on how to
comply with the rule, rather than simply alerted to
its existence). Finally, the Bureau also believes that
as part of routine software updates, creditors may

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Potential Costs of the Rule to Consumers
The direct pecuniary costs to
consumers that would be imposed by
the rule can be calculated as the
incremental cost of having a full interior
appraisal instead of using another
valuation method for the relatively
small subset of covered HPML
transactions (a few thousand annually
as discussed above) where an appraisal
is not currently performed. As described
above, the Bureau believes that
consumers would pay directly for all
new first appraisals—but not the new
second appraisals that would be
required because of a recent resale of the
property—for a total of 3,794 new first
appraisals per year. Assuming the
consumer pays $350 for an appraisal
that would not otherwise have been
conducted, versus $5 for an alternative
valuation, gives a total direct costs to
consumers of 3,794 * ($350-$5) =
$1,308,930 (rounded to the nearest
thousand).
Potential Reduction in Access by
Consumers to Consumer Financial
Products or Services
Incremental costs in covered HPML
transactions that would not otherwise
have a full-interior appraisal could
reduce consumers’ access to non-QM
HPMLs. However, the impact on access
to credit is probably negligible. Any
costs that derive from the additional
underwriting requirements incurred
under the rule are likely to be very
small. What matters, for both first and
subordinate lien loans, are the
incremental costs from the difference
between the full-interior appraisal and
alternative valuation method costs.
These only arise in the fraction of
HPMLs where use of the interior
appraisal is not already accepted
practice. For first liens, full interior
inspection appraisals are common
industry practice: passing the cost of
appraisals on to consumers is current
industry practice, and consumers
appear to accept the appraisal fee. The
interior appraisal requirement therefore
is unlikely to cause a significant adverse
effect on consumers’ access to this kind
of credit. Furthermore, these costs may
also be rolled into the loan, up to LTV
ratio limits, so buyers are unlikely to
face short-term liquidity constraints that
prevent purchasing the home. The
impact of the rule on the volume of nonQM HPMLs originated may be relatively
greater for subordinate liens because in
make adjustments to software systems to ensure
compliance with this rule; the Bureau does not
believe these adjustments would impose significant
additional costs beyond the existing routine
upgrade processes.

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these transactions the rule would
impose an interior appraisal practice
that is not as widespread currently, and
also because the cost of a full interior
appraisal is a larger proportion of the
loan amount (because subordinate lien
loans are typically lower in amount than
first lien loans). However, the number of
subordinate lien HPMLs that will be
covered by the rule will be small to
begin with, excluding qualified
mortgages; any changes in non-QM
HPML subordinate lien transaction
volume may be mitigated by consumers
rolling the appraisal costs into the loan
or the consumer and the creditor
splitting the incremental cost of the fullinterior appraisal if it is profitable for
the creditor to do so.
Significant Alternatives Considered
In determining what level of review
by creditors should be required for full
interior appraisals related to HPMLs,
two alternatives were considered in
developing the proposed rule. One
alternative considered was to require a
full technical review of the appraisal
that would comply with USPAP
Standard 3 (USPAP3). Such a
requirement, however, would add
substantially to the cost of each
appraisal, as a USPAP3-compliant
review can cost nearly as much as a full
interior appraisal. Another alternative
was to require creditors to have
USPAP3-compliant reviews conducted
on a sample of the appraisals carried out
on properties related to an HPML.
Reviewing a sample of appraisals,
however, would be most useful for
creditors making a large number of
HPMLs and employing the same
appraisers for a large number of those
loans. Given the small number of
HPMLs made each year, the value of
sampling appraisals for full USPAP3
review is likely to be small.
In addition to the exemptions that
were adopted in the final rule, based
upon its review of comments discussed
in the section-by-section analysis above,
the Agencies also considered possible
exemptions from the final rule for
‘‘streamlined’’ refinance programs (such
as programs designed by certain
government agencies and governmentsponsored enterprises that do not
require appraisals), and loans of lower
dollar amounts, and clarification on
application of the rule to loans secured
by certain property types. As discussed
in the section-by-section analysis,
however, the Agencies did not adopt
these exemptions or clarifications in the
final rule and instead intend to publish
a supplemental proposal to request
additional comment on these issues.

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Finally, the Agencies considered
alternatives to the scope of the second
appraisal requirement for HPMLs on
properties being resold within 180 days.
With respect to what price increase
would trigger this requirement, in
addition to the approach adopted in the
final rule, the Agencies also considered
whether the trigger should be any
amount greater than zero, an increase of
10 percent regardless of the number of
days between 0 and 180 days since the
acquisition, or an increase of 20 percent
regardless of the number of days
between 0 and 180 days since the
acquisition. For the reasons outlined in
the section-by-section analysis above,
the Agencies determined that setting
staggered price increase thresholds—
more than 10 percent for properties
acquired within 90 days and more than
20 percent for properties acquired
within 91 and 180 days—was more
appropriate. In addition, the Agencies
considered providing no exemption
from the second appraisal requirement
for loans on properties located in rural
areas (as proposed), or providing an
exemption for loans on properties in
rural areas defined using combinations
of urban influence codes (UICs). For the
reasons outlined in the section-bysection analysis above, the Agencies
determined that an exemption was
appropriate for HPMLs secured by
properties located in certain UICs, as
discussed in the section-by-section
analysis of § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H) above.

conducted for transactions that would
otherwise not have a full-interior
appraisal, and 252 new second fullinterior appraisal (as is be required by
§ 1026.35(c)(4)), for a total of 2,218
appraisals. As noted above, these
estimates are derived without
subtracting some of the loans that are
exempt from the overall rule. These
estimates therefore are conservative,
given that these exemptions collectively
apply to a significant number of loans.
The Bureau believes that the impact on
each creditor under $10 billion is
substantially the same as for the broader
group of creditors described above. In
particular, based upon analysis of the
same data sources described above, the
Bureau has determined the under $10
billion creditors have the same cost per
loan and similar one-time and ongoing
burdens, with the specific differences
described above.

Impact of the Rule on Depository
Institutions and Credit Unions With $10
Billion or Less in Total Assets, as
Described in Section 1026 142
Depository institutions and credit
unions with $10 billion or less in assets
would experience the same types of
impacts as those described above. The
impact on individual institutions would
depend on the mix of mortgages that
these institutions originate, the number
of loan officers that would need to be
trained, and the cost of reviewing the
regulation. The Bureau estimates that
these institutions originated 151,000
HPML loans in 2011. Assuming the mix
of purchase money, refinancings, and
subordinate lien mortgages, and the
proportion of loans exempt as qualified
mortgages, was the same at these
institutions as for the industry as a
whole, the Bureau estimates that the
rule will require these institutions to
have 1,966 full interior appraisals

Impact of the Final Rule on Consumers
in Rural Areas
The Bureau does not anticipate that
the final rule will have a unique impact
on consumers in rural areas. The Bureau
does not believe that requiring one
interior USPAP-compliant appraisal for
a covered HPML on a rural property will
have a significantly greater impact than
the same requirement for a covered
HPML on a non-rural property.143
Further, the final rule exempts these
rural transactions from the requirement
to obtain a second appraisal on the
property. Therefore, the cost of creditor
compliance with the second appraisal
requirement (including due diligence)
will not be present for these
transactions. For these reasons,
explained in more detail below, the
Bureau does not anticipate the final rule
will have a unique or disproportionate
impact on consumers in rural areas.
As in the section 1022 analysis in the
proposal, the Bureau continues to
conclude that there would be no unique
impact on rural consumers of the
requirement to obtain the first appraisal.
For first lien transactions, conditional
on taking out a mortgage, rural
consumers may take out first lien
HPMLs at a higher rate than non-rural
consumers. Such a difference between
rural and non-rural rates of first lien
HPMLs does not have a unique impact
on rural consumers, however, because
the rule does not alter existing industry
practice with respect to appraisals for
most first lien transactions. For

142 Approximately 50 banks with under $10
billion in assets are affiliates of large banks with
over $10 billion in assets and subject to Bureau
supervisory authority under Section 1025.
However, these banks are included in this
discussion for convenience.

143 Despite receiving some comments requesting
an exemption from the entire rule for rural HPMLs,
the Agencies have not received nationallyrepresentative data indicating that the cost of first
appraisals for HPMLs would be disproportionately
difficult to incur in rural transactions.

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subordinate lien transactions,
conditional on taking out a mortgage, in
2010 the proportion of subordinate liens
that were HPMLs were roughly the same
for consumers in rural areas as in nonrural areas, as illustrated in Table 2 of
the proposal. In addition, HMDA data
for 2011 indicates the proportion of
subordinate liens in rural areas that
were HPMLs (6.77 percent) was lower
than the proportion for non-rural areas
(8.53 percent). Thus, even though the
rule may have a greater impact on
subordinate lien HPML transactions
because appraisals are less common
currently for these transactions, rural
consumers’ subordinate liens appear no
more likely to be HPMLs than non-rural
consumers, based upon the recent
HMDA data. As a result, there is no
unique or disproportionate impact on
rural consumers in subordinate lien
transactions either.
With respect to the second appraisal
requirement for certain transactions
involving flips, the Bureau believes that
flips occur at the same rate in rural areas
as in non-rural areas. The second
appraisal requirement will not have any
impact on consumers engaging in
transactions on properties in rural areas,
however, because they are exempt from
the second appraisal requirement.144 As
discussed in the preamble to the final
rule, based upon comments received
and further analysis, the Agencies have
determined that there is a sufficient
basis for concern over availability of
appraisers in rural areas to conduct a
second appraisal on rural HPML
transactions, and consequently some
concern over credit availability if the
second appraisal requirement were
applied to these transactions. The
Agencies therefore have exempted these
transactions from the second appraisal
requirement. This determination in the
final rule is based upon a broader
consideration of appraiser availability,
as well as other factors discussed in the
section-by-section analysis above, than
the Bureau considered in its section
1022 analysis in the proposal stage. In
its section 1022 analysis in the proposal,
the Bureau concluded that sufficient
appraisers likely would be available for
a property if there were two active
certified and licensed appraisers on the
National Appraiser Registry in the same
or adjacent county. After reviewing a
number of industry comments
144 If rural consumers had been subject to the
additional appraisal requirement for transactions in
rural areas, then this requirement may also have
had a disproportionate impact on consumers in
rural areas because significantly more rural first lien
mortgage transactions were HPMLs according to
2010 HMDA data described in Table 2 of the
proposal.

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summarized in the section-by-section
analysis above, however, the Agencies
concluded that this approach was too
narrow. The existence of an appraiser
on the registry did not necessarily
guarantee that the appraiser was
available, or if they were, that they
would be competent or charging a
reasonable fee for the transaction. As
discussed in more detail in the sectionby-section analysis above, when the
Agencies considered more broadly
whether five appraisers were available
within 50 miles, the potential for
appraiser availability issues grew more
apparent. This broader approach was
viewed as necessary, to account for the
fact that one or more of the active
appraisers in the registry results for a
given property may not be available or
appropriate for the transaction.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Board

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The Board prepared an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis as
required by the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA)
in connection with the proposed rule.
The regulatory flexibility analysis
otherwise required under section 604 of
the RFA is not required if an agency
certifies, along with a statement
providing the factual basis for such
certification, that the rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. 5
U.S.C. 604, 605(b). The final rule covers
certain banks, other depository
institutions, and non-bank entities that
extend higher-risk mortgage loans to
consumers. The Small Business
Administration (SBA) establishes size
standards that define which entities are
small businesses for purposes of the
RFA.145 The size standard to be
considered a small business is: $175
million or less in assets for banks and
other depository institutions; and $7
million or less in annual revenues for
the majority of nonbank entities that are
likely to be subject to the final rule.
Based on its analysis and for the reasons
stated below, the Board believes that
this final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.146
145 U.S. Small Business Administration, Table of
Small Business Size Standards Matched to North
American Industry Classification System Codes,
available at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
files/Size_Standards_Table.pdf.
146 The Board notes that for purposes of its
analysis, the Board considered all creditors to
which the final rule applies. The Board’s Regulation
Z at 12 CFR 226.43 applies to a subset of these
creditors. See § 226.43(g).

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A. Reasons for the Final Rule
Section 1471 of the Dodd-Frank Act
establishes a new TILA section 129H,
which sets forth appraisal requirements
applicable to ‘‘higher-risk mortgages.’’
The Act generally defines ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ as a closed-end consumer
loan secured by a principal dwelling
with an APR that exceeds the APOR by
1.5 percent for first-lien loans, 2.5
percent for first-lien jumbo loans, or 3.5
percent for subordinate-liens. The
definition of higher-risk mortgage in
new TILA section 129H expressly
excludes qualified mortgages, as defined
in TILA section 129C, as well as reverse
mortgage loans that are qualified
mortgages as defined in TILA section
129C.
Specifically, new TILA section 129H
does not permit a creditor to extend
credit in the form of a ‘‘higher-risk
mortgage’’ to any consumer without
first:
• Obtaining a written appraisal
performed by a certified or licensed
appraiser who conducts a physical
property visit of the interior of the
property.
• Obtaining an additional appraisal
from a different certified or licensed
appraiser if the purpose of the higherrisk mortgage loan is to finance the
purchase or acquisition of a mortgaged
property from a seller within 180 days
of the purchase or acquisition of the
property by that seller at a price that
was lower than the current sale price of
the property. The additional appraisal
must include an analysis of the
difference in sale prices, changes in
market conditions, and any
improvements made to the property
between the date of the previous sale
and the current sale.
• Providing the applicant, at the time
of the initial mortgage application, with
a statement that any appraisal prepared
for the mortgage is for the sole use of the
creditor, and that the applicant may
choose to have a separate appraisal
conducted at the applicant’s expense.
• Providing the applicant with one
copy of each appraisal conducted in
accordance with TILA section 129H
without charge, at least three (3) days
prior to the transaction closing date.
Section 1400 of the Dodd-Frank Act
requires that final regulations to
implement these provisions be issued
no later than January 21, 2013. The
Agencies are issuing the final rule to
fulfill their statutory duty to implement
the appraisal provisions added in new
TILA section 129H.

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10423

B. Statement of Objectives and Legal
Basis
The SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
above contains this information. As
discussed above, the legal basis for the
final rule is new TILA section
129H(b)(4). 15 U.S.C. 1639h(b)(4). New
TILA section 129H was established by
section 1471 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
C. Summary of Issues Raised by
Commenters
In the proposed rule to implement the
appraisal provisions in new TILA
section 129H, the Board sought
information and comment on any costs,
compliance requirements, or changes in
operating procedures arising from the
application of the rule to small
institutions. The Board received
comments from various industry
representatives, including banks, credit
unions, and the trade associations that
represent them. As discussed in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION above, the
commenters asserted that compliance
with the proposed rule would have a
disproportionate impact on small
entities and cited concerns about the
utility and expense of requiring these
entities to comply with all or some of
the rule’s requirements. These
comments, however, did not contain
specific information about costs that
will be incurred or changes in operating
procedures that will be required for
compliance.
In general, the commenters discussed
the impact of statutory requirements
rather than any impact that the
proposed rules themselves would
generate. Moreover, the Agencies have
reduced the compliance burden in the
final rule by adding exemptions from
both the written appraisal and the
additional written appraisal
requirements. Thus, the Board
continues to believe that the final rule
will not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
D. Description of Small Entities to
Which the Rules Apply
The final rule applies to creditors that
make HPMLs subject to 12 CFR
1026.35(c).147 To estimate the number of
small entities that will be subject to the
requirements of the rule, the Board is
relying primarily on data provided by
the Bureau.148 According to the data
147 As

discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
above, the Agencies in the final rule
are referring to ‘‘higher-risk mortgages’’ as HPMLs
subject to 12 CFR 1026.35(c) in order to use
terminology consistent with that already used in
Regulation Z.
148 See the Bureau’s Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis.
INFORMATION

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations

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provided by the Bureau, approximately
3,466 commercial banks, 373 savings
institutions, 3,240 credit unions, and
2,294 non-depository institutions are
considered small entities and extend
mortgages, and therefore are potentially
subject to the final rule.
Data currently available to the Board
are not sufficient to estimate how many
small entities that extend mortgages will
be subject to 12 CFR 1026.35(c), given
the range of exemptions from the rules,
including the exemption for qualified
mortgages. Further, the number of these
small entities that will make HPMLs
subject to 12 CFR 1026.35(c) in the
future is unknown.
E. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping
and Other Compliance Requirements
The compliance requirements of the
final rule are described in detail in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION above.
The final rule generally applies to
creditors that make HPMLs subject to 12
CFR 1026.35(c), which are generally
mortgages with an APR that exceeds the
APOR by a specified percentage, subject
to certain exceptions. The final rule
generally requires creditors to obtain an
appraisal or appraisals meeting certain
specified standards, provide applicants
with a notification regarding the use of
the appraisals, and give applicants a
copy of the written appraisals used.
A creditor is required to determine
whether it extends HPMLs subject to 12
CFR 1026.35(c); if so, the creditor must
analyze the regulations. The creditor
must establish procedures for
identifying mortgages subject to the new
appraisal requirements. A creditor
making a HPML subject to 12 CFR
1026.35(c) must obtain a written
appraisal performed by a certified or
licensed appraiser who conducts a
physical property visit of the interior of
the property. Creditors seeking a safe
harbor for compliance with this
requirement must:
• Order that the appraiser perform the
written appraisal in conformity with the
USPAP and title XI of the FIRREA, and
any implementing regulations, in effect
at the time the appraiser signs the
appraiser’s certification;
• Verify through the National Registry
that the appraiser who signed the
appraiser’s certification was a certified
or licensed appraiser in the State in
which the appraised property is located
as of the date the appraiser signed the
appraiser’s certification;
• Confirm that the elements set forth
in appendix N to this part are addressed
in the written appraisal; and
• Have no actual knowledge to the
contrary of facts or certifications
contained in the written appraisal.

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A creditor must also determine
whether it is financing the purchase or
acquisition of a mortgaged property by
a consumer from a seller (1) within 90
days of the seller’s acquisition of the
property for a resale price that exceeds
the seller’s acquisition price by more
than 10 percent; or (2) 91 to 180 days
of the seller’s acquisition of the property
for a resale price that exceeds the
seller’s acquisition price by more than
20 percent. If so, the creditor must
obtain an additional appraisal of the
property and confirm that the additional
appraisal meets the requirements of the
first appraisal. The creditor also must
ensure that the additional appraisal
includes an analysis of the difference in
sale prices, changes in market
conditions, and any improvements
made to the property between the date
of the previous sale and the current sale.
Creditors extending HPMLs subject to
12 CFR 1026.35(c) also must design,
generate, and provide a new notice to
applicants. Specifically, within three
business days of application, a creditor
must provide a disclosure that informs
consumers of the purpose of the
appraisal, that the creditor will provide
the consumer with a copy of any
appraisal, and that the consumer may
choose to have a separate appraisal
conducted at the expense of the
consumer. In addition, creditors making
HPMLs subject to 12 CFR 1026.35(c)
must provide the consumer with a copy
of each appraisal conducted at least
three business days prior to closing and
develop systems for that purpose.
The Board believes that certain factors
will mitigate the economic impact of the
final rule. First, the Board believes that
only a small number of loans will be
affected by the final rule. For example,
according to HMDA data, less than four
percent of first-lien home purchase
mortgage loans in 2010 or 2011 would
potentially be subject to the appraisal
requirements of 12 CFR 1026.35(c).149
Moreover, most home purchase loans do
not involve properties that were
previously purchased within 180 days
and therefore would not require an
additional written appraisal. In
addition, based on outreach, the Board
believes that many creditors are already
obtaining written appraisals performed
by certified or licensed appraisers who
conduct a physical property visit of the
interior of the property. Creditors may
be obtaining such appraisals pursuant to
other requirements, such as of FIRREA
title XI or the FHA Anti-Flipping Rule,
149 This estimate does not account for exemptions
provided in the final rule.

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or they may be obtaining the appraisals
voluntarily.
Because of the small number of
transactions affected, the Board believes
that the final rule is unlikely to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
F. Identification of Duplicative,
Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Regulations
The Board has not identified any
Federal statutes or regulations that
would duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with the final rule. The final rule will
work in conjunction with the existing
requirements of FIRREA title XI and its
implementing regulations.
G. Discussion of Significant Alternatives
As described in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION, above, the Board has
sought to minimize the economic
impact on small entities in several ways.
First, the final rule provides exemptions
from both the written appraisal and the
additional written appraisal
requirements, and provides creditors
with a safe harbor for determining that
an appraiser has met certain specified
requirements. The final rule also
replaces the term ‘‘higher-risk mortgage
loan’’ with ‘‘higher-priced mortgage
loan’’ in order to use terminology
consistent with that already used in
Regulation Z. Moreover, the final rule
seeks to reduce burden by providing
that the disclosure required at
application may be fulfilled by
compliance with the disclosure
requirement in Regulation B, 12 CFR
1002.14(a)(2). Lastly, the final rule seeks
to reduce burden by allowing a creditor
subject to the additional appraisal
requirement under TILA section
129H(b)(2) to obtain an appraisal that
contains the analysis required in TILA
section 129H(b)(2)(A) only to the extent
that needed information is known. 15
U.S.C. 1639h(b)(2).
Bureau
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to conduct
an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA) and a final regulatory flexibility
analysis (FRFA) of any rule subject to
notice-and-comment rulemaking
requirements, unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.150 The Bureau
150 For purposes of assessing the impacts of the
final rule on small entities, ‘‘small entities’’ is
defined in the RFA to include small businesses,
small not-for-profit organizations, and small
government jurisdictions. 5 U.S.C. 601(6). A ‘‘small
business’’ is determined by application of Small
Business Administration regulations and reference

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
also is subject to certain additional
procedures under the RFA involving the
convening of a panel to consult with
small business representatives prior to
proposing a rule for which an IRFA is
required.151 A FRFA is not required
because this rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
A. Summary of Final Rule
The empirical approach to calculating
the impact that the regulation has on
small entities subject to the final rule
follows the methodology, and uses the
same data, as the above analysis
conducted under Section 1022 of the
Dodd-Frank Act. The impact analysis
focuses on the economic impact of the
final rule, relative to a pre-statute
baseline, for small depository
institutions (DIs) and non-depository
independent mortgage banks (IMBs),
also described in this impact analysis as
non-DIs. The Small Business
Administration classifies DIs
(commercial banks, savings institutions,
credit unions, and other depository
institutions) as small if they have no
more than $175 million in assets, and
classifies other real estate credit firms
(including non-DIs) as small if they have
no more than $7 million in annual
revenues.152
The final rule implements section
1471 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which
establishes appraisal requirements for
HPMLs that are not otherwise exempt
under the final rule. Under the
exemptions in the final rule, the final
rule does not apply qualified mortgages
as defined in the Bureau’s 2013 ATR
Final Rule, transactions secured by a
new manufactured home, transactions
secured by a mobile home, boat, or
trailer, transactions to finance the initial

construction of a dwelling, temporary
bridge loans with a term of 12 months
or less, or reverse mortgages.
Consistent with the statute, the final
rule allows a creditor to make a covered
HPML only if the following conditions
are met:
• The creditor obtains a written
appraisal;
• The appraisal is performed by a
certified or licensed appraiser; and
• The appraiser conducts a physical
property visit of the interior of the
property.
In addition, as required by the Act,
the final rule requires a creditor
originating a covered HPML to obtain an
additional written appraisal, at no cost
to the borrower, if certain conditions are
met, unless a transaction falls into one
of the exemptions from this requirement
in the rule (exemptions are described in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii). The following
conditions trigger this requirement:
• The HPML will finance the
acquisition of the consumer’s principal
dwelling;
• The seller selling what will become
the consumer’s principal dwelling
acquired the home within 180 days
prior to the consumer’s purchase
agreement (measured from the date of
the consumer’s purchase agreement);
and
• The consumer is acquiring the
home for a price that is more than 10
percent higher than the price at which
the seller acquired the property (if the
seller acquired the property within 90
days of the consumer’s purchase
agreement) or more than 20 percent
higher than the price at which the seller
acquired the property (if the seller
acquired the property within 91 to 180
days of the consumer’s purchase
agreements).

10425

The additional written appraisal, from a
different licensed or certified appraiser,
generally must include the following
information: an analysis of the
difference in sale prices (i.e., the price
at which the seller previously acquired
the property, and the price at which the
consumer agreed to acquire the property
as set forth in the consumer’s purchase
agreement), changes in market
conditions, and any improvements
made to the property between the date
of the seller’s previous acquisition and
the consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property.
Finally, the rule requires creditors in
covered HPML transactions to provide a
standardized notice to consumers
regarding the appraisal process within
three days of the application, as well as
a free copy of any written appraisal
obtained for the transaction no later
than three business days prior to
consummation of the transaction (or
within 30 days of determining the
transaction will not be consummated).
B. Number and Classes of Affected
Entities
Of the roughly 17,462 depository
institutions (including credit unions)
and IMBs, 12,568 are below the relevant
small entity thresholds. Of the small
institutions, 9,094 are estimated to have
originated mortgaged loans in 2011.
While loan counts exist for credit
unions and HMDA-reporting DIs and
IMBs, they must be projected for nonHMDA reporters. For IMBs, an accepted
statistical method (‘‘nearest neighbor
matching’’) is used to estimate the
number of these institutions that have
no more than $7 million in revenues
from the MCR.

TABLE 1—COUNTS OF CREDITORS BY TYPE

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Category

NAICS code

Total entities

Small entities

Entities that
originate any
mortgage
loans b

Commercial Banking ............................................................
Savings Institutions ..............................................................
Credit Unions c .....................................................................
Real Estate Credit d e ............................................................

522110
522120
522130
522292

6,505
930
7,240
2,787

3,601
377
6,296
2,294

a 6,307

Total ..............................................................................

........................

17,462

12,568

Small entities
that originate
any mortgage
loans
a 3,466

a 922

a 373

a 4,178

a 3,240

2,787

a 2,294

14,194

9,373

Source: 2011 HMDA, Dec 31, 2011 Bank and Thrift Call Reports, Dec 31, 2011 NCUA Call Reports, Dec 31, 2011 NMLSR Mortgage Call Reports.
a For HMDA reporters, loan counts from HMDA 2011. For institutions that are not HMDA reporters, loan counts projected based on Call Report
data fields and counts for HMDA reporters.
b Entities are characterized as originating loans if they make one or more loans.
to the North American Industry Classification
System (NAICS) classifications and size standards.
5 U.S.C. 601(3). A ‘‘small organization’’ is any ‘‘notfor-profit enterprise which is independently owned

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and operated and is not dominant in its field.’’ 5
U.S.C. 601(4). A ‘‘small governmental jurisdiction’’
is the government of a city, county, town, township,

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village, school district, or special district with a
population of less than 50,000. 5 U.S.C. 601(5).
151 5 U.S.C. 609.
152 13 CFR Ch. 1.

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c Does not include cooperatives operating in Puerto Rico. The Bureau has limited data about these institutions, which are subject to Regulation
Z, or their mortgage activity.
d NMLSR Mortgage Call Report (‘‘MCR’’) for 2011. All MCR reporters that originate at least one loan or that have positive loan amounts are
considered to be engaged in real estate credit (instead of purely mortgage brokers). For institutions with missing revenue values, the probability
that institution was a small entity is estimated based on the count and amount of originations and the count and amount of brokered loans.
e Data do not distinguish nonprofit from for-profit organizations, but Real Estate Credit presumptively includes nonprofit organizations.

C. Analysis
Although most DIs and non-DIs are
affected by the final rule, the final rule
does not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities, as
is demonstrated by the burden estimates
for small institutions calculated below.
For each institution the cost of
compliance is calculated and then
divided by a measure of revenue. For
DIs, revenue is obtained from the
appropriate call report. For non-DIs, the
frequency of HPMLs is not available in
the MCR. However, data available in
HMDA shows that the proportion of
HPMLs in a non-DI’s originations does

not vary by origination volume. As
such, HMDA data is used in lieu of the
MCR data to calculate costs of
compliance with the final rule.
The creditors will incur one-time
costs of review, as described in the
analysis under section 1022 above, and
ongoing costs, proportional to the
volume of HPMLs originated, and also
as described in the section 1022 analysis
above.
The Bureau estimates that 85 percent
of the creditors affected are going to
have one-time costs of less than $300.153
Using an alternative metric, 85 percent
of the creditors have a ratio of one-time

costs to their revenue of less than 0.1
percent.154
For small DIs, Table 2 reports various
statistics for the estimated annual cost
of compliance with the final rule as a
percentage of revenues using
conservative assumptions. The
assumptions underlying the Bureau’s
estimates are explained in the table and
are generally discussed in more detail in
the Section 1022(b)(2) analysis. The
table shows that 85 percent of the small
DIs and credit unions that originate any
HPMLs have costs of significantly less
than one percent of the revenue. This
stays the same when the creditors are
separated into types.155

TABLE 2—RECURRING COSTS OF RULE AS A SHARE OF REVENUE BY TYPE OF CREDITOR (85TH PERCENTILE).
Small HPML
originators
All Institutions ...........................................................................................................................................................
Banks .......................................................................................................................................................................
Thrifts .......................................................................................................................................................................
Credit Unions ...........................................................................................................................................................

4461
3006
310
1145

85th Percentile
<0.01%
<0.01%
<0.01%
<0.01%

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Assumptions: Costs per-transaction and per-loan officer are as described in the section 1022(b)(2) analysis. These include but are not limited
to the following: Full-interior appraisals—whether first or second—cost $350, alternative valuations cost $5. In the absence of the rule, the probability of a full-interior appraisal for a transaction is 95 percent for purchase-money transactions, 90 percent for refinance transactions, and 5 percent for subordinate-lien mortgages. The proportion of resales within 180 days is 5 percent, without regard to difference in price. Costs of the first
full interior appraisal are passed on completely to consumers. The review of the appraisal upon receipt takes 15 minutes of loan officer time. The
Bureau also includes 15 minutes of loan officer time per loan to estimate whether the transaction is a flip.

The Bureau also has analyzed the data
for IMBs separately. Most IMBs are
small, and the Bureau does not possess
the data on the revenues of
approximately 700 of those. As with the
DIs and credit unions, the effects of the
rule are insignificant. Out of the 1,325
small IMBs that originate any HPMLs,
and for whom the Bureau possesses
revenue information, 85 percent of the
IMBs have costs below 0.30 percent of
the revenue, using the same cost
assumptions as for the depository
institutions and credit unions.156 The
exemptions from the rule and from its
second appraisal requirement
significantly reduce the number of
HPMLs subject to these requirements,

almost tenfold. For the remaining
HPMLs that are covered by the rule,
such as non-QM HPMLs, because many
of the costs imposed by the final rule are
likely to be passed on to consumers, this
may result in a decrease in demand for
those loans (such as non-QM HPMLs).
However, any possible decrease in nonQM HPML volume is likely to be
negligible. For both first-lien and
subordinate-lien HPMLs, the principal
increase in cost to consumers is the
difference in costs between the fullinterior appraisal and any alternative
valuation method costs; some other
costs imposed by the rule, such as
creditor labor costs discussed in the
section 1022(b)(2) analysis above, and

the cost of providing required
disclosures, also may be reflected in
increases in the fees or rates charged in
a class of loans. These charges are
unlikely to exceed $600. For first lien
transactions, full interior inspections are
common industry practice so for the
typical first lien transaction this
increase in cost to consumers would be
small. Furthermore, these costs may also
be rolled into the loan, up to loan-tovalue ratio limits, so short-term
liquidity constraints for buyers are
unlikely to bind. Passing the cost of
appraisals on to consumers is current
industry practice, and consumers
appear to accept the appraisal fee, so

153 Banks, saving institutions, and credit unions
all have comparatively lower numbers. For the
small IMBs, 85 percent are going to have one-time
setup costs of less than $445.
154 Even for the small IMBs this ratio is less than
1 percent for 85 percent of the IMBs. The numbers
are much lower for the other types of creditors.
155 The final rule would not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small DIs, even
if the cost of appraisals were assumed to be
significantly higher than the average cost—such as

at $600, as conservatively assumed in the proposal
based upon the state with the highest median—and
even if the analysis did not assume any HPMLs
would meet the criteria for exemptions in the final
rule. The switches from $350 to $600 for appraisal
cost and from non-QM to all HPMLs would increase
the percentages in the table approximately by a
factor of 20. However, even then the impact remains
well within 3 percent for 85 percent of the
institutions.
156 The final rule would not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small IMBs, even

if the cost of appraisals were assumed to be
significantly higher than the average cost—at $600,
as conservatively assumed in the proposal—and
even if the analysis did not assume any HPMLs
would meet the criteria for exemptions in the final
rule. The switches from $350 to $600 for appraisal
cost and from non-QM to all HPMLs would increase
the percentages in the table approximately by a
factor of 20. However, even then the impact remains
well within 3 percent for 85 percent of the
institutions.

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there is unlikely to be an adverse effect
on demand.
A more likely impact—albeit
significantly reduced by the scope of
exemptions adopted in the final rule—
would be on the volume of non-QM
HPMLs secured by subordinate liens
because, in practice, these are the
transactions on which final rule
imposes a change from the status quo,
and also because the cost of a full
interior appraisal is a larger proportion
of the loan amount to the extent
subordinate lien loan amounts generally
are lower than first lien loan amounts.
However, changes in the volume of
subordinate lien non-QM HPMLs may
be mitigated by consumers rolling the
appraisal costs into the loan or the
consumer and the creditor splitting the
incremental cost of the full-interior
appraisal if it is profitable for the
creditor to do so. In addition, many
creditors originating subordinate lien
non-QM HPMLs can offer alternative
products that are not subject to the rule,
such as qualified mortgages or home
equity lines of credit (HELOCs).
Similarly, the costs imposed on
creditors are sufficiently small that they
are unlikely to result in a decrease in
the supply of credit.
D. Certification
Accordingly, the Director of the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
certifies that this rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

FDIC
The RFA generally requires that, in
connection with a final rulemaking, an
agency prepare a final regulatory
flexibility analysis that describes the
impact of the final rule on small
entities.157 A regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required, however, if the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
(defined in regulations promulgated by
the Small Business Administration to
include banking organizations with total
assets of less than or equal to $175
million) and publishes its certification
along with a statement providing the
factual basis for such certification in the
Federal Register together with the rule.
As of March 31, 2012, there were
approximately 2,571 small FDICsupervised banks, which include 2,410
state nonmember banks and 161 statechartered savings banks. The FDIC
analyzed the 2010 Home Mortgage
157 See

5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.

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Disclosure Act 158 (HMDA) dataset to
determine how many loans by FDICsupervised banks might qualify as
HPMLs under section 129H of TILA, as
added by section 1471 of the DoddFrank Act.159 This analysis reflected
that only 70 FDIC-supervised banks
originated at least 100 HPMLs, with
only four banks originating more than
500 HPMLs. Further, the FDICsupervised banks that met the definition
of a small entity originated on average
less than eight HPML loans each in
2010.
The three requirements 160 in the final
rule that could impact small FDICsupervised institutions most
significantly are:
1. Requiring an appraisal in
connection with real estate financial
transactions that previously did not
require an appraisal,
2. mandating that the appraiser
conduct a physical visit to the interior
of the property, and
3. requiring a second appraisal at the
lender’s expense in certain situations.
As for the first potential impact, the
FDIC notes that Part 323 of the FDIC
Rules and Regulations 161 (Part 323)
requires financial institutions to obtain
an appraisal for federally related
transactions unless an exemption
applies. Part 323 grants an exemption to
the appraisal requirement for real estaterelated financial transactions of
$250,000 or less. However, Part 323
requires financial institutions to obtain
an appropriate evaluation that is
consistent with safe and sound banking
practices for such transactions. The final
rule will supersede this exemption,
resulting in creditors having to obtain
an appraisal for an HPML transaction
regardless of the transaction amount.
The requirement to obtain an appraisal
rather than an evaluation does not add
much, if any, new burden on FDICsupervised institutions, as they are
158 The FDIC based its analysis on the HMDA
data, as it provided a proxy for the characteristics
of HPMLs. While the FDIC recognizes that fewer
higher-priced loans were generated in 2010, a more
historical review is not possible because the average
offer price (a key data element for this review) was
not added until the fourth quarter of 2009. The
FDIC also recognizes that the HMDA data provides
information relative to mortgage lending in
metropolitan statistical areas, but not in rural areas.
159 The FDIC notes that the exact number of small
entities likely to be affected by the final rule is
unknown because the FDIC lacks reliable sources
for certain information.
160 The requirements to provide consumers with
a statement disclosing the purpose of the appraisal
and to furnish consumers a copy of the appraisal
without charge at least three days prior to closing
should not create a significant new burden, as most
FDIC-supervised institutions routinely provide
required disclosures and copies of the appraisal to
consumers in a timely manner.
161 12 CFR Part 323.

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10427

required by Part 323 to obtain some type
of valuation of the mortgaged property.
The final rule merely limits the type of
permissible valuation to an appraisal for
HPMLs.
As for the second potential impact,
the final rule’s requirement affects a
lender only to the extent that a lender
must instruct the appraiser to conduct a
physical visit of the interior of the
mortgaged property. USPAP and title XI
of FIRREA, and the regulations
prescribed thereunder, do not require
appraisers to perform on-site visits.
Instead, USPAP requires appraisers to
include a certification which clearly
states whether the appraiser has or has
not personally inspected the subject
property. During informal outreach
conducted by the Agencies, outreach
participants indicated that many
creditors require appraisers to perform a
physical inspection of the mortgaged
property. This requirement is
documented in the Uniform Residential
Appraisal Report form used as a matter
of practice in the industry, which
includes a certification that the
appraiser performed a complete visual
inspection of the interior and exterior
areas of the subject property. Outreach
participants indicated that requiring a
physical visit of the interior of the
mortgaged property added, on average,
an additional cost of about $50 to the
appraisal fee, which is paid by the
applicant. Thus, the physical visit
requirement creates a potential burden
for the appraiser, not the lender, and the
cost is born by the applicant.
As for the third potential impact, the
final rule’s requirement to conduct a
second appraisal for certain transactions
should not affect many FDIC-supervised
banks. As previously indicated, FDICsupervised banks that meet the
definition of a small entity originated an
average of less than eight HPMLs each
in 2010. According to estimates
provided by FHFA, about 5 percent of
single-family property sales in 2010
reflected situations in which the same
property had been sold within a 180-day
period. This information shows that
most small FDIC-supervised banks will
have to obtain a second appraisal for a
nominal number of transactions at the
bank’s expense. The estimated cost of a
second appraisal is between $350 to
$600.
In sum, the FDIC believes that the
final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities that it regulates
in light of the fact that: (1) Part 323
already requires FDIC-supervised
depository institutions to obtain some
type of valuation for real estate-related
financial transactions; (2) the

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requirement of conducting a physical
visit of the interior of the mortgaged
property creates a potential burden for
an appraiser, rather than the lender,
with the cost being born by the
applicant; and (3) the second appraisal
requirement should affect a nominal
number of transactions. Accordingly,
pursuant to section 605(b) of the RFA,
the FDIC certifies that the final rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
FHFA
The final rule applies only to
institutions in the primary mortgage
market that originate mortgage loans.
FHFA’s regulated entities—Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home
Loan Banks—operate in the secondary
mortgage markets. In addition, these
entities do not come within the meaning
of small entities as defined in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act. See 5 U.S.C.
601(6)).

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

NCUA
The RFA generally requires that, in
connection with a final rule, an agency
prepare and make available for public
comment a final regulatory flexibility
analysis that describes the impact of the
final rule on small entities.162 A
regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required, however, if the agency
certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities and
publishes its certification and a short,
explanatory statement in the Federal
Register together with the rule. NCUA
defines small entities as small credit
unions having less than ten million
dollars in assets 163 in contrast to the
definition of small entities in the rules
issued by the Small Business
Administration (SBA), which include
banking organizations with total assets
of less than or equal to $175 million.
NCUA staff analyzed the 2010 Home
Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA)
dataset to determine how many loans by
federally insured credit unions (FICUs)
might qualify as HPMLs under section
129H of TILA.164 As of March 31, 2012,
there were 2,475 FICUs that met
NCUA’s small entity definition but none
of these institutions reported data to
HMDA in 2010. For purposes of this
rulemaking and for consistency with the
162 See

5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
FR 31949 (May 29, 2003).
164 NCUA based its analysis on the HMDA data,
as it provided a proxy for the characteristics of
HPMLs. The analysis is restricted to 2010 HMDA
data because the average offer price (a key data
element for this review) was not added in the
HMDA data until the fourth quarter of 2009.
163 68

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Agencies, NCUA reviewed the dataset
for FICUs that met the small entity
standard for banking organizations
under the SBA’s regulations. As of
March 31, 2012, there were
approximately 6,060 FICUs with total
assets of $175 million or less. Of the
FICUs which reported 2010 HMDA data,
452 reported at least one HPML. The
data reflects that only three FICUs
originated at least 100 HPMLs, with no
FICUs originating more than 500
HPMLs, and 88 percent of reporting
FICUs originating ten HPMLs or less.
Further, FICUs that met the SBA’s
definition of a small entity originated an
average four HPML loans each in
2010.165
As previously discussed, section 1471
of the Dodd-Frank Act 166 generally
prohibits a creditor from extending
credit in the form of a HPML to any
consumer without first:
• Obtaining a written appraisal
performed by a certified or licensed
appraiser who conducts a physical
property visit of the interior of the
property.
• Obtaining an additional appraisal
from a different certified or licensed
appraiser if the HPML finances the
purchase or acquisition of a property
from a seller at a higher price than the
seller paid, within 180 days of the
seller’s purchase or acquisition. The
additional appraisal must include an
analysis of the difference in sale prices,
changes in market conditions, and any
improvements made to the property
between the date of the previous sale
and the current sale.
• Providing the applicant, at the time
of the initial mortgage application, with
a statement that any appraisal prepared
for the mortgage is for the sole use of the
creditor, and that the applicant may
choose to have a separate appraisal
conducted at the applicant’s expense.
• Providing the applicant with one
copy of each appraisal conducted in
accordance with TILA section 129H
without charge, at least three (3) days
prior to the transaction closing date.
The final rule implements the
appraisal requirements of section 1471
of the Dodd-Frank Act. Part 722 of
NCUA’s regulations 167 requires FICUs
165 With only a fraction of small FICUs reporting
data to HMDA, NCUA also analyzed FICUs not
observed in the HMDA data. Using the total number
of real estate loans originated by FICUs with less
than $175M in total assets, NCUA estimated the
average number of HPMLs per real estate loan
originated. Using this ratio to interpolate the likely
number of HPML originations, the analysis suggests
that small FICUs originate on average less than two
HPML loans each year.
166 Codified at section 129H of the Truth-inLending Act, 15 U.S.C. 1631 et seq.
167 12 CFR part 722.

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to obtain an appraisal for federally
related transactions unless an
exemption applies. Part 722 grants an
exemption to the appraisal requirement
for real estate-related financial
transactions of $250,000 or less.
However, part 722 requires FICUs to
obtain an appropriate evaluation that is
consistent with safe and sound practices
for such transactions.
The final rule will supersede this
exemption, resulting in FICUs having to
obtain an appraisal for a HPML
transaction regardless of the transaction
amount. The requirement to obtain an
appraisal rather than an evaluation does
not pose a new burden to financial
institutions, as they are required by part
722 to obtain some type of valuation of
the mortgaged property. The final rule
merely limits the type of permissible
valuations to an appraisal for HPMLs.
The final rule’s requirement to
conduct a physical visit of the interior
of the mortgaged property potentially
adds an additional burden to the
appraiser. The USPAP and title XI of
FIRREA and the regulations prescribed
thereunder do not require appraisers to
perform on-site visits. Instead, USPAP
requires appraisers to include a
certification which clearly states
whether the appraiser has or has not
personally inspected the subject
property. During informal outreach
conducted by the Agencies, outreach
participants indicated that many
creditors require appraisers to perform a
physical inspection of the mortgaged
property. This requirement is
documented in the Uniform Residential
Appraisal Report form used as a matter
of practice in the industry, which
includes a certification that the
appraiser performed a complete visual
inspection of the interior and exterior
areas of the subject property. Outreach
participants indicated that requiring a
physical visit of the interior of the
mortgaged property added on average an
additional cost of about $50 to the
appraisal fee, which is paid by the
applicant.
In light of the fact that few loans made
by FICUs would qualify as HPMLs, the
fact that many creditors already require
that an appraiser conduct an interior
inspection of mortgage collateral
property in connection with an
appraisal; the fact that requiring an
interior inspection would add a
relatively small amount to the cost of an
appraisal; and the various exemptions
and exclusions from the requirements
provided in the rule, NCUA believes the
final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on small FICUs.
For the reasons provided above,
NCUA certifies that the final rule will

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. Accordingly, a regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required.
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 encourages
independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on
state and local interests. NCUA, an
independent regulatory agency as
defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5), voluntarily
complies with the executive order to
adhere to fundamental federalism
principles. This final rule applies to
Federally insured credit unions and will
not have a substantial direct effect on
the states, on the relationship between
the national government and the states,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. NCUA has
determined that this final rule does not
constitute a policy that has federalism
implications for purposes of the
Executive Order.
The Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999—Assessment
of Federal Regulations and Policies on
Families
NCUA has determined this final rule
will not affect family well-being within
the meaning of section 654 of the
Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999, Public Law
105–277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1998).

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 168
(SBREFA) provides generally for
congressional review of agency rules. A
reporting requirement is triggered in
instances where NCUA issues a final
rule as defined by Section 551 of the
Administrative Procedure Act.169 NCUA
does not believe this final rule is a
‘‘major rule’’ within the meaning of the
relevant sections of SBREFA. NCUA has
submitted the rule to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for its
determination.
OCC
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C.
605(b) (RFA), the regulatory flexibility
analysis otherwise required under
section 603 of the RFA is not required
if the agency certifies that the final rule
will not, if promulgated, have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
(defined for purposes of the RFA to
168 Public
169 5

Law 104–121, 110 Stat. 857 (1996).
U.S.C. 551.

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include banks, savings institutions and
other depository credit intermediaries
with assets less than or equal to $175
million 170 and trust companies with
total assets of $7 million or less) and
publishes its certification and a short,
explanatory statement in the Federal
Register along with its final rule.
Section 1471 of the Dodd-Frank Act
establishes a new TILA section 129H,
which sets forth appraisal requirements
applicable to higher-priced mortgage
loans. A ‘‘higher-priced mortgage’’
generally is a closed-end consumer loan
secured by a principal dwelling with an
APR that exceeds the APOR by 1.5
percent for first-lien loans with a
principal amount below the conforming
loan limit, 2.5 percent for first-lien
jumbo loans, or 3.5 percent for
subordinate-liens. The definition of
higher-priced mortgage loan expressly
excludes qualified mortgages, as defined
in TILA section 129C, as well as reverse
mortgage loans that are qualified
mortgages as defined in TILA section
129C.
Specifically, section 129H does not
permit a creditor to extend credit in the
form of a higher-priced mortgage loan to
any consumer without first:
• Obtaining a written appraisal
performed by a certified or licensed
appraiser who conducts a physical
property visit of the interior of the
property.
• Obtaining an additional written
appraisal from a different certified or
licensed appraiser if the purpose of the
higher-risk mortgage loan is to finance
the purchase or acquisition of a
mortgaged property from a seller within
180 days of the purchase or acquisition
of the property by that seller at a price
that was lower than the current sale
price of the property. The additional
written appraisal must include an
analysis of the difference in sale prices,
changes in market conditions, and any
improvements made to the property
between the date of the previous sale
and the current sale.
• Providing the applicant, at the time
of the initial mortgage application, with
a statement that any written appraisal
prepared for the mortgage is for the sole
use of the creditor, and that the
applicant may choose to have a separate
appraisal conducted at the applicant’s
expense.
• Providing the applicant with one
copy of each appraisal conducted in
accordance with TILA section 129H
170 ‘‘A financial institution’s asset are determined
by averaging assets reported on its four quarterly
financial statements for the preceding year.’’ See
footnote 8 of the U.S. Small Business
Administration’s Table of Size Standards.

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10429

without charge, at least three (3) days
prior to the transaction closing date.
The OCC currently supervises 1,926
banks (1,262 commercial banks, 65 trust
companies, 552 federal savings
associations, and 47 branches or
agencies of foreign banks). We estimate
that less than 1,400 of the banks
supervised by the OCC are currently
originating one- to four-family
residential mortgage loans.
Approximately 772 OCC supervised
banks are small entities based on the
SBA’s definition of small entities for
RFA purposes. Of these, the OCC
estimates that 465 banks originate
mortgages and therefore may be
impacted by the final rule.
The OCC classifies the economic
impact of total costs on a bank as
significant if the total costs in a single
year are greater than 5 percent of total
salaries and benefits, or greater than 2.5
percent of total non-interest expense.
The OCC estimates that the average cost
per small bank will range from a lower
bound of approximately $10,000 to an
upper bound of approximately $18,000.
Using the upper bound cost estimate,
we believe the final rule will have a
significant economic impact on three
small banks, which is not a substantial
number.
Therefore, we believe the final rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The OCC certifies that the Final
Rule would not, if promulgated, have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
OCC Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 Determination
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C.
1532), requires the OCC to prepare a
budgetary impact statement before
promulgating a rule that includes a
Federal mandate that may result in the
expenditure by state, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any one year (adjusted annually for
inflation). The OCC has determined that
this final rule will not result in
expenditures by state, local, and tribal
governments, or the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year.
Accordingly, the OCC has not prepared
a budgetary impact statement.
VII. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain provisions of this final rule
contain ‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). Under the PRA,
the Agencies may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to

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srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

respond to, an information collection
unless the information collection
displays a valid Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number. The
information collection requirements
contained in this joint notice of final
rulemaking have been submitted to
OMB for review and approval by the
Bureau, FDIC, NCUA, and OCC under
section 3506 of the PRA and section
1320.11 of the OMB’s implementing
regulations (5 CFR part 1320). The
Board reviewed the final rule under the
authority delegated to the Board by
OMB.
Title of Information Collection: HPML
Appraisals.
Frequency of Response: Event
generated.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit and not-for-profit
organizations.171
Bureau: Insured depository
institutions with more than $10 billion
in assets, their depository institution
affiliates, and certain non-depository
mortgage institutions.172
FDIC: Insured state non-member
banks, insured state branches of foreign
banks, and certain subsidiaries of these
entities.
OCC: National banks, Federal savings
associations, Federal branches or
agencies of foreign banks, or any
operating subsidiary thereof.
Board: State member banks,
uninsured state branches and agencies
of foreign banks.
NCUA: Federally-insured credit
unions.
Abstract:
The collection of information
requirements in this final rule are found
in paragraphs (c)(3)(i), (c)(3)(ii), (c)(4),
(c)(5), and (c)(6) of 12 CFR 1026.35. This
information is required to protect
consumers and promote the safety and
soundness of creditors making HPMLs
subject to 12 CFR 1026.35(c). This
information is used by creditors to
evaluate real estate collateral securing
HPMLs subject to 12 CFR 1026.35(c)
and by consumers entering these
transactions. The collections of
information are mandatory for creditors
making HPMLs subject to 12 CFR
1026.35(c). The final rule requires that,
171 The burdens on the affected public generally
are divided in accordance with the Agencies’
respective administrative enforcement authority
under TILA section 108, 15 U.S.C. 1607.
172 The Bureau and the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) generally both have enforcement
authority over non-depository institutions for
Regulation Z. Accordingly, for purposes of this PRA
analysis, the Bureau has allocated to itself half of
the Bureau’s estimated burden for non-depository
mortgage institutions. The FTC is responsible for
estimating and reporting to OMB its share of burden
under this proposal.

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within three business days of
application, a creditor provide a
disclosure that informs consumers of
the purpose of the appraisal, that the
creditor will provide the consumer a
copy of any appraisal, and that the
consumer may choose to have a separate
appraisal conducted at the expense of
the consumer (Initial Appraisal
Disclosure). See 12 CFR 1026.35(c)(5). If
a loan is a HPML subject to 12 CFR
1026.35(c), then the creditor is required
to obtain a written appraisal prepared
by a certified or licensed appraiser who
conducts a physical visit of the interior
of the property that will secure the
transaction (Written Appraisal), and
provide a copy of the Written Appraisal
to the consumer. See 12 CFR
1026.35(c)(3)(i) and (c)(6). To qualify for
the safe harbor provided under the final
rule, a creditor is required to review the
Written Appraisal as specified in the
text of the rule and Appendix N. See 12
CFR 1026.35(c)(3)(ii).
A creditor is required to obtain an
additional appraisal (Additional Written
Appraisal) for a HPML that is subject to
12 CFR 1026.35(c) if (1) the seller
acquired the property securing the loan
90 or fewer days prior to the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property and the resale price exceeds
the seller’s acquisition price by more
than 10 percent; or (2) the seller
acquired the property securing the loan
91 to 180 days prior to the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property and the resale price exceeds
the seller’s acquisition price by more
than 20 percent. See 12 CFR
1026.35(c)(4). The Additional Written
Appraisal must meet the requirements
described above and also analyze: (1)
The difference between the price at
which the seller acquired the property
and the price the consumer agreed to
pay, (2) changes in market conditions
between the date the seller acquired the
property and the date the consumer
agreed to acquire the property, and (3)
any improvements made to the property
between the date the seller acquired the
property and the date on which the
consumer agreed to acquire the
property. See 12 CFR 1026.35(c)(4)(iv).
A creditor is also required to provide a
copy of the Additional Written
Appraisal to the consumer. 12 CFR
1026.35(c)(6).
Comments on Proposed PRA Estimate
In the proposal, the Agencies
proposed a Calculation of Estimated
Burden based on the proposed
requirements. The Agencies received
one comment from a bank in response
to the PRA estimate in the proposed
rule. The commenter asserted that the

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Agencies’ proposed PRA estimates to
comply with the new requirements were
understated, but the commenter did not
provide alternative estimates. The
Agencies recognize that the amount of
time required of institutions to comply
with the requirements may vary;
however, the Agencies continue to
believe that estimates provided are
reasonable averages.
The requirements provided in the
final rule are substantially similar to
those provided in the proposed rule.
Based upon data available to the Bureau
as described in its section 1022 analysis
above and in the table below, the
estimated burdens allocated to the
Bureau are revised from the proposal to
reflect an institution count based upon
updated data and reduced to reflect
those exemptions in the final rule for
which the Bureau has identified data.
Because these data were unavailable to
the other Agencies before finalizing this
PRA section, the other Agencies did not
adjust the calculations to account for the
exempted transactions provided in the
final rule. Accordingly, the estimated
burden calculations in the table below
are overstated.
Calculation of Estimated Burden
For the Initial Appraisal Disclosure,
the creditor is required to provide a
short, written disclosure within three
days of application. Because the
disclosure is classified as a warning
label supplied by the Federal
government, the Agencies are assigning
it no burden for purposes of this PRA
analysis.173
The estimated burden for the Written
Appraisal requirements includes the
creditor’s burden of reviewing the
Written Appraisal in order to satisfy the
safe harbor criteria set forth in the rule
and providing a copy of the Written
Appraisal to the consumer.
Additionally, as discussed above, an
Additional Written Appraisal
containing additional analyses is
required in certain circumstances. The
Additional Written Appraisal must meet
the standards of the Written Appraisal.
The Additional Written Appraisal is
also required to be prepared by a
certified or licensed appraiser different
from the appraiser performing the
Written Appraisal, and a copy of the
Additional Written Appraisal must be
provided to the consumer. The creditor
must separately review the Additional
Written Appraisal in order to qualify for
173 The public disclosure of information
originally supplied by the Federal government to
the recipient for the purpose of disclosure to the
public is not included within the definition of
‘‘collection of information.’’ 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(2).

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
the safe harbor provided in the final
rule.
The Agencies estimate that
respondents will take, on average, 15
minutes for each HPML that is subject
to 12 CFR 1026.35(c) to review the
Written Appraisal and to provide a copy
of the Written Appraisal. The Agencies

estimate further that respondents will
take, on average, 15 minutes for each
HPML that is subject to 12 CFR
1026.35(c) to investigate and verify the
need for an Additional Written
Appraisal and, where necessary, an
additional 15 minutes to review the
Additional Written Appraisal and to

10431

provide a copy of the Additional
Written Appraisal. For the small
fraction of loans requiring an Additional
Written Appraisal, the burden is similar
to that of the Written Appraisal. The
following table summarizes these
burden estimates.
Estimated PRA Burden

TABLE 3—SUMMARY OF PRA BURDEN HOURS FOR INFORMATION COLLECTIONS IN FINAL RULE
Estimated
number of
respondents

Estimated
number of
appraisals
per
respondent 174

Estimated
burden hours
per appraisal

Estimated
total annual
burden hours

[a]

[b]

[c]

[d] = (a*b*c)

Review and Provide a Copy of Written Appraisal
175 176 177.

Bureau
Depository Inst. > $10 B in total assets + Depository Inst. Affiliates ..............
Non-Depository Inst. and Credit Unions ..........................................................
FDIC .................................................................................................................
Board 179 ..........................................................................................................
OCC .................................................................................................................
NCUA ...............................................................................................................

132
2,853
2,571
418
1,399
2,437

6.21
0.38
8
24
69
6

0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25

5,142
2,508
24,133
3,656

Total ..........................................................................................................

9,810

........................

........................

35,780

205
178136

Investigate and Verify Requirement for Additional Written Appraisal
Bureau.
Depository Inst. > $10 B in total assets + Depository Inst. Affiliates ..............
Non-Depository Inst. and Credit Unions ..........................................................
FDIC .................................................................................................................
Board ...............................................................................................................
OCC .................................................................................................................
NCUA ...............................................................................................................

132
2,853
2,571
418
1,399
2,437

20.05
1.22
15
24
69
6

0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25

662
435
9,641
2,508
24,133
3,656

Total ..........................................................................................................

9,810

........................

........................

41,035

Review and Provide a Copy of Additional Written Appraisal
Bureau.
Depository Inst. > $10 B in total assets + Depository Inst. Affiliates ..............
Non-Depository Inst. and Credit Unions ..........................................................
FDIC .................................................................................................................
Board ...............................................................................................................
OCC .................................................................................................................
NCUA ...............................................................................................................

132
2,853
2,571
418
1,399
2,437

0.64
0.04
1
1
3
0.3

0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25
0.25

21
14
643
105
1,049
183

Total ..........................................................................................................

9,810

........................

........................

2,015

Notes:
(1) Respondents include all institutions estimated to originate HPMLs that are subject to 12 CFR 1026.35(c).
(2) There may be an additional ongoing burden of roughly 75 hours for privately-insured credit unions estimated to originate HPMLs that are
subject to 12 CFR 1026.35(c). The Bureau will assume half of the burden for non-depository institutions and the privately-insured credit unions.

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

Finally, respondents must also review
the instructions and legal guidance
174 The ‘‘Estimated Number of Appraisals Per
Respondent’’ reflects the estimated number of
Written Appraisals and Additional Written
Appraisals that will be performed solely to comply
with the final rule. It does not include the number
of appraisals that will continue to be performed
under current industry practice, without regard to
the final rule’s requirements.
175 The information collection requirements (ICs)
in this final rule will be incorporated with the
Bureau’s existing collection associated with Truth
in Lending Act (Regulation Z) 12 CFR 1026 (OMB
No. 3170–0015).

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176 The

burden estimates allocated to the Bureau
are updated using the data described in the
Bureau’s section 1022 analysis above, including
significant burden reductions after accounting for
qualified mortgages that are exempt from the final
rule, and burden reductions after accounting for
loans in rural areas that are exempt from the
Additional Written Appraisal requirement in the
final rule.
177 There are 153 depository institutions (and
their depository affiliates) that are subject to the
Bureau’s administrative enforcement authority. In
addition, there are 146 privately-insured credit
unions that are subject to the Bureau’s
administrative enforcement authority. For purposes
of this PRA analysis, the Bureau’s respondents

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under Regulation Z are 135 depository institutions
that originate either open or closed-end mortgages;
77 privately-insured credit unions that originate
either open or closed-end mortgages; and an
estimated 2,787 non-depository institutions that are
subject to the Bureau’s administrative enforcement
authority. Unless otherwise specified, all references
to burden hours and costs for the Bureau
respondents for the collection under Regulation Z
are based on a calculation that includes half of the
burden for the estimated 2,787 non-depository
institutions and 77 privately-insured credit unions.
178 The Bureau assumes half of the burden for the
IMBs and the credit unions supervised by the
Bureau. The FTC assumes the burden for the other
half.

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations

associated with the final rule and train
loan officers regarding the requirements
of the final rule. The Agencies estimate
that these one-time costs are as follows:
Bureau: 36,383 hours; FDIC: 10,284
hours; Board 3,344 hours; OCC: 19,586
hours; NCUA: 7,311 hours.180
The Agencies have a continuing
interest in the public’s opinions of our
collections of information. At any time,
comments regarding the burden
estimate, or any other aspect of this
collection of information, including
suggestions for reducing the burden,
may be sent to the OMB desk officer for
the Agencies by mail to U.S. Office of
Management and Budget, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC 20503, or by the
internet to http://
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov, with
copies to the Agencies at the addresses
listed in the ADDRESSES section of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
FHFA
The final rule does not contain any
collections of information applicable to
the FHFA, requiring review by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.).
Therefore, FHFA has not submitted any
materials to OMB for review.
VIII. Section 302 of the Riegle
Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
Section 1400 of the Dodd Frank Act
requires this rule to take effect not later
than 12 months after the date of
issuance of the final rule. This rule is
issued on January 18, 2013 and will
become effective on January 18, 2014.
Section 302 of the Riegle Community
Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act of 1994 (‘‘RCDRIA’’)
requires that, subject to certain
exceptions, regulations issued by the
OCC, the Board and the FDIC that
impose additional reporting, disclosure,
or other requirements on insured
depository institutions, shall take effect
on the first day of a calendar quarter
which begins on or after the date on
which the regulations are published in

final form. This effective date
requirement does not apply if the
issuing agency finds for good cause that
the regulation should become effective
before such time. 12 U.S.C. 4802.
The OCC, the Board and the FDIC find
that good cause exists to establish an
effective date for this rule other than the
first date of a calendar quarter,
specifically January 18, 2014. This rule
incorporates key definitions from, and is
designed to accommodate combined
disclosures with, other new mortgagerelated rules being issued by the Bureau
that also have effective dates on and
around January 18, 2014. The consistent
application of these rules will permit
depository institutions to implement the
systems, policies and procedures
required to comply with this group of
regulations in a coordinated and
efficient way. In addition, insured
depository institutions wishing to
comply at the beginning of a calendar
quarter prior to the effective date retain
the flexibility to do so.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 34
Appraisal, Appraiser, Banks, Banking,
Consumer protection, Credit, Mortgages,
National banks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations, Truth in Lending.

Appraisals, Mortgages, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations, Truth in Lending.
12 CFR Part 226
Advertising, Appraisal, Appraiser,
Consumer protection, Credit, Federal
Reserve System, Mortgages, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Truth
in lending.
12 CFR Part 722
Appraisal, Credit, Credit unions,
Mortgages, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.

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179 The

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Advertising, Appraisal, Appraiser,
Banking, Banks, Consumer protection,
Credit, Credit unions, Mortgages,
National banks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations, Truth in lending.
12 CFR Part 1222
Government sponsored enterprises,
Mortgages, Appraisals.

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Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the OCC amends 12 CFR parts
34 and 164, as follows:
PART 34—REAL ESTATE LENDING
AND APPRAISALS
1. The authority citation for part 34 is
revised to read as follows:

■

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 25b, 29,
93a,371, 1463, 1464, 1465,1701j–3, 1828(o),
3331 et seq., 5101 et seq., 5412(b)(2)(B) and
15 U.S.C. 1639h.

2. Subpart G to part 34 is added to
read as follows:

■

Subpart G— Appraisals for Higher-Priced
Mortgage Loans
Sec.
34.201 Authority, purpose, and scope.
34.202 Definitions applicable to higherpriced mortgage loans.
34.203 Appraisals for higher-priced
mortgage loans.
Appendix A to Subpart G—Higher-Priced
Mortgage Loan Appraisal Safe Harbor
Review
Appendix B to Subpart G—Illustrative
Written Source Documents for Higherpriced Mortgage Loan Appraisal Rules
Appendix C to Subpart G—OCC
Interpretations

Subpart G—Appraisals for HigherPriced Mortgage Loans

12 CFR Part 164

12 CFR Part 1026
ICs in this rule will be incorporated with
the Board’s Reporting, Recordkeeping, and
Disclosure Requirements associated with
Regulation Z (Truth in Lending), 12 CFR part 226,
and Regulation AA (Unfair or Deceptive Acts or
Practices), 12 CFR part 227 (OMB No. 7100–0199).
The burden estimates provided in this rule pertain
only to the ICs associated with this final rule.
180 Estimated one-time burden is calculated
assuming a fixed burden per institution to review
the regulations and fixed burden per estimated loan
officer in training costs. As a result of the different
size and mortgage activities across institutions, the
average per-institution one-time burdens vary
across the Agencies.

Department of the Treasury

Sfmt 4700

§ 34.201

Authority, purpose and scope.

(a) Authority. This subpart is issued
by the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency under 12 U.S.C. 93a, 12 U.S.C.
1463, 1464 and 15 U.S.C. 1639h.
(b) Purpose. The OCC adopts this
subpart pursuant to the requirements of
section 129H of the Truth in Lending
Act (15 U.S.C. 1639h) which provides
that a creditor, including a national
bank or operating subsidiary, a Federal
branch or agency or a Federal savings
association or operating subsidiary, may
not extend credit in the form of a
higher-risk mortgage without complying
with the requirements of section 129H
of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C.
1639h) and this subpart G. The
definition of a higher-risk mortgage in
section 129H is consistent with the
definition of a higher-priced mortgage
loan under Regulation Z, 12 CFR part
1026. Specifically, 12 CFR 1026.35
defines a higher-priced mortgage loan as
a closed-end consumer credit
transaction secured by the consumer’s
principal dwelling with an annual
percentage rate that exceeds the average
prime offer rate for a comparable

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
transaction as of the date the interest
rate is set:
(1) By 1.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a first lien with a
principal obligation at consummation
that does not exceed the limit in effect
as of the date the transaction’s interest
rate is set for the maximum principal
obligation eligible for purchase by
Freddie Mac;
(2) By 2.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a first lien with a
principal obligation at consummation
that exceeds the limit in effect as of the
date the transaction’s interest rate is set
for the maximum principal obligation
eligible for purchase by Freddie Mac; or
(3) By 3.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a subordinate lien.
(c) Scope. This subpart applies to
higher-priced mortgage loan
transactions entered into by national
banks and their operating subsidiaries,
Federal branches and agencies and
Federal savings associations and
operating subsidiaries of savings
associations.
(d) Official Interpretations. Appendix
C to this subpart sets out OCC
Interpretations of the requirements
imposed by the OCC pursuant to this
subpart.
§ 34.202 Definitions applicable to higherpriced mortgage loans.

(a) Creditor has the same meaning as
in 12 CFR 1026.2(a)(17).
(b) Higher-priced mortgage loan has
the same meaning as in 12 CFR
1026.35(a)(1).
(c) Reverse mortgage has the same
meaning as in 12 CFR 1026.33(a).

srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3

§ 34.203 Appraisals for higher-priced
mortgage loans.

(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Certified or licensed appraiser
means a person who is certified or
licensed by the State agency in the State
in which the property that secures the
transaction is located, and who
performs the appraisal in conformity
with the Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice and the
requirements applicable to appraisers in
title XI of the Financial Institutions
Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act
of 1989, as amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et
seq.), and any implementing
regulations, in effect at the time the
appraiser signs the appraiser’s
certification.
(2) Manufactured home has the same
meaning as in 24 CFR 3280.2.
(3) National Registry means the
database of information about State
certified and licensed appraisers
maintained by the Appraisal

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Subcommittee of the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council.
(4) State agency means a ‘‘State
appraiser certifying and licensing
agency’’ recognized in accordance with
section 1118(b) of the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989 (12 U.S.C.
3347(b)) and any implementing
regulations.
(b) Exemptions. The requirements in
paragraphs (c) through (f) of this section
do not apply to the following types of
transactions:
(1) A qualified mortgage as defined in
12 CFR 1026.43(e).
(2) A transaction secured by a new
manufactured home.
(3) A transaction secured by a mobile
home, boat, or trailer.
(4) A transaction to finance the initial
construction of a dwelling.
(5) A loan with a maturity of 12
months or less, if the purpose of the
loan is a ‘‘bridge’’ loan connected with
the acquisition of a dwelling intended to
become the consumer’s principal
dwelling.
(6) A reverse-mortgage transaction
subject to 12 CFR 1026.33(a).
(c) Appraisals required—(1) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section, a creditor
shall not extend a higher-priced
mortgage loan to a consumer without
obtaining, prior to consummation, a
written appraisal of the property to be
mortgaged. The appraisal must be
performed by a certified or licensed
appraiser who conducts a physical visit
of the interior of the property that will
secure the transaction.
(2) Safe harbor. A creditor obtains a
written appraisal that meets the
requirements for an appraisal required
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section if
the creditor:
(i) Orders that the appraiser perform
the appraisal in conformity with the
Uniform Standards of Professional
Appraisal Practice and title XI of the
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery,
and Enforcement Act of 1989, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and
any implementing regulations in effect
at the time the appraiser signs the
appraiser’s certification;
(ii) Verifies through the National
Registry that the appraiser who signed
the appraiser’s certification was a
certified or licensed appraiser in the
State in which the appraised property is
located as of the date the appraiser
signed the appraiser’s certification;
(iii) Confirms that the elements set
forth in appendix A to this subpart are
addressed in the written appraisal; and

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10433

(iv) Has no actual knowledge contrary
to the facts or certifications contained in
the written appraisal.
(d) Additional appraisal for certain
higher-priced mortgage loans—(1) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraphs (b) and (d)(7) of this section,
a creditor shall not extend a higherpriced mortgage loan to a consumer to
finance the acquisition of the
consumer’s principal dwelling without
obtaining, prior to consummation, two
written appraisals, if:
(i) The seller acquired the property 90
or fewer days prior to the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property and the price in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property exceeds the seller’s acquisition
price by more than 10 percent; or
(ii) The seller acquired the property
91 to 180 days prior to the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property and the price in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property exceeds the seller’s acquisition
price by more than 20 percent.
(2) Different certified or licensed
appraisers. The two appraisals required
under paragraph (d)(1) of this section
may not be performed by the same
certified or licensed appraiser.
(3) Relationship to general appraisal
requirements. If two appraisals must be
obtained under paragraph (d)(1) of this
section, each appraisal shall meet the
requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this
section.
(4) Required analysis in the additional
appraisal. One of the two required
appraisals must include an analysis of:
(i) The difference between the price at
which the seller acquired the property
and the price that the consumer is
obligated to pay to acquire the property,
as specified in the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property from
the seller;
(ii) Changes in market conditions
between the date the seller acquired the
property and the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property; and
(iii) Any improvements made to the
property between the date the seller
acquired the property and the date of
the consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property.
(5) No charge for the additional
appraisal. If the creditor must obtain
two appraisals under paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, the creditor may charge the
consumer for only one of the appraisals.
(6) Creditor’s determination of prior
sale date and price—(i) Reasonable
diligence. A creditor must obtain two
written appraisals under paragraph
(d)(1) of this section unless the creditor
can demonstrate by exercising
reasonable diligence that the

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations

requirement to obtain two appraisals
does not apply. A creditor acts with
reasonable diligence if the creditor bases
its determination on information
contained in written source documents,
such as the documents listed in
appendix B to this subpart.
(ii) Inability to determine prior sale
date or price—modified requirements
for additional appraisal. If, after
exercising reasonable diligence, a
creditor cannot determine whether the
conditions in paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and
(d)(1)(ii) are present and therefore must
obtain two written appraisals in
accordance with paragraphs (d)(1)
through (d)(5) of this section, one of the
two appraisals shall include an analysis
of the factors in paragraph (d)(4) of this
section only to the extent that the
information necessary for the appraiser
to perform the analysis can be
determined.
(7) Exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement. The additional
appraisal required under paragraph
(d)(1) of this section shall not apply to
extensions of credit that finance a
consumer’s acquisition of property:
(i) From a local, State or Federal
government agency;
(ii) From a person who acquired title
to the property through foreclosure,
deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, or other
similar judicial or non-judicial
procedure as a result of the person’s
exercise of rights as the holder of a
defaulted mortgage loan;
(iii) From a non-profit entity as part
of a local, State, or Federal government
program under which the non-profit
entity is permitted to acquire title to
single-family properties for resale from
a seller who acquired title to the
property through the process of
foreclosure, deed-in-lieu of foreclosure,
or other similar judicial or non-judicial
procedure;
(iv) From a person who acquired title
to the property by inheritance or
pursuant to a court order of dissolution
of marriage, civil union, or domestic
partnership, or of partition of joint or
marital assets to which the seller was a
party;
(v) From an employer or relocation
agency in connection with the
relocation of an employee;
(vi) From a servicemember, as defined
in 50 U.S.C. App. 511(1), who received
a deployment or permanent change of
station order after the servicemember
purchased the property;
(vii) Located in an area designated by
the President as a federal disaster area,
if and for as long as the Federal
financial institutions regulatory
agencies, as defined in 12 U.S.C.
3350(6), waive the requirements in title

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XI of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989,
as amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and
any implementing regulations in that
area; or
(viii) Located in a rural county, as
defined in 12 CFR 1026.35(b)(2)(iv)(A).
(e) Required disclosure—(1) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section, a creditor
shall disclose the following statement,
in writing, to a consumer who applies
for a higher-priced mortgage loan: ‘‘We
may order an appraisal to determine the
property’s value and charge you for this
appraisal. We will give you a copy of
any appraisal, even if your loan does not
close. You can pay for an additional
appraisal for your own use at your own
cost.’’ Compliance with the disclosure
requirement in Regulation B, 12 CFR
1002.14(a)(2), satisfies the requirements
of this paragraph.
(2) Timing of disclosure. The
disclosure required by paragraph (e)(1)
of this section shall be delivered or
placed in the mail no later than the
third business day after the creditor
receives the consumer’s application for
a higher-priced mortgage loan subject to
this section. In the case of a loan that
is not a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to this section at the time of
application, but becomes a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to this
section after application, the disclosure
shall be delivered or placed in the mail
not later than the third business day
after the creditor determines that the
loan is a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to this section.
(f) Copy of appraisals—(1) In general.
Except as provided in paragraph (b) of
this section, a creditor shall provide to
the consumer a copy of any written
appraisal performed in connection with
a higher-priced mortgage loan pursuant
to paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
(2) Timing. A creditor shall provide to
the consumer a copy of each written
appraisal pursuant to paragraph (f)(1) of
this section:
(i) No later than three business days
prior to consummation of the loan; or
(ii) In the case of a loan that is not
consummated, no later than 30 days
after the creditor determines that the
loan will not be consummated.
(3) Form of copy. Any copy of a
written appraisal required by paragraph
(f)(1) of this section may be provided to
the applicant in electronic form, subject
to compliance with the consumer
consent and other applicable provisions
of the Electronic Signatures in Global
and National Commerce Act (E-Sign
Act) (15 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.).
(4) No charge for copy of appraisal. A
creditor shall not charge the consumer

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for a copy of a written appraisal
required to be provided to the consumer
pursuant to paragraph (f)(1) of this
section.
(g) Relation to other rules. The rules
in this section 34.203 were adopted
jointly by the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (the Board), the
OCC, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, the National Credit Union
Administration, the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, and the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau (Bureau).
These rules are substantively identical
to the Board’s and the Bureau’s higherpriced mortgage loan appraisal rules
published separately in 12 CFR 226.43
(for the Board) and 12 CFR 1026.35(a)
and (c) (for the Bureau).
Appendix A to Subpart G — HigherPriced Mortgage Loan Appraisal Safe
Harbor Review
To qualify for the safe harbor provided in
§ 34.203(c)(2), a creditor must confirm that
the written appraisal:
1. Identifies the creditor who ordered the
appraisal and the property and the interest
being appraised.
2. Indicates whether the contract price was
analyzed.
3. Addresses conditions in the property’s
neighborhood.
4. Addresses the condition of the property
and any improvements to the property.
5. Indicates which valuation approaches
were used, and includes a reconciliation if
more than one valuation approach was used.
6. Provides an opinion of the property’s
market value and an effective date for the
opinion.
7. Indicates that a physical property visit
of the interior of the property was performed.
8. Includes a certification signed by the
appraiser that the appraisal was prepared in
accordance with the requirements of the
Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal
Practice.
9. Includes a certification signed by the
appraiser that the appraisal was prepared in
accordance with the requirements of title XI
of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and any
implementing regulations.

Appendix B to Subpart G—Illustrative
Written Source Documents for HigherPriced Mortgage Loan Appraisal Rules
A creditor acts with reasonable diligence
under § 34.203(d)(6)(i) if the creditor bases its
determination on information contained in
written source documents, such as:
1. A copy of the recorded deed from the
seller.
2. A copy of a property tax bill.
3. A copy of any owner’s title insurance
policy obtained by the seller.
4. A copy of the RESPA settlement
statement from the seller’s acquisition (i.e.,
the HUD–1 or any successor form).
5. A property sales history report or title
report from a third-party reporting service.

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
6. Sales price data recorded in multiple
listing services.
7. Tax assessment records or transfer tax
records obtained from local governments.
8. A written appraisal performed in
compliance with § 34.203(c)(1) for the same
transaction.
9. A copy of a title commitment report
detailing the seller’s ownership of the
property, the date it was acquired, or the
price at which the seller acquired the
property.
10. A property abstract.

Appendix C to Subpart G—OCC
Interpretations

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Section 34.202—Definitions applicable to
higher-priced mortgage loans
1. Staff Interpretations. Section 34.202
incorporates definitions from Regulation Z,
12 CFR part 1026. These OCC Interpretations
of 12 CFR part 34, subpart G, incorporate the
Official Staff Interpretations to the Bureau’s
Regulation Z associated with those
definitions, at 12 CFR part 1026, Supplement
I.
Section 34.203—Appraisals for higherpriced mortgage loans
34.203(a) Definitions.
34.203(a)(1) Certified or licensed appraiser.
1. USPAP. The Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) are
established by the Appraisal Standards Board
of the Appraisal Foundation (as defined in 12
U.S.C. 3350(9)). Under § 34.203(a)(1), the
relevant USPAP standards are those found in
the edition of USPAP in effect at the time the
appraiser signs the appraiser’s certification.
2. Appraiser’s certification. The appraiser’s
certification refers to the certification that
must be signed by the appraiser for each
appraisal assignment. This requirement is
specified in USPAP Standards Rule 2–3.
3. FIRREA title XI and implementing
regulations. The relevant regulations are
those prescribed under section 1110 of the
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3339), that relate to an
appraiser’s development and reporting of the
appraisal in effect at the time the appraiser
signs the appraiser’s certification. Paragraph
(3) of FIRREA section 1110 (12 U.S.C.
3339(3)), which relates to the review of
appraisals, is not relevant for determining
whether an appraiser is a certified or licensed
appraiser under § 34.203(a)(1).
34.203(b) Exemptions.
Paragraph 34.203(b)(2).
1. Secured by new manufactured home. A
transaction secured by a new manufactured
home, regardless of whether the transaction
is also secured by the land on which it is
sited, is not a ‘‘higher-priced mortgage loan’’
subject to the appraisal requirements of
§ 34.203.
Paragraph 34.203(b)(3).
1. Secured by a mobile home. For purposes
of the exemption in § 34.203(b)(3), a mobile
home does not include a manufactured
home, as defined in § 34.203(a)(2).
Paragraph 34.203(b)(4).
1. Construction-to-permanent loans.
Section 34.203 does not apply to a

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transaction to finance the initial construction
of a dwelling. This exclusion applies to a
construction-only loan as well as to the
construction phase of a construction-topermanent loan. Section 34.203 does apply,
however, to permanent financing that
replaces a construction loan, whether the
permanent financing is extended by the same
or a different creditor, unless the permanent
financing is otherwise exempt from the
requirements of § 34.203. See § 34.203(b).
When a construction loan may be
permanently financed by the same creditor,
the general disclosure requirements for
closed-end credit pursuant to Regulation Z
(12 CFR 1026.17) provide that the creditor
may give either one combined disclosure for
both the construction financing and the
permanent financing, or a separate set of
disclosures for each of the two phases as
though they were two separate transactions.
See 12 CFR 1026.17(c)(6)(ii) and the Official
Staff Interpretations to the Bureau’s
Regulation Z, comment 17(c)(6)–2. Which
disclosure option a creditor elects under
§ 1026.17(c)(6)(ii) does not affect the
determination of whether the permanent
phase of the transaction is subject to § 34.203.
When the creditor discloses the two phases
as separate transactions, the annual
percentage rate for the permanent phase must
be compared to the average prime offer rate
for a transaction that is comparable to the
permanent financing to determine coverage
under § 34.203. When the creditor discloses
the two phases as a single transaction, a
single annual percentage rate, reflecting the
appropriate charges from both phases, must
be calculated for the transaction in
accordance with 12 CFR 1026.35(a)(1)
(incorporated into 12 CFR part 34, subpart G
by § 34.202) and appendix D to 12 CFR part
1026. The annual percentage rate must be
compared to the average prime offer rate for
a transaction that is comparable to the
permanent financing to determine coverage
under § 34.203. If the transaction is
determined to be a higher-priced mortgage
loan not otherwise exempt under § 34.203(b),
only the permanent phase is subject to the
requirements of § 34.203.
34.203(c) Appraisals required.
34.203(c)(1) In general.
1. Written appraisal—electronic
transmission. To satisfy the requirement that
the appraisal be ‘‘written,’’ a creditor may
obtain the appraisal in paper form or via
electronic transmission.
34.203(c)(2) Safe harbor.
1. Safe harbor. A creditor that satisfies the
safe harbor conditions in § 34.203(c)(2)(i)
through (iv) complies with the appraisal
requirements of § 34.203(c)(1). A creditor that
does not satisfy the safe harbor conditions in
§ 34.203(c)(2)(i) through (iv) does not
necessarily violate the appraisal
requirements of § 34.203(c)(1).
2. Appraiser’s certification. For purposes of
§ 34.203(c)(2), the appraiser’s certification
refers to the certification specified in item 9
of appendix A to this subpart. See also
comment 34.203(a)(1)–2.
Paragraph 34.203(c)(2)(iii).
1. Confirming elements in the appraisal. To
confirm that the elements in appendix A to
this subpart are included in the written

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appraisal, a creditor need not look beyond
the face of the written appraisal and the
appraiser’s certification.
34.203(d) Additional appraisal for certain
higher-priced mortgage loans.
1. Acquisition. For purposes of § 34.203(d),
the terms ‘‘acquisition’’ and ‘‘acquire’’ refer
to the acquisition of legal title to the property
pursuant to applicable State law, including
by purchase.
34.203(d)(1) In general.
1. Appraisal from a previous transaction.
An appraisal that was previously obtained in
connection with the seller’s acquisition or
the financing of the seller’s acquisition of the
property does not satisfy the requirements to
obtain two written appraisals under
§ 34.203(d)(1).
2. 90-day, 180-day calculation. The time
periods described in § 34.203(d)(1)(i) and (ii)
are calculated by counting the day after the
date on which the seller acquired the
property, up to and including the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the property
that secures the transaction. For example,
assume that the creditor determines that date
of the consumer’s acquisition agreement is
October 15, 2012, and that the seller acquired
the property on April 17, 2012. The first day
to be counted in the 180-day calculation
would be April 18, 2012, and the last day
would be October 15, 2012. In this case, the
number of days from April 17 would be 181,
so an additional appraisal is not required.
3. Date seller acquired the property. For
purposes of § 34.203(d)(1)(i) and (ii), the date
on which the seller acquired the property is
the date on which the seller became the legal
owner of the property pursuant to applicable
State law.
4. Date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. For the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the property
under § 34.203(d)(1)(i) and (ii), the creditor
should use the date on which the consumer
and the seller signed the agreement provided
to the creditor by the consumer. The date on
which the consumer and the seller signed the
agreement might not be the date on which
the consumer became contractually obligated
under State law to acquire the property. For
purposes of § 34.203(d)(1)(i) and (ii), a
creditor is not obligated to determine
whether and to what extent the agreement is
legally binding on both parties. If the dates
on which the consumer and the seller signed
the agreement differ, the creditor should use
the later of the two dates.
5. Price at which the seller acquired the
property. The price at which the seller
acquired the property refers to the amount
paid by the seller to acquire the property.
The price at which the seller acquired the
property does not include the cost of
financing the property.
6. Price the consumer is obligated to pay
to acquire the property. The price the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire the
property is the price indicated on the
consumer’s agreement with the seller to
acquire the property. The price the consumer
is obligated to pay to acquire the property
from the seller does not include the cost of
financing the property. For purposes of
§ 34.203(d)(1)(i) and (ii), a creditor is not
obligated to determine whether and to what

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extent the agreement is legally binding on
both parties. See also comment 34.203(d)(1)–
4.
34.203(d)(2) Different certified or licensed
appraisers.
1. Independent appraisers. The
requirements that a creditor obtain two
separate appraisals under § 34.203(d)(1), and
that each appraisal be conducted by a
different licensed or certified appraiser under
§ 34.203(d)(2), indicate that the two
appraisals must be conducted independently
of each other. If the two certified or licensed
appraisers are affiliated, such as by being
employed by the same appraisal firm, then
whether they have conducted the appraisal
independently of each other must be
determined based on the facts and
circumstances of the particular case known
to the creditor.
34.203(d)(3) Relationship to general
appraisal requirements.
1. Safe harbor. When a creditor is required
to obtain an additional appraisal under
§ 34.203(d)(1), the creditor must comply with
the requirements of both § 34.203(c)(1) and
§ 34.203(d)(2) through (5) for that appraisal.
The creditor complies with the requirements
of § 34.203(c)(1) for the additional appraisal
if the creditor meets the safe harbor
conditions in § 34.203(c)(2) for that appraisal.
34.203(d)(4) Required analysis in the
additional appraisal.
1. Determining acquisition dates and prices
used in the analysis of the additional
appraisal. For guidance on identifying the
date on which the seller acquired the
property, see comment 34.203(d)(1)–3. For
guidance on identifying the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property, see comment 34.203(d)(1)–4. For
guidance on identifying the price at which
the seller acquired the property, see comment
34.203(d)(1)–5. For guidance on identifying
the price the consumer is obligated to pay to
acquire the property, see comment
34.203(d)(1)–6.
34.203(d)(5) No charge for additional
appraisal.
1. Fees and mark-ups. The creditor is
prohibited from charging the consumer for
the performance of one of the two appraisals
required under § 34.203(d)(1), including by
imposing a fee specifically for that appraisal
or by marking up the interest rate or any
other fees payable by the consumer in
connection with the higher-priced mortgage
loan.
34.203(d)(6) Creditor’s determination of
prior sale date and price.
34.203(d)(6)(i) In general.
1. Estimated sales price. If a written source
document describes the seller’s acquisition
price in a manner that indicates that the price
described is an estimated or assumed amount
and not the actual price, the creditor should
look at an alternative document to satisfy the
reasonable diligence standard in determining
the price at which the seller acquired the
property.
2. Reasonable diligence—oral statements
insufficient. Reliance on oral statements of
interested parties, such as the consumer,
seller, or mortgage broker, does not constitute
reasonable diligence under § 34.203(d)(6)(i).
3. Lack of information and conflicting
information—two appraisals required. If a

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creditor is unable to demonstrate that the
requirement to obtain two appraisals under
§ 34.203(d)(1) does not apply, the creditor
must obtain two written appraisals before
extending a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to the requirements of § 34.203 See
also comment 34.203(d)(6)(ii)–1. For
example:
i. Assume a creditor orders and reviews the
results of a title search, which shows that a
prior sale occurred between 91 and 180 days
ago, but not the price paid in that sale. Thus,
based on the title search, the creditor would
not be able to determine whether the price
the consumer is obligated to pay under the
consumer’s acquisition agreement is more
than 20 percent higher than the seller’s
acquisition price, pursuant to
§ 34.203(d)(1)(ii). Before extending a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to the appraisal
requirements of § 34.203, the creditor must
either: perform additional diligence to
ascertain the seller’s acquisition price and,
based on this information, determine
whether two written appraisals are required;
or obtain two written appraisals in
compliance with § 34.203(d)(6). See also
comment 34.203(d)(6)(ii)–1.
ii. Assume a creditor reviews the results of
a title search indicating that the last recorded
purchase was more than 180 days before the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property. Assume also that the creditor
subsequently receives a written appraisal
indicating that the seller acquired the
property between 91 and 180 days before the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property. In this case, unless one of these
sources is clearly wrong on its face, the
creditor would not be able to determine
whether the seller acquired the property
within 180 days of the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property from the
seller, pursuant to § 34.203(d)(1)(ii). Before
extending a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to the appraisal requirements of
§ 34.203, the creditor must either: perform
additional diligence to ascertain the seller’s
acquisition date and, based on this
information, determine whether two written
appraisals are required; or obtain two written
appraisals in compliance with § 34.203(d)(6).
See also comment 34.203(d)(6)(ii)–1.
34.203(d)(6)(ii) Inability to determine prior
sales date or price—modified requirements
for additional appraisal.
1. Required analysis. In general, the
additional appraisal required under
§ 34.203(d)(1) should include an analysis of
the factors listed in § 34.203(d)(4)(i) through
(iii). However, if, following reasonable
diligence, a creditor cannot determine
whether the conditions in § 34.203(d)(1)(i) or
(ii) are present due to a lack of information
or conflicting information, the required
additional appraisal must include the
analyses required under § 34.203(d)(4)(i)
through (iii) only to the extent that the
information necessary to perform the
analyses is known. For example, assume that
a creditor is able, following reasonable
diligence, to determine that the date on
which the seller acquired the property
occurred between 91 and 180 days prior to
the date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. However, the creditor is

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unable, following reasonable diligence, to
determine the price at which the seller
acquired the property. In this case, the
creditor is required to obtain an additional
written appraisal that includes an analysis
under § 34.203(d)(4)(ii) and (iii) of the
changes in market conditions and any
improvements made to the property between
the date the seller acquired the property and
the date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. However, the creditor is
not required to obtain an additional written
appraisal that includes analysis under
§ 34.203(d)(4)(i) of the difference between the
price at which the seller acquired the
property and the price that the consumer is
obligated to pay to acquire the property.
34.203(d)(7) Exemptions from the
additional appraisal requirement.
Paragraph 34.203(d)(7)(iii).
1. Non-profit entity. For purposes of
§ 34.203(d)(7)(iii), a ‘‘non-profit entity’’ is a
person with a tax exemption ruling or
determination letter from the Internal
Revenue Service under section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (12 U.S.C.
501(c)(3)).
Paragraph 34.203(d)(7)(viii).
1. Bureau table of rural counties. The
Bureau publishes on its Web site a table of
rural counties under 12 CFR
1026.35(b)(2)(iv)(A) for each calendar year by
the end of that calendar year. See Official
Staff Interpretations to the Bureau’s
Regulation Z, comment 35(b)(2)(iv)–1. A
property securing an HPML subject to
§ 34.203 is in a rural county under
§ 34.203(d)(7)(viii) if the county in which the
property is located is on the table of rural
counties most recently published by the
Bureau. For example, for a transaction
occurring in 2015, assume that the Bureau
most recently published a table of rural
counties at the end of 2014. The property
securing the transaction would be located in
a rural county for purposes of
§ 34.203(d)(7)(viii) if the county is on the
table of rural counties published by the
Bureau at the end of 2014.
34.203(e) Required disclosure.
34.203(e)(1) In general.
1. Multiple applicants. When two or more
consumers apply for a loan subject to this
section, the creditor is required to give the
disclosure to only one of the consumers.
2. Appraisal independence requirements
not affected. Nothing in the text of the
consumer notice required by § 34.203(e)(1)
should be construed to affect, modify, limit,
or supersede the operation of any legal,
regulatory, or other requirements or
standards relating to independence in the
conduct of appraisals or restrictions on the
use of borrower-ordered appraisals by
creditors.
34.203(f) Copy of appraisals.
34.203(f)(1) In general.
1. Multiple applicants. When two or more
consumers apply for a loan subject to this
section, the creditor is required to give the
copy of each required appraisal to only one
of the consumers.
34.203(f)(2) Timing.
1. ‘‘Provide.’’ For purposes of the
requirement to provide a copy of the
appraisal within a specified time under

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§ 34.203(f)(2), ‘‘provide’’ means ‘‘deliver.’’
Delivery occurs three business days after
mailing or delivering the copies to the lastknown address of the applicant, or when
evidence indicates actual receipt by the
applicant (which, in the case of electronic
receipt, must be based upon consent that
complies with the E-Sign Act), whichever is
earlier.
2. ‘‘Receipt’’ of the appraisal. For
appraisals prepared by the creditor’s internal
appraisal staff, the date of ‘‘receipt’’ is the
date on which the appraisal is completed.
3. No waiver. Regulation B, 12 CFR
1002.14(a)(1), allowing the consumer to
waive the requirement that the appraisal
copy be provided three business days before
consummation, does not apply to higherpriced mortgage loans subject to § 34.203. A
consumer of a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to § 34.302 may not waive the timing
requirement to receive a copy of the appraisal
under § 34.203(f)(1).
34.203(f)(4) No charge for copy of
appraisal.
1. Fees and mark-ups. The creditor is
prohibited from charging the consumer for
any copy of an appraisal required to be
provided under § 34.203(f)(1), including by
imposing a fee specifically for a required
copy of an appraisal or by marking up the
interest rate or any other fees payable by the
consumer in connection with the higherpriced mortgage loan.

Appendix B—Illustrative Written
Source Documents for Higher-Priced
Mortgage Loan Appraisal Rules
1. Title commitment report. The ‘‘title
commitment report’’ is a document from a
title insurance company describing the
property interest and status of its title, parties
with interests in the title and the nature of
their claims, issues with the title that must
be resolved prior to closing of the transaction
between the parties to the transfer, amount
and disposition of the premiums, and
endorsements on the title policy. This
document is issued by the title insurance
company prior to the company’s issuance of
an actual title insurance policy to the
property’s transferee and/or creditor
financing the transaction. In different
jurisdictions, this instrument may be referred
to by different terms, such as a title
commitment, title binder, title opinion, or
title report.

3. The authority citation for Part 164
is revised to read as follows:

■

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Authority: 12 U.S.C.1462, 1462a,
1463,1464, 1828(m), 3331 et seq.,
5412(b)(2)(B), 15 U.S.C. 1639h.

4. Sections 164.1 through 164.8 are
designated as Subpart A to part 164.
Subpart A—Appraisals
5. The heading of subpart A is added
to read as set forth above.

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Sec.
164.20 Authority, purpose and scope.
164.21 Application of appraisal
requirements for higher-priced mortgage
loans to Federal savings associations and
their operating subsidiaries.
§ 164.20

Authority, purpose and scope.

(a) Authority. This subpart is issued
by the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency under 12 U.S.C. 1463, 1464
and 15 U.S.C. 1639h.
(b) Purpose. The OCC adopts this
subpart pursuant to the requirements of
section 129H of the Truth in Lending
Act (15 U.S.C. 1639h) which provides
that a creditor, including a Federal
savings association or its operating
subsidiary, may not extend credit in the
form of a higher-priced mortgage loan
without complying with the
requirements of section 129H of the
Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1639h)
and these implementing regulations.
(c) Scope. This subpart applies to
higher priced mortgage loan
transactions entered into by Federal
savings associations and operating
subsidiaries of savings associations.
§ 164.21 Application of appraisal
requirements for higher-priced mortgage
loans to Federal savings associations and
their operating subsidiaries.

Federal savings associations and their
operating subsidiaries may not extend
credit in the form of a higher-priced
mortgage loan without complying with
the requirements of Section 129H of the
Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1639h)
and the implementing regulations
adopted by the OCC at 12 CFR part 34,
subpart G.
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System
Authority and Issuance

PART 226—TRUTH IN LENDING ACT
(REGULATION Z)

[Designated as Subpart A]

■

Subpart B—Appraisals for HigherPriced Mortgage Loans

For the reasons stated above, the
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System amends Regulation Z,
12 CFR part 226, as follows:

PART 164—APPRAISALS

§§ 164.1–164.8

6. Subpart B to part 164 is added to
read as follows:

■

7. The authority citation for part 226
is revised to read as follows:

■

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 3806; 15 U.S.C. 1604,
1637(c)(5), 1639(l), and 1639h; Pub. L. 111–
24, section 2, 123 Stat. 1734; Pub. L. 111–
203, 124 Stat. 1376.

8. New § 226.43 is added to read as
follows:

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§ 226.43 Appraisals for higher-priced
mortgage loans.

(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Certified or licensed appraiser
means a person who is certified or
licensed by the State agency in the State
in which the property that secures the
transaction is located, and who
performs the appraisal in conformity
with the Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice and the
requirements applicable to appraisers in
title XI of the Financial Institutions
Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act
of 1989, as amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et
seq.), and any implementing
regulations, in effect at the time the
appraiser signs the appraiser’s
certification.
(2) Creditor has the same meaning as
in 12 CFR 1026.2(a)(17).
(3) Higher-priced mortgage loan
means a closed-end consumer credit
transaction secured by the consumer’s
principal dwelling with an annual
percentage rate that exceeds the average
prime offer rate for a comparable
transaction as of the date the interest
rate is set:
(i) By 1.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a first lien with a
principal obligation at consummation
that does not exceed the limit in effect
as of the date the transaction’s interest
rate is set for the maximum principal
obligation eligible for purchase by
Freddie Mac;
(ii) By 2.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a first lien with a
principal obligation at consummation
that exceeds the limit in effect as of the
date the transaction’s interest rate is set
for the maximum principal obligation
eligible for purchase by Freddie Mac; or
(iii) By 3.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a subordinate lien.
(4) Manufactured home has the same
meaning as in 24 CFR 3280.2.
(5) National Registry means the
database of information about State
certified and licensed appraisers
maintained by the Appraisal
Subcommittee of the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council.
(6) State agency means a ‘‘State
appraiser certifying and licensing
agency’’ recognized in accordance with
section 1118(b) of the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989 (12 U.S.C.
3347(b)) and any implementing
regulations.
(b) Exemptions. The requirements in
paragraphs (c)(3) through (6) of this
section do not apply to the following
types of transactions:
(1) A qualified mortgage as defined in
12 CFR 1026.43(e).

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(2) A transaction secured by a new
manufactured home.
(3) A transaction secured by a mobile
home, boat, or trailer.
(4) A transaction to finance the initial
construction of a dwelling.
(5) A loan with maturity of 12 months
or less, if the purpose of the loan is a
‘‘bridge’’ loan connected with the
acquisition of a dwelling intended to
become the consumer’s principal
dwelling.
(6) A reverse-mortgage transaction
subject to 12 CFR 1026.33(a).
(c) Appraisals required—(1) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section, a creditor
shall not extend a higher-priced
mortgage loan to a consumer without
obtaining, prior to consummation, a
written appraisal of the property to be
mortgaged. The appraisal must be
performed by a certified or licensed
appraiser who conducts a physical visit
of the interior of the property that will
secure the transaction.
(2) Safe harbor. A creditor obtains a
written appraisal that meets the
requirements for an appraisal required
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section if
the creditor:
(i) Orders that the appraiser perform
the appraisal in conformity with the
Uniform Standards of Professional
Appraisal Practice and title XI of the
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery,
and Enforcement Act of 1989, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and
any implementing regulations in effect
at the time the appraiser signs the
appraiser’s certification;
(ii) Verifies through the National
Registry that the appraiser who signed
the appraiser’s certification was a
certified or licensed appraiser in the
State in which the appraised property is
located as of the date the appraiser
signed the appraiser’s certification;
(iii) Confirms that the elements set
forth in appendix N to this part are
addressed in the written appraisal; and
(iv) Has no actual knowledge contrary
to the facts or certifications contained in
the written appraisal.
(d) Additional appraisal for certain
higher-priced mortgage loans—(1) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraphs (b) and (d)(7) of this section,
a creditor shall not extend a higherpriced mortgage loan to a consumer to
finance the acquisition of the
consumer’s principal dwelling without
obtaining, prior to consummation, two
written appraisals, if:
(i) The seller acquired the property 90
or fewer days prior to the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property and the price in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the

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property exceeds the seller’s acquisition
price by more than 10 percent; or
(ii) The seller acquired the property
91 to 180 days prior to the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property and the price in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property exceeds the seller’s acquisition
price by more than 20 percent.
(2) Different certified or licensed
appraisers. The two appraisals required
under paragraph (d)(1) of this section
may not be performed by the same
certified or licensed appraiser.
(3) Relationship to general appraisal
requirements. If two appraisals must be
obtained under paragraph (d)(1) of this
section, each appraisal shall meet the
requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this
section.
(4) Required analysis in the additional
appraisal. One of the two required
appraisals must include an analysis of:
(i) The difference between the price at
which the seller acquired the property
and the price that the consumer is
obligated to pay to acquire the property,
as specified in the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property from
the seller;
(ii) Changes in market conditions
between the date the seller acquired the
property and the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property; and
(iii) Any improvements made to the
property between the date the seller
acquired the property and the date of
the consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property.
(5) No charge for the additional
appraisal. If the creditor must obtain
two appraisals under paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, the creditor may charge the
consumer for only one of the appraisals.
(6) Creditor’s determination of prior
sale date and price—(i) Reasonable
diligence. A creditor must obtain two
written appraisals under paragraph
(d)(1) of this section unless the creditor
can demonstrate by exercising
reasonable diligence that the
requirement to obtain two appraisals
does not apply. A creditor acts with
reasonable diligence if the creditor bases
its determination on information
contained in written source documents,
such as the documents listed in
Appendix O to this part.
(ii) Inability to determine prior sale
date or price—modified requirements
for additional appraisal. If, after
exercising reasonable diligence, a
creditor cannot determine whether the
conditions in paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and
(d)(1)(ii) are present and therefore must
obtain two written appraisals in
accordance with paragraphs (d)(1)
through (5) of this section, one of the
two appraisals shall include an analysis

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of the factors in paragraph (d)(4) of this
section only to the extent that the
information necessary for the appraiser
to perform the analysis can be
determined.
(7) Exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement. The additional
appraisal required under paragraph
(d)(1) of this section shall not apply to
extensions of credit that finance a
consumer’s acquisition of property:
(i) From a local, State or Federal
government agency;
(ii) From a person who acquired title
to the property through foreclosure,
deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, or other
similar judicial or non-judicial
procedure as a result of the person’s
exercise of rights as the holder of a
defaulted mortgage loan;
(iii) From a non-profit entity as part
of a local, State, or Federal government
program under which the non-profit
entity is permitted to acquire title to
single-family properties for resale from
a seller who acquired title to the
property through the process of
foreclosure, deed-in-lieu of foreclosure,
or other similar judicial or non-judicial
procedure;
(iv) From a person who acquired title
to the property by inheritance or
pursuant to a court order of dissolution
of marriage, civil union, or domestic
partnership, or of partition of joint or
marital assets to which the seller was a
party;
(v) From an employer or relocation
agency in connection with the
relocation of an employee;
(vi) From a servicemember, as defined
in 50 U.S.C. App. 511(1), who received
a deployment or permanent change of
station order after the servicemember
purchased the property;
(vii) Located in an area designated by
the President as a federal disaster area,
if and for as long as the Federal
financial institutions regulatory
agencies, as defined in 12 U.S.C.
3350(6), waive the requirements in title
XI of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989,
as amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and
any implementing regulations in that
area; or
(viii) Located in a rural county, as
defined in 12 CFR 1026.35(b)(2)(iv)(A).
(e) Required disclosure—(1) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section, a creditor
shall disclose the following statement,
in writing, to a consumer who applies
for a higher-priced mortgage loan: ‘‘We
may order an appraisal to determine the
property’s value and charge you for this
appraisal. We will give you a copy of
any appraisal, even if your loan does not
close. You can pay for an additional

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
appraisal for your own use at your own
cost.’’ Compliance with the disclosure
requirement in Regulation B, 12 CFR
1002.14(a)(2), satisfies the requirements
of this paragraph.
(2) Timing of disclosure. The
disclosure required by paragraph (e)(1)
of this section shall be delivered or
placed in the mail no later than the
third business day after the creditor
receives the consumer’s application for
a higher-priced mortgage loan subject to
this section. In the case of a loan that
is not a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to this section at the time of
application, but becomes a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to this
section after application, the disclosure
shall be delivered or placed in the mail
not later than the third business day
after the creditor determines that the
loan is a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to this section.
(f) Copy of appraisals—(1) In general.
Except as provided in paragraph (b) of
this section, a creditor shall provide to
the consumer a copy of any written
appraisal performed in connection with
a higher-priced mortgage loan pursuant
to paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
(2) Timing. A creditor shall provide to
the consumer a copy of each written
appraisal pursuant to paragraph (f)(1) of
this section:
(i) No later than three business days
prior to consummation of the loan; or
(ii) In the case of a loan that is not
consummated, no later than 30 days
after the creditor determines that the
loan will not be consummated.
(3) Form of copy. Any copy of a
written appraisal required by paragraph
(f)(1) of this section may be provided to
the applicant in electronic form, subject
to compliance with the consumer
consent and other applicable provisions
of the Electronic Signatures in Global
and National Commerce Act (E-Sign
Act) (15 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.).
(4) No charge for copy of appraisal. A
creditor shall not charge the consumer
for a copy of a written appraisal
required to be provided to the consumer
pursuant to paragraph (f)(1) of this
section.
(g) Relation to other rules. The rules
in this section were adopted jointly by
the Board, the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency (OCC), the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, the
National Credit Union Administration,
the Federal Housing Finance Agency,
and the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau (Bureau). These rules are
substantively identical to the OCC’s and
the Bureau’s higher-priced mortgage
loan appraisal rules published
separately in 12 CFR part 34, subpart G
and 12 CFR part 164, subpart B (for the

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OCC) and 12 CFR 1026.35(a) and (c) (for
the Bureau). The Board’s rules apply to
all creditors who are State member
banks, bank holding companies and
their subsidiaries (other than a bank),
savings and loan holding companies
and their subsidiaries (other than a
savings and loan association), and
insured branches and agencies of
foreign banks. Compliance with the
Board’s rules satisfies the requirements
of 15 U.S.C. 1639h.
■ 9. Appendix N to Part 226 is added to
read as follows:
Appendix N to Part 226—Higher-Priced
Mortgage Loan Appraisal Safe Harbor
Review
To qualify for the safe harbor provided in
§ 226.43(c)(2), a creditor must confirm that
the written appraisal:
1. Identifies the creditor who ordered the
appraisal and the property and the interest
being appraised.
2. Indicates whether the contract price was
analyzed.
3. Addresses conditions in the property’s
neighborhood.
4. Addresses the condition of the property
and any improvements to the property.
5. Indicates which valuation approaches
were used, and includes a reconciliation if
more than one valuation approach was used.
6. Provides an opinion of the property’s
market value and an effective date for the
opinion.
7. Indicates that a physical property visit
of the interior of the property was performed.
8. Includes a certification signed by the
appraiser that the appraisal was prepared in
accordance with the requirements of the
Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal
Practice.
9. Includes a certification signed by the
appraiser that the appraisal was prepared in
accordance with the requirements of title XI
of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and any
implementing regulations.

10. Appendix O to Part 226 is added
to read as follows:

■

Appendix O to Part 226—Illustrative
Written Source Documents for HigherPriced Mortgage Loan Appraisal Rules
A creditor acts with reasonable diligence
under § 226.43(d)(6)(i) if the creditor bases its
determination on information contained in
written source documents, such as:
1. A copy of the recorded deed from the
seller.
2. A copy of a property tax bill.
3. A copy of any owner’s title insurance
policy obtained by the seller.
4. A copy of the RESPA settlement
statement from the seller’s acquisition (i.e.,
the HUD–1 or any successor form).
5. A property sales history report or title
report from a third-party reporting service.
6. Sales price data recorded in multiple
listing services.

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7. Tax assessment records or transfer tax
records obtained from local governments.
8. A written appraisal performed in
compliance with § 226.43(c)(1) for the same
transaction.
9. A copy of a title commitment report
detailing the seller’s ownership of the
property, the date it was acquired, or the
price at which the seller acquired the
property.
10. A property abstract.

11. In Supplement I to part 226:
a. New Section 226.43—Appraisals for
Higher-Priced Mortgage Loans is added.
■ b. New Appendix O—Illustrative
Written Source Documents for HigherPriced Mortgage Loan Appraisal Rules is
added.
The additions read as follows:
■
■

Supplement I to Part 226—Official
Interpretations
*

*

*

*

*

Section 226.43—Appraisals for Higher-Risk
Mortgage Loans
43(a) Definitions.
43(a)(1) Certified or licensed appraiser.
1. USPAP. The Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) are
established by the Appraisal Standards Board
of the Appraisal Foundation (as defined in 12
U.S.C. 3350(9)). Under § 226.43(a)(1), the
relevant USPAP standards are those found in
the edition of USPAP in effect at the time the
appraiser signs the appraiser’s certification.
2. Appraiser’s certification. The appraiser’s
certification refers to the certification that
must be signed by the appraiser for each
appraisal assignment. This requirement is
specified in USPAP Standards Rule 2–3.
3. FIRREA title XI and implementing
regulations. The relevant regulations are
those prescribed under section 1110 of the
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3339), that relate to an
appraiser’s development and reporting of the
appraisal in effect at the time the appraiser
signs the appraiser’s certification. Paragraph
(3) of FIRREA section 1110 (12 U.S.C.
3339(3)), which relates to the review of
appraisals, is not relevant for determining
whether an appraiser is a certified or licensed
appraiser under § 226.43(a)(1).
43(a)(3) Higher-priced mortgage loan.
1. Principal dwelling. The term ‘‘principal
dwelling’’ has the same meaning under
§ 226.43(a)(3) as under 12 CFR 1026.2(a)(24).
See the Official Staff Interpretations to the
Bureau’s Regulation Z (Supplement I to Part
1026), comment 2(a)(24)–3.
2. Average prime offer rate. For guidance
on average prime offer rates, see the Official
Staff Interpretations to the Bureau’s
Regulation Z, comments 35(a)(2)–1 and –3.
3. Comparable transaction. For guidance
on determining the average prime offer rate
for comparable transactions, see the Official
Staff Interpretations to the Bureau’s
Regulation Z, comments 35(a)(1)–1 and
35(a)(2)–2.
4. Rate set. For guidance on the date the
annual percentage rate is set, see the Official
Staff Interpretations to the Bureau’s
Regulation Z, comment 35(a)(1)–2.

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5. Threshold for ‘‘jumbo’’ loans. For
guidance on determining whether a
transaction’s principal balance exceeds the
limit in effect as of the date the transaction’s
rate is set for the maximum principal
obligation eligible for purchase by Freddie
Mac, see the Official Staff Interpretations to
the Bureau’s Regulation Z, comment
35(a)(1)–3.
43(b) Exemptions.
Paragraph 43(b)(2).
1. Secured by new manufactured home. A
transaction secured by a new manufactured
home, regardless of whether the transaction
is also secured by the land on which it is
sited, is not a ‘‘higher-priced mortgage loan’’
subject to the appraisal requirements of
§ 226.43.
Paragraph 43(b)(3).
1. Secured by a mobile home. For purposes
of the exemption in § 226.43(b)(3), a mobile
home does not include a manufactured
home, as defined in § 226.43(a)(3).
Paragraph 43(b)(4)
1. Construction-to-permanent loans.
Section 226.43 does not apply to a
transaction to finance the initial construction
of a dwelling. This exclusion applies to a
construction-only loan as well as to the
construction phase of a construction-topermanent loan. Section 226.43 does apply,
however, to permanent financing that
replaces a construction loan, whether the
permanent financing is extended by the same
or a different creditor, unless the permanent
financing is otherwise exempt from the
requirements of § 226.43. See § 226.43(b).
When a construction loan may be
permanently financed by the same creditor,
the general disclosure requirements for
closed-end credit pursuant to Regulation Z
(12 CFR 1026.17) provide that the creditor
may give either one combined disclosure for
both the construction financing and the
permanent financing, or a separate set of
disclosures for each of the two phases as
though they were two separate transactions.
See 12 CFR 1026.17(c)(6)(ii) and the Official
Staff Interpretations to the Bureau’s
Regulation Z, comment 17(c)(6)–2. Which
disclosure option a creditor elects under
§ 1026.17(c)(6)(ii) does not affect the
determination of whether the permanent
phase of the transaction is subject to § 226.43.
When the creditor discloses the two phases
as separate transactions, the annual
percentage rate for the permanent phase must
be compared to the average prime offer rate
for a transaction that is comparable to the
permanent financing to determine coverage
under § 226.43. When the creditor discloses
the two phases as a single transaction, a
single annual percentage rate, reflecting the
appropriate charges from both phases, must
be calculated for the transaction in
accordance with § 226.43(a)(3) and appendix
D to 12 CFR part 1026. The annual
percentage rate must be compared to the
average prime offer rate for a transaction that
is comparable to the permanent financing to
determine coverage under § 226.43. If the
transaction is determined to be a higherpriced mortgage loan not otherwise exempt
under § 226.43(b), only the permanent phase
is subject to the requirements of § 226.43.
43(c) Appraisals required.

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43(c)(1) In general.
1. Written appraisal—electronic
transmission. To satisfy the requirement that
the appraisal be ‘‘written,’’ a creditor may
obtain the appraisal in paper form or via
electronic transmission.
43(c)(2) Safe harbor.
1. Safe harbor. A creditor that satisfies the
safe harbor conditions in § 226.43(c)(2)(i)
through (iv) complies with the appraisal
requirements of § 226.43(c)(1). A creditor that
does not satisfy the safe harbor conditions in
§ 226.43(c)(2)(i) through (iv) does not
necessarily violate the appraisal
requirements of § 226.43(c)(1).
2. Appraiser’s certification. For purposes of
§ 226.43(c)(2), the appraiser’s certification
refers to the certification specified in item 9
of appendix N. See also comment 43(a)(1)–
2.
Paragraph 43(c)(2)(iii).
1. Confirming elements in the appraisal. To
confirm that the elements in appendix N to
this part are included in the written
appraisal, a creditor need not look beyond
the face of the written appraisal and the
appraiser’s certification.
43(d) Additional appraisal for certain
higher-priced mortgage loans.
1. Acquisition. For purposes of § 226.43(d),
the terms ‘‘acquisition’’ and ‘‘acquire’’ refer
to the acquisition of legal title to the property
pursuant to applicable State law, including
by purchase.
43(d)(1) In general.
1. Appraisal from a previous transaction.
An appraisal that was previously obtained in
connection with the seller’s acquisition or
the financing of the seller’s acquisition of the
property does not satisfy the requirements to
obtain two written appraisals under
§ 226.43(d)(1).
2. 90-day, 180-day calculation. The time
periods described in § 226.43(d)(1)(i) and (ii)
are calculated by counting the day after the
date on which the seller acquired the
property, up to and including the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the property
that secures the transaction. For example,
assume that the creditor determines that date
of the consumer’s acquisition agreement is
October 15, 2012, and that the seller acquired
the property on April 17, 2012. The first day
to be counted in the 180-day calculation
would be April 18, 2012, and the last day
would be October 15, 2012. In this case, the
number of days from April 17 would be 181,
so an additional appraisal is not required.
3. Date seller acquired the property. For
purposes of § 226.43(d)(1)(i) and (ii), the date
on which the seller acquired the property is
the date on which the seller became the legal
owner of the property pursuant to applicable
State law.
4. Date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. For the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the property
under § 226.43(d)(1)(i) and (ii), the creditor
should use the date on which the consumer
and the seller signed the agreement provided
to the creditor by the consumer. The date on
which the consumer and the seller signed the
agreement might not be the date on which
the consumer became contractually obligated
under State law to acquire the property. For
purposes of § 226.43(d)(1)(i) and (ii), a

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creditor is not obligated to determine
whether and to what extent the agreement is
legally binding on both parties. If the dates
on which the consumer and the seller signed
the agreement differ, the creditor should use
the later of the two dates.
5. Price at which the seller acquired the
property. The price at which the seller
acquired the property refers to the amount
paid by the seller to acquire the property.
The price at which the seller acquired the
property does not include the cost of
financing the property.
6. Price the consumer is obligated to pay
to acquire the property. The price the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire the
property is the price indicated on the
consumer’s agreement with the seller to
acquire the property. The price the consumer
is obligated to pay to acquire the property
from the seller does not include the cost of
financing the property. For purposes of
§ 226.43(d)(1)(i) and (ii), a creditor is not
obligated to determine whether and to what
extent the agreement is legally binding on
both parties. See also comment 43(d)(1)–4.
43(d)(2) Different certified or licensed
appraisers.
1. Independent appraisers. The
requirements that a creditor obtain two
separate appraisals under § 226.43(d)(1), and
that each appraisal be conducted by a
different licensed or certified appraiser under
§ 226.43(d)(2), indicate that the two
appraisals must be conducted independently
of each other. If the two certified or licensed
appraisers are affiliated, such as by being
employed by the same appraisal firm, then
whether they have conducted the appraisal
independently of each other must be
determined based on the facts and
circumstances of the particular case known
to the creditor.
43(d)(3) Relationship to general appraisal
requirements.
1. Safe harbor. When a creditor is required
to obtain an additional appraisal under
§ 226(d)(1), the creditor must comply with
the requirements of both § 226.43(c)(1) and
§ 226.43(d)(2) through (5) for that appraisal.
The creditor complies with the requirements
of § 226.43(c)(1) for the additional appraisal
if the creditor meets the safe harbor
conditions in § 226.43(c)(2) for that appraisal.
43(d)(4) Required analysis in the
additional appraisal.
1. Determining acquisition dates and prices
used in the analysis of the additional
appraisal. For guidance on identifying the
date on which the seller acquired the
property, see comment 43(d)(1)–3. For
guidance on identifying the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property, see comment 43(d)(1)–4. For
guidance on identifying the price at which
the seller acquired the property, see comment
43(d)(1)–5. For guidance on identifying the
price the consumer is obligated to pay to
acquire the property, see comment 43(d)(1)–
6.
43(d)(5) No charge for additional
appraisal.
1. Fees and mark-ups. The creditor is
prohibited from charging the consumer for
the performance of one of the two appraisals
required under § 226.43(d)(1), including by

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imposing a fee specifically for that appraisal
or by marking up the interest rate or any
other fees payable by the consumer in
connection with the higher-priced mortgage
loan.
43(d)(6) Creditor’s determination of prior
sale date and price.
43(d)(6)(i) In general.
1. Estimated sales price. If a written source
document describes the seller’s acquisition
price in a manner that indicates that the price
described is an estimated or assumed amount
and not the actual price, the creditor should
look at an alternative document to satisfy the
reasonable diligence standard in determining
the price at which the seller acquired the
property.
2. Reasonable diligence—oral statements
insufficient. Reliance on oral statements of
interested parties, such as the consumer,
seller, or mortgage broker, does not constitute
reasonable diligence under § 226.43(d)(6)(i).
3. Lack of information and conflicting
information—two appraisals required. If a
creditor is unable to demonstrate that the
requirement to obtain two appraisals under
§ 226.43(d)(1) does not apply, the creditor
must obtain two written appraisals before
extending a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to the requirements of § 226.43. See
also comment 43(d)(6)(ii)–1. For example:
i. Assume a creditor orders and reviews the
results of a title search, which shows that a
prior sale occurred between 91 and 180 days
ago, but not the price paid in that sale. Thus,
based on the title search, the creditor would
not be able to determine whether the price
the consumer is obligated to pay under the
consumer’s acquisition agreement is more
than 20 percent higher than the seller’s
acquisition price, pursuant to
§ 226.43(d)(1)(ii). Before extending a higherpriced mortgage loan subject to the appraisal
requirements of § 226.43, the creditor must
either: perform additional diligence to
ascertain the seller’s acquisition price and,
based on this information, determine
whether two written appraisals are required;
or obtain two written appraisals in
compliance with § 226.43(d). See also
comment 43(d)(6)(ii)–1.
ii. Assume a creditor reviews the results of
a title search indicating that the last recorded
purchase was more than 180 days before the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property. Assume also that the creditor
subsequently receives a written appraisal
indicating that the seller acquired the
property between 91 and 180 days before the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property. In this case, unless one of these
sources is clearly wrong on its face, the
creditor would not be able to determine
whether the seller acquired the property
within 180 days of the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property from the
seller, pursuant to § 226.43(d)(1)(ii). Before
extending a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to the appraisal requirements of
§ 226.43, the creditor must either: (1) Perform
additional diligence to ascertain the seller’s
acquisition date and, based on this
information, determine whether two written
appraisals are required; or (2) obtain two
written appraisals in compliance with
§ 226.43(d). See also comment 43(d)(6)(ii)–1.

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43(d)(6)(ii) Inability to determine prior
sales date or price—modified requirements
for additional appraisal.
1. Required analysis. In general, the
additional appraisal required under
§ 226.43(d)(1) should include an analysis of
the factors listed in § 226.43(d)(4)(i) through
(iii). However, if, following reasonable
diligence, a creditor cannot determine
whether the conditions in § 226.43(d)(1)(i) or
(ii) are present due to a lack of information
or conflicting information, the required
additional appraisal must include the
analyses required under § 226.43(d)(4)(i)
through (iii) only to the extent that the
information necessary to perform the
analyses is known. For example, assume that
a creditor is able, following reasonable
diligence, to determine that the date on
which the seller acquired the property
occurred between 91 and 180 days prior to
the date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. However, the creditor is
unable, following reasonable diligence, to
determine the price at which the seller
acquired the property. In this case, the
creditor is required to obtain an additional
written appraisal that includes an analysis
under § 226.43(d)(4)(ii) and (iii) of the
changes in market conditions and any
improvements made to the property between
the date the seller acquired the property and
the date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. However, the creditor is
not required to obtain an additional written
appraisal that includes analysis under
§ 226.43(d)(4)(i) of the difference between the
price at which the seller acquired the
property and the price that the consumer is
obligated to pay to acquire the property.
43(d)(7) Exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement.
Paragraph 43(d)(7)(iii).
1. Non-profit entity. For purposes of
§ 226.43(d)(7)(iii), a ‘‘non-profit entity’’ is a
person with a tax exemption ruling or
determination letter from the Internal
Revenue Service under section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (12 U.S.C.
501(c)(3)).
Paragraph 43(d)(7)(viii).
1. Bureau table of rural counties. The
Bureau publishes on its Web site a table of
rural counties under § 226.43(d)(7)(viii) for
each calendar year by the end of the calendar
year. See Official Staff Interpretations to the
Bureau’s Regulation Z, comment 35(b)(2)(iv)–
1. A property securing an HPML subject to
§ 226.43 is in a rural county under
§ 226.43(d)(7)(viii) if the county in which the
property is located is on the table of rural
counties most recently published by the
Bureau. For example, for a transaction
occurring in 2015, assume that the Bureau
most recently published a table of rural
counties at the end of 2014. The property
securing the transaction would be located in
a rural county for purposes of
§ 226.43(d)(7)(viii) if the county is on the
table of rural counties published by the
Bureau at the end of 2014.
43(e) Required disclosure.
43(e)(1) In general.
1. Multiple applicants. When two or more
consumers apply for a loan subject to this
section, the creditor is required to give the
disclosure to only one of the consumers.

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2. Appraisal independence requirements
not affected. Nothing in the text of the
consumer notice required by § 226.43(e)(1)
should be construed to affect, modify, limit,
or supersede the operation of any legal,
regulatory, or other requirements or
standards relating to independence in the
conduct of appraisers or restrictions on the
use of borrower-ordered appraisals by
creditors.
43(f) Copy of appraisals.
43(f)(1) In general.
1. Multiple applicants. When two or more
consumers apply for a loan subject to this
section, the creditor is required to give the
copy of each required appraisal to only one
of the consumers.
43(f)(2) Timing.
1. ‘‘Provide.’’ For purposes of the
requirement to provide a copy of the
appraisal within a specified time under
§ 226.43(f)(2), ‘‘provide’’ means ‘‘deliver.’’
Delivery occurs three business days after
mailing or delivering the copies to the lastknown address of the applicant, or when
evidence indicates actual receipt by the
applicant (which, in the case of electronic
receipt, must be based upon consent that
complies with the E-Sign Act), whichever is
earlier.
2. ‘‘Receipt’’ of the appraisal. For
appraisals prepared by the creditor’s internal
appraisal staff, the date of ‘‘receipt’’ is the
date on which the appraisal is completed.
3. No waiver. Regulation B, 12 CFR
1002.14(a)(1), allowing the consumer to
waive the requirement that the appraisal
copy be provided three business days before
consummation, does not apply to higherpriced mortgage loans subject to § 226.43. A
consumer of a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to § 226.43 may not waive the timing
requirement to receive a copy of the appraisal
under § 226.43(f)(1).
43(f)(4) No charge for copy of appraisal.
1. Fees and mark-ups. The creditor is
prohibited from charging the consumer for
any copy of an appraisal required to be
provided under § 226.43(f)(1), including by
imposing a fee specifically for a required
copy of an appraisal or by marking up the
interest rate or any other fees payable by the
consumer in connection with the higherpriced mortgage loan.

*

*

*

*

*

Appendix O—Illustrative Written
Source Documents for Higher-Priced
Mortgage Loan Appraisal Rules
1. Title commitment report. The ‘‘title
commitment report’’ is a document from a
title insurance company describing the
property interest and status of its title, parties
with interests in the title and the nature of
their claims, issues with the title that must
be resolved prior to closing of the transaction
between the parties to the transfer, amount
and disposition of the premiums, and
endorsements on the title policy. This
document is issued by the title insurance
company prior to the company’s issuance of
an actual title insurance policy to the
property’s transferee and/or creditor
financing the transaction. In different
jurisdictions, this instrument may be referred

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to by different terms, such as a title
commitment, title binder, title opinion, or
title report.

National Credit Union Administration
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons discussed above,
NCUA amends 12 CFR part 722 as
follows:
PART 722—APPRAISALS
12. The authority citation for part 722
is revised to read as follows:

■

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1766, 1789 and 3339.
Section 722.3(f) is also issued under 15
U.S.C. 1639h.

13. In § 722.3, add paragraph (f) to
read as follows:

■

§ 722.3 Appraisals required; transactions
requiring a State certified or licensed
appraiser.

*

*
*
*
*
(f) Higher-priced mortgage loans. A
credit union may not extend credit to a
consumer in the form of a ‘‘higherpriced mortgage loan’’ as defined in 12
CFR 1026.35(a)(1), without meeting the
requirements of section 129H of the
Truth in Lending Act, 15 U.S.C. 1639h,
and its implementing regulations in
Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.35(c).
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Bureau amends
Regulation Z, 12 CFR part 1026, as
follows:
PART 1026—TRUTH IN LENDING ACT
(REGULATION Z)
14. The authority citation for part
1026 continues to read as follows:

■

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2601; 2603–2605,
2607, 2609, 2617, 5511, 5512, 5532, 5581; 15
U.S.C. 1601 et seq.

Subpart C—Closed-End Credit
15. Section 1026.35 is amended by
republishing paragraphs (a) introductory
text and (a)(1), and adding paragraph (c)
as follows:
*
*
*
*
*

■

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§ 1026.35 Prohibited acts or practices in
connection with higher-priced mortgage
loans.

(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) ‘‘Higher-priced mortgage loan’’
means a closed-end consumer credit
transaction secured by the consumer’s
principal dwelling with an annual
percentage rate that exceeds the average
prime offer rate for a comparable

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transaction as of the date the interest
rate is set:
(i) By 1.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a first lien with a
principal obligation at consummation
that does not exceed the limit in effect
as of the date the transaction’s interest
rate is set for the maximum principal
obligation eligible for purchase by
Freddie Mac;
(ii) By 2.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a first lien with a
principal obligation at consummation
that exceeds the limit in effect as of the
date the transaction’s interest rate is set
for the maximum principal obligation
eligible for purchase by Freddie Mac; or
(iii) By 3.5 or more percentage points,
for a loan secured by a subordinate lien.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Appraisals for higher-priced
mortgage loans—(1) Definitions. For
purposes of this section:
(i) Certified or licensed appraiser
means a person who is certified or
licensed by the State agency in the State
in which the property that secures the
transaction is located, and who
performs the appraisal in conformity
with the Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice and the
requirements applicable to appraisers in
title XI of the Financial Institutions
Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act
of 1989, as amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et
seq.), and any implementing regulations
in effect at the time the appraiser signs
the appraiser’s certification.
(ii) Manufactured home has the same
meaning as in 24 CFR 3280.2.
(iii) National Registry means the
database of information about State
certified and licensed appraisers
maintained by the Appraisal
Subcommittee of the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council.
(iv) State agency means a ‘‘State
appraiser certifying and licensing
agency’’ recognized in accordance with
section 1118(b) of the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989 (12 U.S.C.
3347(b)) and any implementing
regulations.
(2) Exemptions. The requirements in
paragraphs (c)(3) through (6) of this
section do not apply to the following
types of transactions:
(i) A qualified mortgage as defined in
12 CFR 1026.43(e).
(ii) A transaction secured by a new
manufactured home.
(iii) A transaction secured by a mobile
home, boat, or trailer.
(iv) A transaction to finance the initial
construction of a dwelling.
(v) A loan with maturity of 12 months
or less, if the purpose of the loan is a

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‘‘bridge’’ loan connected with the
acquisition of a dwelling intended to
become the consumer’s principal
dwelling.
(vi) A reverse-mortgage transaction
subject to 12 CFR 1026.33(a).
(3) Appraisals required—(i) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, a
creditor shall not extend a higher-priced
mortgage loan to a consumer without
obtaining, prior to consummation, a
written appraisal of the property to be
mortgaged. The appraisal must be
performed by a certified or licensed
appraiser who conducts a physical visit
of the interior of the property that will
secure the transaction.
(ii) Safe harbor. A creditor obtains a
written appraisal that meets the
requirements for an appraisal required
under paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section
if the creditor:
(A) Orders that the appraiser perform
the appraisal in conformity with the
Uniform Standards of Professional
Appraisal Practice and title XI of the
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery,
and Enforcement Act of 1989, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and
any implementing regulations in effect
at the time the appraiser signs the
appraiser’s certification;
(B) Verifies through the National
Registry that the appraiser who signed
the appraiser’s certification was a
certified or licensed appraiser in the
State in which the appraised property is
located as of the date the appraiser
signed the appraiser’s certification;
(C) Confirms that the elements set
forth in appendix N to this part are
addressed in the written appraisal; and
(D) Has no actual knowledge contrary
to the facts or certifications contained in
the written appraisal.
(4) Additional appraisal for certain
higher-priced mortgage loans—(i) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(4)(vii) of this
section, a creditor shall not extend a
higher-priced mortgage loan to a
consumer to finance the acquisition of
the consumer’s principal dwelling
without obtaining, prior to
consummation, two written appraisals,
if:
(A) The seller acquired the property
90 or fewer days prior to the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property and the price in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property exceeds the seller’s acquisition
price by more than 10 percent; or
(B) The seller acquired the property
91 to 180 days prior to the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property and the price in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 30 / Wednesday, February 13, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
property exceeds the seller’s acquisition
price by more than 20 percent.
(ii) Different certified or licensed
appraisers. The two appraisals required
under paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section
may not be performed by the same
certified or licensed appraiser.
(iii) Relationship to general appraisal
requirements. If two appraisals must be
obtained under paragraph (c)(4)(i) of
this section, each appraisal shall meet
the requirements of paragraph (c)(3)(i) of
this section.
(iv) Required analysis in the
additional appraisal. One of the two
required appraisals must include an
analysis of:
(A) The difference between the price
at which the seller acquired the
property and the price that the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire
the property, as specified in the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property from the seller;
(B) Changes in market conditions
between the date the seller acquired the
property and the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property; and
(C) Any improvements made to the
property between the date the seller
acquired the property and the date of
the consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property.
(v) No charge for the additional
appraisal. If the creditor must obtain
two appraisals under paragraph (c)(4)(i)
of this section, the creditor may charge
the consumer for only one of the
appraisals.
(vi) Creditor’s determination of prior
sale date and price—(A) Reasonable
diligence. A creditor must obtain two
written appraisals under paragraph
(c)(4)(i) of this section unless the
creditor can demonstrate by exercising
reasonable diligence that the
requirement to obtain two appraisals
does not apply. A creditor acts with
reasonable diligence if the creditor bases
its determination on information
contained in written source documents,
such as the documents listed in
Appendix O to this part.
(B) Inability to determine prior sale
date or price—modified requirements
for additional appraisal. If, after
exercising reasonable diligence, a
creditor cannot determine whether the
conditions in paragraphs (c)(4)(i)(A) and
(c)(4)(i)(B) are present and therefore
must obtain two written appraisals in
accordance with paragraphs (c)(4)(i)
through (v) of this section, one of the
two appraisals shall include an analysis
of the factors in paragraph (c)(4)(iv) of
this section only to the extent that the
information necessary for the appraiser
to perform the analysis can be
determined.

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(vii) Exemptions from the additional
appraisal requirement. The additional
appraisal required under paragraph
(c)(4)(i) of this section shall not apply to
extensions of credit that finance a
consumer’s acquisition of property:
(A) From a local, State or Federal
government agency;
(B) From a person who acquired title
to the property through foreclosure,
deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, or other
similar judicial or non-judicial
procedure as a result of the person’s
exercise of rights as the holder of a
defaulted mortgage loan;
(C) From a non-profit entity as part of
a local, State, or Federal government
program under which the non-profit
entity is permitted to acquire title to
single-family properties for resale from
a seller who acquired title to the
property through the process of
foreclosure, deed-in-lieu of foreclosure,
or other similar judicial or non-judicial
procedure;
(D) From a person who acquired title
to the property by inheritance or
pursuant to a court order of dissolution
of marriage, civil union, or domestic
partnership, or of partition of joint or
marital assets to which the seller was a
party;
(E) From an employer or relocation
agency in connection with the
relocation of an employee;
(F) From a servicemember, as defined
in 50 U.S.C. App. 511(1), who received
a deployment or permanent change of
station order after the servicemember
purchased the property;
(G) Located in an area designated by
the President as a federal disaster area,
if and for as long as the Federal
financial institutions regulatory
agencies, as defined in 12 U.S.C.
3350(6), waive the requirements in title
XI of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989,
as amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and
any implementing regulations in that
area; or
(H) Located in a rural county, as
defined in 12 CFR 1026.35(b)(2)(iv)(A).
(5) Required disclosure—(i) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, a
creditor shall disclose the following
statement, in writing, to a consumer
who applies for a higher-priced
mortgage loan: ‘‘We may order an
appraisal to determine the property’s
value and charge you for this appraisal.
We will give you a copy of any
appraisal, even if your loan does not
close. You can pay for an additional
appraisal for your own use at your own
cost.’’ Compliance with the disclosure
requirement in Regulation B, 12 CFR

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10443

1002.14(a)(2), satisfies the requirements
of this paragraph.
(ii) Timing of disclosure. The
disclosure required by paragraph
(c)(5)(i) of this section shall be delivered
or placed in the mail no later than the
third business day after the creditor
receives the consumer’s application for
a higher-priced mortgage loan subject to
paragraph (c) of this section. In the case
of a loan that is not a higher-priced
mortgage loan subject to paragraph (c) of
this section at the time of application,
but becomes a higher-priced mortgage
loan subject to paragraph (c) of this
section after application, the disclosure
shall be delivered or placed in the mail
not later than the third business day
after the creditor determines that the
loan is a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to paragraph (c) of this section.
(6) Copy of appraisals—(i) In general.
Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2)
of this section, a creditor shall provide
to the consumer a copy of any written
appraisal performed in connection with
a higher-priced mortgage loan pursuant
to paragraphs (c)(3) and (c)(4) of this
section.
(ii) Timing. A creditor shall provide to
the consumer a copy of each written
appraisal pursuant to paragraph (c)(6)(i)
of this section:
(A) No later than three business days
prior to consummation of the loan; or
(B) In the case of a loan that is not
consummated, no later than 30 days
after the creditor determines that the
loan will not be consummated.
(iii) Form of copy. Any copy of a
written appraisal required by paragraph
(c)(6)(i) of this section may be provided
to the applicant in electronic form,
subject to compliance with the
consumer consent and other applicable
provisions of the Electronic Signatures
in Global and National Commerce Act
(E-Sign Act) (15 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.).
(iv) No charge for copy of appraisal.
A creditor shall not charge the
consumer for a copy of a written
appraisal required to be provided to the
consumer pursuant to paragraph (c)(6)(i)
of this section.
(7) Relation to other rules. The rules
in this paragraph (c) were adopted
jointly by the Federal Reserve Board
(Board), the Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency (OCC), the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, the National
Credit Union Administration, the
Federal Housing Finance Agency, and
the Bureau. These rules are
substantively identical to the Board’s
and the OCC’s higher-priced mortgage
loan appraisal rules published
separately in 12 CFR 226.43 (for the
Board) and in 12 CFR part 34, subpart

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G and 12 CFR part 164, subpart B (for
the OCC).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. Appendix N to Part 1026 is added
to read as follows:
Appendix N to Part 1026—HigherPriced Mortgage Loan Appraisal Safe
Harbor Review
To qualify for the safe harbor provided in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii), a creditor must confirm
that the written appraisal:
1. Identifies the creditor who ordered the
appraisal and the property and the interest
being appraised.
2. Indicates whether the contract price was
analyzed.
3. Addresses conditions in the property’s
neighborhood.
4. Addresses the condition of the property
and any improvements to the property.
5. Indicates which valuation approaches
were used, and includes a reconciliation if
more than one valuation approach was used.
6. Provides an opinion of the property’s
market value and an effective date for the
opinion.
7. Indicates that a physical property visit
of the interior of the property was performed.
8. Includes a certification signed by the
appraiser that the appraisal was prepared in
accordance with the requirements of the
Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal
Practice.
9. Includes a certification signed by the
appraiser that the appraisal was prepared in
accordance with the requirements of title XI
of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3331 et seq.), and any
implementing regulations.

17. Appendix O to Part 1026 is added
to read as follows:

■

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Appendix O to Part 1026—Illustrative
Written Source Documents for HigherPriced Mortgage Loan Appraisal Rules
A creditor acts with reasonable diligence
under § 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(A) if the creditor
bases its determination on information
contained in written source documents, such
as:
1. A copy of the recorded deed from the
seller.
2. A copy of a property tax bill.
3. A copy of any owner’s title insurance
policy obtained by the seller.
4. A copy of the RESPA settlement
statement from the seller’s acquisition (i.e.,
the HUD–1 or any successor form).
5. A property sales history report or title
report from a third-party reporting service.
6. Sales price data recorded in multiple
listing services.
7. Tax assessment records or transfer tax
records obtained from local governments.
8. A written appraisal performed in
compliance with § 1026.35(c)(3)(i) for the
same transaction.
9. A copy of a title commitment report
detailing the seller’s ownership of the
property, the date it was acquired, or the
price at which the seller acquired the
property.

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10. A property abstract.

18. In Supplement I to part 1026,
A. Under Section 1026.35—Prohibited
Acts or Practices in Connection with
Higher-Priced Mortgage Loans, as
amended January 22, 2013 (78 FR 4754):
■ i. Under 35(a) Definitions, the heading
of Paragraph 35(a)(1) and paragraphs 1,
2, and 3 are republished.
■ ii. New 35(c) Appraisals is added.
■ B. New Appendix O—Illustrative
Written Source Documents for HigherPriced Mortgage Loan Appraisal Rules is
added.
The revisions, additions, and
removals read as follows:
■
■

Supplement I to Part 1026—Official
Interpretations
*

*

*

*

*

Section 1026.35—Requirements for HigherPriced Mortgage Loans
35(a) Definitions
Paragraph 35(a)(1)
1. Comparable transaction. A higherpriced mortgage loan is a consumer credit
transaction secured by the consumer’s
principal dwelling with an annual percentage
rate that exceeds the average prime offer rate
for a comparable transaction as of the date
the interest rate is set by the specified
margin. The table of average prime offer rates
published by the Bureau indicates how to
identify the comparable transaction.
2. Rate set. A transaction’s annual
percentage rate is compared to the average
prime offer rate as of the date the
transaction’s interest rate is set (or ‘‘locked’’)
before consummation. Sometimes a creditor
sets the interest rate initially and then re-sets
it at a different level before consummation.
The creditor should use the last date the
interest rate is set before consummation.
3. Threshold for ‘‘jumbo’’ loans. Section
1026.35(a)(1)(ii) provides a separate
threshold for determining whether a
transaction is a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to § 1026.35 when the principal
balance exceeds the limit in effect as of the
date the transaction’s rate is set for the
maximum principal obligation eligible for
purchase by Freddie Mac (a ‘‘jumbo’’ loan).
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA)
establishes and adjusts the maximum
principal obligation pursuant to rules under
12 U.S.C. 1454(a)(2) and other provisions of
Federal law. Adjustments to the maximum
principal obligation made by FHFA apply in
determining whether a mortgage loan is a
‘‘jumbo’’ loan to which the separate coverage
threshold in § 1026.35(a)(1)(ii) applies.

*

*

*

*

*

35(c)—Appraisals
35(c)(1) Definitions
35(c)(1)(i) Certified or Licensed Appraiser
1. USPAP. The Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) are
established by the Appraisal Standards Board
of the Appraisal Foundation (as defined in 12
U.S.C. 3350(9)). Under § 1026.35(c)(1)(i), the

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relevant USPAP standards are those found in
the edition of USPAP and that are in effect
at the time the appraiser signs the appraiser’s
certification.
2. Appraiser’s certification. The appraiser’s
certification refers to the certification that
must be signed by the appraiser for each
appraisal assignment. This requirement is
specified in USPAP Standards Rule 2–3.
3. FIRREA title XI and implementing
regulations. The relevant regulations are
those prescribed under section 1110 of the
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), as
amended (12 U.S.C. 3339), that relate to an
appraiser’s development and reporting of the
appraisal in effect at the time the appraiser
signs the appraiser’s certification. Paragraph
(3) of FIRREA section 1110 (12 U.S.C.
3339(3)), which relates to the review of
appraisals, is not relevant for determining
whether an appraiser is a certified or licensed
appraiser under § 1026.35(c)(1)(i).
35(c)(2) Exemptions
Paragraph 35(c)(2)(ii)
1. Secured by new manufactured home. A
transaction secured by a new manufactured
home, regardless of whether the transaction
is also secured by the land on which it is
sited, is not a ‘‘higher-priced mortgage loan’’
subject to the appraisal requirements of
§ 1026.35(c).
Paragraph 35(c)(2)(iii)
1. Secured by a mobile home. For purposes
of the exemption in § 1026.35(c)(2)(iii), a
mobile home does not include a
manufactured home, as defined in
§ 1026.35(c)(1)(ii).
Paragraph 35(c)(2)(iv)
1. Construction-to-permanent loans.
Section 1026.35(c) does not apply to a
transaction to finance the initial construction
of a dwelling. This exclusion applies to a
construction-only loan as well as to the
construction phase of a construction-topermanent loan. Section 1026.35(c) does
apply, however, to permanent financing that
replaces a construction loan, whether the
permanent financing is extended by the same
or a different creditor, unless the permanent
financing is otherwise exempt from the
requirements of § 1026.35(c). See
§ 1026.35(c)(2). When a construction loan
may be permanently financed by the same
creditor, the general disclosure requirements
for closed-end credit (§ 1026.17) provide that
the creditor may give either one combined
disclosure for both the construction financing
and the permanent financing, or a separate
set of disclosures for each of the two phases
as though they were two separate
transactions. See § 1026.17(c)(6)(ii) and
comment 17(c)(6)–2. Section 1026.17(c)(6)(ii)
addresses only how a creditor may elect to
disclose a construction-to-permanent
transaction. Which disclosure option a
creditor elects under § 1026.17(c)(6)(ii) does
not affect the determination of whether the
permanent phase of the transaction is subject
to § 1026.35(c). When the creditor discloses
the two phases as separate transactions, the
annual percentage rate for the permanent
phase must be compared to the average prime
offer rate for a transaction that is comparable

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to the permanent financing to determine
coverage under § 1026.35(c). When the
creditor discloses the two phases as a single
transaction, a single annual percentage rate,
reflecting the appropriate charges from both
phases, must be calculated for the transaction
in accordance with § 1026.35 and appendix
D to part 1026. The annual percentage rate
must be compared to the average prime offer
rate for a transaction that is comparable to
the permanent financing to determine
coverage under § 1026.35(c). If the
transaction is determined to be a higherpriced mortgage loan not otherwise exempt
under § 1026.35(c)(2), only the permanent
phase is subject to the requirements of
§ 1026.35(c).
35(c)(3) Appraisals Required
35(c)(3)(i) In General
1. Written appraisal—electronic
transmission. To satisfy the requirement that
the appraisal be ‘‘written,’’ a creditor may
obtain the appraisal in paper form or via
electronic transmission.
35(c)(3)(ii) Safe Harbor.
1. Safe harbor. A creditor that satisfies the
safe harbor conditions in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(A) through (D) complies
with the appraisal requirements of
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(i). A creditor that does not
satisfy the safe harbor conditions in
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)(A) through (D) does not
necessarily violate the appraisal
requirements of § 1026.35(c)(3)(i).
2. Appraiser’s certification. For purposes of
§ 1026.35(c)(3)(ii), the appraiser’s
certification refers to the certification
specified in item 9 of appendix N. See also
comment 35(c)(1)(i)–2.
Paragraph 35(c)(3)(ii)(C)
1. Confirming elements in the appraisal. To
confirm that the elements in appendix N to
this part are included in the written
appraisal, a creditor need not look beyond
the face of the written appraisal and the
appraiser’s certification.
35(c)(4) Additional Appraisal for Certain
Higher-Priced Mortgage Loans
1. Acquisition. For purposes of
§ 1026.35(c)(4), the terms ‘‘acquisition’’ and
‘‘acquire’’ refer to the acquisition of legal title
to the property pursuant to applicable State
law, including by purchase.
35(c)(4)(i) In General
1. Appraisal from a previous transaction.
An appraisal that was previously obtained in
connection with the seller’s acquisition or
the financing of the seller’s acquisition of the
property does not satisfy the requirements to
obtain two written appraisals under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i).
2. 90-day, 180-day calculation. The time
periods described in § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and
(B) are calculated by counting the day after
the date on which the seller acquired the
property, up to and including the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the property
that secures the transaction. For example,
assume that the creditor determines that date
of the consumer’s acquisition agreement is
October 15, 2012, and that the seller acquired
the property on April 17, 2012. The first day
to be counted in the 180-day calculation

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would be April 18, 2012, and the last day
would be October 15, 2012. In this case, the
number of days from April 17 would be 181,
so an additional appraisal is not required.
3. Date seller acquired the property. For
purposes of § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B), the
date on which the seller acquired the
property is the date on which the seller
became the legal owner of the property
pursuant to applicable State law.
4. Date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. For the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the property
under § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B), the
creditor should use the date on which the
consumer and the seller signed the agreement
provided to the creditor by the consumer.
The date on which the consumer and the
seller signed the agreement might not be the
date on which the consumer became
contractually obligated under State law to
acquire the property. For purposes of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B), a creditor is not
obligated to determine whether and to what
extent the agreement is legally binding on
both parties. If the dates on which the
consumer and the seller signed the agreement
differ, the creditor should use the later of the
two dates.
5. Price at which the seller acquired the
property. The price at which the seller
acquired the property refers to the amount
paid by the seller to acquire the property.
The price at which the seller acquired the
property does not include the cost of
financing the property.
6. Price the consumer is obligated to pay
to acquire the property. The price the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire the
property is the price indicated on the
consumer’s agreement with the seller to
acquire the property. The price the consumer
is obligated to pay to acquire the property
from the seller does not include the cost of
financing the property. For purposes of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) and (B), a creditor is not
obligated to determine whether and to what
extent the agreement is legally binding on
both parties. See also comment 35(c)(4)(i)–4.
35(c)(4)(ii) Different Certified or Licensed
Appraisers
1. Independent appraisers. The
requirements that a creditor obtain two
separate appraisals under § 1026.35(c)(4)(i),
and that each appraisal be conducted by a
different licensed or certified appraiser under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(ii), indicate that the two
appraisals must be conducted independently
of each other. If the two certified or licensed
appraisers are affiliated, such as by being
employed by the same appraisal firm, then
whether they have conducted the appraisal
independently of each other must be
determined based on the facts and
circumstances of the particular case known
to the creditor.
35(c)(4)(iii) Relationship to General
Appraisal Requirements
1. Safe harbor. When a creditor is required
to obtain an additional appraisal under
§ 1026(c)(4)(i), the creditor must comply with
the requirements of both § 1026.35(c)(3)(i)
and § 1026.35(c)(4)(ii) through (v) for that
appraisal. The creditor complies with the
requirements of § 1026.35(c)(3)(i) for the

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additional appraisal if the creditor meets the
safe harbor conditions in § 1026.35(c)(3)(ii)
for that appraisal.
35(c)(4)(iv) Required Analysis in the
Additional Appraisal
1. Determining acquisition dates and prices
used in the analysis of the additional
appraisal. For guidance on identifying the
date on which the seller acquired the
property, see comment 35(c)(4)(i)–3. For
guidance on identifying the date of the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property, see comment 35(c)(4)(i)–4. For
guidance on identifying the price at which
the seller acquired the property, see comment
35(c)(4)(i)–5. For guidance on identifying the
price the consumer is obligated to pay to
acquire the property, see comment
35(c)(4)(i)–6.
35(c)(4)(v) No Charge for Additional
Appraisal
1. Fees and mark-ups. The creditor is
prohibited from charging the consumer for
the performance of one of the two appraisals
required under § 1026.35(c)(4)(i), including
by imposing a fee specifically for that
appraisal or by marking up the interest rate
or any other fees payable by the consumer in
connection with the higher-priced mortgage
loan.
35(c)(4)(vi) Creditor’s Determination of Prior
Sale Date and Price
35(c)(4)(vi)(A) In General
1. Estimated sales price. If a written source
document describes the seller’s acquisition
price in a manner that indicates that the price
described is an estimated or assumed amount
and not the actual price, the creditor should
look at an alternative document to satisfy the
reasonable diligence standard in determining
the price at which the seller acquired the
property.
2. Reasonable diligence—oral statements
insufficient. Reliance on oral statements of
interested parties, such as the consumer,
seller, or mortgage broker, does not constitute
reasonable diligence under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vi)(A).
3. Lack of information and conflicting
information—two appraisals required. If a
creditor is unable to demonstrate that the
requirement to obtain two appraisals under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i) does not apply, the creditor
must obtain two written appraisals before
extending a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to the requirements of § 1026.35(c).
See also comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(B)–1. For
example:
i. Assume a creditor orders and reviews the
results of a title search, which shows that a
prior sale occurred between 91 and 180 days
ago, but not the price paid in that sale. Thus,
based on the title search, the creditor would
not be able to determine whether the price
the consumer is obligated to pay under the
consumer’s acquisition agreement is more
than 20 percent higher than the seller’s
acquisition price, pursuant to
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B). Before extending a
higher-priced mortgage loan subject to the
appraisal requirements of § 1026.35(c), the
creditor must either: (1) Perform additional
diligence to ascertain the seller’s acquisition
price and, based on this information,

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determine whether two written appraisals are
required; or (2) obtain two written appraisals
in compliance with § 1026.35(c)(4). See also
comment 35(c)(4)(vi)(B)–1.
ii. Assume a creditor reviews the results of
a title search indicating that the last recorded
purchase was more than 180 days before the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property. Assume also that the creditor
subsequently receives a written appraisal
indicating that the seller acquired the
property between 91 and 180 days before the
consumer’s agreement to acquire the
property. In this case, unless one of these
sources is clearly wrong on its face, the
creditor would not be able to determine
whether the seller acquired the property
within 180 days of the date of the consumer’s
agreement to acquire the property from the
seller, pursuant to § 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(B).
Before extending a higher-priced mortgage
loan subject to the appraisal requirements of
§ 1026.35(c), the creditor must either:
perform additional diligence to ascertain the
seller’s acquisition date and, based on this
information, determine whether two written
appraisals are required; or obtain two written
appraisals in compliance with
§ 1026.35(c)(4). See also comment
35(c)(4)(vi)(B)–1.

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35(c)(4)(vi)(B) Inability To Determine Prior
Sales Date or Price—Modified Requirements
for Additional Appraisal
1. Required analysis. In general, the
additional appraisal required under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i) should include an analysis
of the factors listed in § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(A)
through (C). However, if, following
reasonable diligence, a creditor cannot
determine whether the conditions in
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(i)(A) or (B) are present due to
a lack of information or conflicting
information, the required additional
appraisal must include the analyses required
under § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(A) through (C) only
to the extent that the information necessary
to perform the analyses is known. For
example, assume that a creditor is able,
following reasonable diligence, to determine
that the date on which the seller acquired the
property occurred between 91 and 180 days
prior to the date of the consumer’s agreement
to acquire the property. However, the
creditor is unable, following reasonable
diligence, to determine the price at which the
seller acquired the property. In this case, the
creditor is required to obtain an additional
written appraisal that includes an analysis
under § 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(B) and (c)(4)(iv)(C)
of the changes in market conditions and any
improvements made to the property between
the date the seller acquired the property and
the date of the consumer’s agreement to
acquire the property. However, the creditor is
not required to obtain an additional written
appraisal that includes analysis under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(iv)(A) of the difference
between the price at which the seller
acquired the property and the price that the
consumer is obligated to pay to acquire the
property.

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35(c)(4)(vii) Exemptions From the Additional
Appraisal Requirement
Paragraph 35(c)(4)(vii)(C)
1. Non-profit entity. For purposes of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(C), a ‘‘non-profit entity’’
is a person with a tax exemption ruling or
determination letter from the Internal
Revenue Service under section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C.
501(c)(3)).
Paragraph 35(c)(4)(vii)(H)
1. Bureau table of rural counties. The
Bureau publishes on its Web site a table of
rural counties under § 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H)
for each calendar year by the end of that
calendar year. See comment 35(b)(2)(iv)–1. A
property securing an HPML subject to
§ 1026.35(c) is in a rural county under
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H) if the county in which
the property is located is on the table of rural
counties most recently published by the
Bureau. For example, for a transaction
occurring in 2015, assume that the Bureau
most recently published a table of rural
counties at the end of 2014. The property
securing the transaction would be located in
a rural county for purposes of
§ 1026.35(c)(4)(vii)(H) if the county is on the
table of rural counties published by the
Bureau at the end of 2014.
35(c)(5) Required Disclosure
35(c)(5)(i) In General
1. Multiple applicants. When two or more
consumers apply for a loan subject to this
section, the creditor is required to give the
disclosure to only one of the consumers.
2. Appraisal independence requirements
not affected. Nothing in the text of the
consumer notice required by
§ 1026.35(c)(5)(i) should be construed to
affect, modify, limit, or supersede the
operation of any legal, regulatory, or other
requirements or standards relating to
independence in the conduct of appraisers or
restrictions on the use of borrower-ordered
appraisals by creditors.
35(c)(6) Copy of Appraisals
35(c)(6)(i) In General
1. Multiple applicants. When two or more
consumers apply for a loan subject to this
section, the creditor is required to give the
copy of each required appraisal to only one
of the consumers.
35(c)(6)(ii) Timing
1. ‘‘Provide.’’ For purposes of the
requirement to provide a copy of the
appraisal within a specified time under
§ 1026.35(c)(6)(ii), ‘‘provide’’ means
‘‘deliver.’’ Delivery occurs three business
days after mailing or delivering the copies to
the last-known address of the applicant, or
when evidence indicates actual receipt by the
applicant (which, in the case of electronic
receipt, must be based upon consent that
complies with the E-Sign Act), whichever is
earlier.
2. ‘‘Receipt’’ of the appraisal. For
appraisals prepared by the creditor’s internal
appraisal staff, the date of ‘‘receipt’’ is the
date on which the appraisal is completed.
3. No waiver. Regulation B, 12 CFR
1002.14(a)(1), allowing the consumer to

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waive the requirement that the appraisal
copy be provided three business days before
consummation, does not apply to higherpriced mortgage loans subject to § 1026.35(c).
A consumer of a higher-priced mortgage loan
subject to § 1026.35(c) may not waive the
timing requirement to receive a copy of the
appraisal under § 1026.35(c)(6)(i).
35(c)(6)(iv) No Charge for Copy Of Appraisal
1. Fees and mark-ups. The creditor is
prohibited from charging the consumer for
any copy of an appraisal required to be
provided under § 1026.35(c)(6)(i), including
by imposing a fee specifically for a required
copy of an appraisal or by marking up the
interest rate or any other fees payable by the
consumer in connection with the higherpriced mortgage loan.

*

*

*

*

*

Appendix O—Illustrative Written Source
Documents for Higher-Priced Mortgage Loan
Appraisal Rules
1. Title commitment report. The ‘‘title
commitment report’’ is a document from a
title insurance company describing the
property interest and status of its title, parties
with interests in the title and the nature of
their claims, issues with the title that must
be resolved prior to closing of the transaction
between the parties to the transfer, amount
and disposition of the premiums, and
endorsements on the title policy. This
document is issued by the title insurance
company prior to the company’s issuance of
an actual title insurance policy to the
property’s transferee and/or creditor
financing the transaction. In different
jurisdictions, this instrument may be referred
to by different terms, such as a title
commitment, title binder, title opinion, or
title report.

Federal Housing Finance Agency
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, and under
the authority of 15 U.S.C. 1639h and 12
U.S.C. 4511(b), 4526, and 4617, the
Federal Housing Finance Agency adds
Part 1222 to subchapter B of chapter XII
of title 12 of the Code of the Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 1222—APPRAISALS
Subpart A—Requirements for Higher-Priced
Mortgage Loans
Sec.
1222.1 Purpose and scope.
1222.2 Reservation of authority.

Subparts B to Z—[Reserved]
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 4511(b), 4526, and
4617; 15 U.S.C. 1639h (TILA).

Subpart A—Requirements for HigherPriced Mortgage Loans
§ 1222.1

Purpose and scope.

This subpart cross-references the
requirement that creditors extending

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credit in the form of higher-priced
mortgage loans comply with Section
129H of the Truth-in-Lending Act
(TILA), 15 U.S.C. 1639h, and its
implementing regulations in Regulation
Z, 12 CFR 1026.35. Neither the Banks
nor the Enterprises are subject to
Section 129H of TILA or 12 CFR
1026.35. Originators of higher-priced
mortgage loans, including Bank
members and institutions that sell
mortgage loans to the Enterprises, are
subject to those provisions. A failure of
those institutions to comply with
Section 129H of TILA and 12 CFR
1026.35 may limit their ability to sell
such loans to the Banks or Enterprises
or to pledge such loans to the Banks as
collateral, to the extent provided in the
parties’ agreements.
§ 1222.2

Reservation of authority.

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Nothing in this subpart A shall be
read to limit the authority of the
Director of the Federal Housing Finance
Agency to take supervisory or
enforcement action, including action to
address unsafe and unsound practices
or conditions, or violations of law. In

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addition, nothing in this subpart A shall
be read to limit the authority of the
Director to impose requirements for any
purchase of higher-priced mortgage
loans by an Enterprise or a Federal
Home Loan Bank, or acceptance of
higher-priced mortgage loans as
collateral to secure advances by a
Federal Home Loan Bank.
Subparts B to Z—[Reserved]
Dated: January 18, 2013.
Thomas J. Curry,
Comptroller of the Currency.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, January 16, 2013.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Secretary of the Board.
By the National Credit Union
Administration Board on January 11, 2013.
Mary Rupp,
Secretary of the Board.
Dated: January 18, 2013.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.

by section 129H of the Truth in Lending Act
as added by section 1471 of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act.
Dated at Washington, DC, this 15th day of
January, 2013.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
Dated: January 18, 2013.
Edward J. DeMarco,
Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
[FR Doc. 2013–01809 Filed 2–12–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–33–4810–AM– 6210–01– 6714–01–
7535–01–P

This rule is being adopted by the FDIC
jointly with the other agencies as mandated

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