A Closing Disclosure is a five-page form that provides final details about the mortgage loan you have selected. It includes the loan terms, your projected monthly payments, and how much you will pay in fees and other costs to get your mortgage (closing costs).
The lender is required to give you the Closing Disclosure at least three business days before you close on the mortgage loan. This three-day window allows you time to compare your final terms and costs to those provided in the loan estimate that you previously received from the lender. The three days also gives you time to ask your lender any questions before you go to the closing table.
You won’t receive a Closing Disclosure if you’re applying for a reverse mortgage. For those loans, you will receive two forms—a HUD-1 Settlement Statement and a final Truth in Lending Disclosure—instead of the Closing Disclosure.
If you are applying for a home equity line of credit (HELOC); a manufactured housing loan that is not secured by real estate; or a loan through certain types of homebuyer assistance programs, you will not receive a HUD-1 or a Closing Disclosure—but you should receive a Truth-in-Lending disclosure.
In California, as in the rest of the United States, the Closing Disclosure form is a critical document for most mortgage transactions. It is mandated by the federal Truth in Lending Act (TILA) as implemented by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's (CFPB) TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure (TRID) rule. The form provides comprehensive details about the mortgage loan, including loan terms, monthly payments, and closing costs. Lenders are required to provide the Closing Disclosure to the borrower at least three business days before the loan closing date. This period is designed to give borrowers sufficient time to review the final terms and costs and to address any discrepancies between the Closing Disclosure and the initial Loan Estimate they received. However, certain loans like reverse mortgages, HELOCs, loans not secured by real estate, and loans from specific homebuyer assistance programs are exempt from this requirement and have different disclosure forms, such as the HUD-1 Settlement Statement and the Truth in Lending Disclosure.