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Does
HUD Owe You A Refund?
If
you had a Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)/Federal
Housing Administration (FHA) insured mortgage, you may be eligible for a
refund of part of your insurance premium or a share of any excess earnings
from the FHA's Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund.
Who
may be eligible for an FHA refund or share?
Premium
Refund: You may be eligible for a refund of a
portion of the insurance premium if you:
acquired
your loan after September 1, 1983
paid
an upfront mortgage insurance premium at closing and
did
not default on your mortgage payments.
Review
your settlement papers or check with your mortgage company to determine if
you paid an upfront premium.
Distributive
Share: You may be eligible for a share of any
excess earnings from the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund if you:
originated
your loan before September 1, 1983
paid
on your loan for more than seven years and
had
your FHA insurance terminated before November 5, 1990.
Exceptions:
Assumptions:
When an FHA-insured loan is assumed, the insurance remains in force (the
seller receives no refund). The owner(s) of the property at the time the
insurance is terminated is entitled to any refund.
FHA
to FHA Refinances: When an FHA loan is
refinanced, the refund from the old premium may be applied toward the
upfront premium required for the new loan.
Claims:
When a mortgage company submits a claim to HUD for insurance benefits, no
refund is due the homeowner.
Statute
of Limitations: HUD is not liable for a
distributive share that remains unclaimed 6 years from the date
notification was first sent to the last known address of the mortgagor.
How
are refunds determined?
The
FHA Commissioner determines how much of the upfront premium is refunded
when loans are terminated. Refunds are based on the number of months the
loan is insured. For any FHA-insured loans with a closing date prior to
January 1, 2001, and endorsed before December 8, 2004, no refund is due
the homeowner after the end of the seventh year of insurance. For any
FHA-insured loans closed on or after January 1, 2001 and endorsed before
December 8, 2004, no refund is due the homeowner after the fifth year of
insurance. For FHA-insured loans endorsed on or after December 8, 2004, no
refund is due the homeowner unless they refinanced to a new FHA-insured
loan, and no refund is due these homeowners after the third year of
insurance.
How
are refunds processed?
Your
mortgage company notifies HUD of the termination of the FHA mortgage
insurance for your loan.
If
you are eligible for a refund, HUD will either request that the Department
of the Treasury (Treasury) issue a check directly to you or send you an
Application for Premium Refund or Distributive Share Payment (form
HUD-27050-B) so that you can provide HUD with additional information about
your case.
If
you receive a form HUD-27050-B, please read and complete the application
carefully, sign it, have it notarized, and return it to HUD along with
proof that you were the owner of the property at the time that the
insurance was terminated.
After
HUD receives your completed form HUD-27050-B and the necessary suporting
documentation, this information will be carefully reviewed. Upon
completion of this review, HUD will either request that Treasury issue a
check directly to you or request additional information from you.
How
to follow-up:
If
you do not receive a check or an application within 45 days after you have
paid off your loan, check with your mortgage company to confirm that they
have sent HUD a request to terminate the mortgage insurance on your loan.
If they confirm that the correct termination information was sent, contact
HUD. If you do not receive a refund or any other documentation from HUD
within 120 days after the date you mailed your application, contact
HUD immediately.
How
to contact HUD:
Phone:
(800) 697-6967, 8:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Eastern
Standard Time, Monday through Friday.
Mail:
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, P.O. Box 23699,
Washington, DC 20026-3699.
Note:
All inquiries should include your name, your FHA case number, the date
that the mortgage was paid-in-full, the property address, and your daytime
phone number.
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