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Taxes, Insurance and Interest
At closing, you may be required to prepay the interest on your home loan from the date of closing to the start of the period covered by your first monthly home loan payment.
If taxes and insurance (homeowner's, mortgage, flood, or other) are to be included in your payment, you will probably be required to pay a prorated amount for these as well to establish your escrow account.
If you plan to pay your taxes and insurance separately, you will have to show proof of payment for insurance and possibly taxes at closing.
Everything you need to know about escrow accounts.
If you're paying your property taxes and homeowner's insurance as part of your home loan payment, you may want to know how an escrow account works.
Basically, all year long your lender collects monthly payments called "reserves" that go into an escrow account to pay your property taxes and whatever kinds of insurance you're required to carry (homeowner's, mortgage, flood, etc.). At the time your property tax and insurance payments are due, your lender will have collected enough to make these payments in full. This relieves you of the responsibility of budgeting for these items yourself in addition to your monthly loan payment.
At the time of your closing, your lender may require you to fund some portion of these accounts.
Will the amount you pay per month for taxes and insurance ever change? Yes, it very well could if property taxes or insurance charges change. Since property taxes are based on a tax assessor's valuation of your home, they can increase or decrease over time. Your lender will examine your escrow account periodically to determine if the current monthly deposits you make will cover the tax and insurance bills when they're due. If not, your lender adjusts your payment and, with Countrywide, you receive notice of your new payment amount in your monthly statement.
Usually, the annual changes to your payments are minor. In a hot real estate market though, your payments could make a substantial jump if your home's value rises significantly and you're assessed a much higher property tax.
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