Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 27— - REAL ESTATE SETTLEMENT PROCEDURES › § 2609
Lenders for federally related mortgage loans cannot make you put more money into an escrow account than needed to pay property taxes, insurance, and similar charges. At closing they can only collect enough to cover payments from the last normal payment date to your first full mortgage payment, plus up to one-sixth of the total estimated cost for the next 12 months. After your first full payment, monthly deposits can be no more than one-twelfth of the estimated yearly charges plus enough to keep a cushion up to one-sixth of the estimated yearly total. If there is a shortage, the lender may require extra monthly deposits to fix it. Servicers must tell you at least once a year if the escrow account is short. When a servicer sets up an escrow account, they must give you a clear list of the expected taxes, insurance, and other charges for the first 12 months and the dates they expect to pay them. That statement must be given at closing or within 45 days of opening the account. After that, the servicer must send a yearly statement (the first yearly period began on the first January 1 after November 28, 1990) within 30 days after each 12-month period. The yearly statement must show your monthly payment, how much goes into escrow, total paid in and out, what was paid for taxes and insurance, and the ending balance. If a servicer or lender fails to send the required statement, they can be fined $50 per failure, up to $100,000 in a 12‑month period; if the failure was intentional, the fine is $100 per failure and there is no $100,000 cap.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 2609
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73