Homebuyers navigating the mortgage process often encounter fees, referrals, and disclosures they don't fully understand. Some of these practices cross legal boundaries, costing consumers thousands of dollars through hidden kickbacks and undisclosed arrangements. The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act exists to prevent such abuses, yet violations remain surprisingly common across the mortgage industry.
When lenders, title companies, or real estate agents violate RESPA, the financial harm extends beyond inflated closing costs. Homebuyers may pay marked-up fees for services they never requested, or find themselves steered toward providers who pay referral fees rather than offer competitive pricing. Understanding these violations helps consumers protect themselves and recognize when they have grounds for legal action.
The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, enacted in 1974 and enforced by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), regulates the mortgage settlement process for residential real estate transactions. The law targets federally related mortgage loans, which includes most conventional mortgages, FHA loans, VA loans, and USDA loans used to purchase or refinance one-to-four family properties.
RESPA serves three primary purposes: ensuring consumers receive timely information about settlement costs, eliminating kickbacks and referral fees that inflate costs, and prohibiting sellers from requiring buyers...