Force-placed duplicate insurance on already-covered property violates RESPA
NewRez placed a force-placed wind insurance policy on a property with continuous active homeowners coverage explicitly including wind, a direct violation of RESPA Regulation X which prohibits force-placed insurance when existing coverage is in place. The unauthorized policy and resulting escrow disbursements increased the borrower's monthly costs with no valid legal basis.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyMortgage servicer force-places duplicate wind insurance creating negative escrow balance
NewRez force-placed a wind insurance policy on a property already covered for wind under an active homeowners policy, with no legal basis under RESPA. The duplicate insurance charge created a large negative escrow balance and substantially increased monthly mortgage payments without borrower consent or notice. The borrower now faces an escrow crisis caused entirely by the servicer's unauthorized action.
Mortgage Servicer Force-Places Duplicate Wind Insurance, Inflates Escrow by $6,700
Shellpoint Mortgage Servicing force-placed duplicate wind insurance without proper notice, collecting $8,800 in escrow against an actual premium of $2,000 — a $6,700 unexplained overcharge. The servicer provided no justification for the discrepancy. Force-placed insurance abuse by mortgage servicers is a documented systemic pattern that regulators have repeatedly investigated.
Mortgage Servicers Place Excessive Force-Placed Insurance Above Legal Limits
Mortgage servicers place force-placed flood insurance on properties at amounts exceeding statutory maximum coverage limits, creating illegal overcharges. Servicers ignore repeated customer calls and documentation, leaving homeowners paying for unlawful insurance coverage.
Escrow double-billed for insurance after homeowner switches provider
When homeowners switch insurance providers and pay the new insurer directly, servicers like NewRez continue billing the escrow for the old policy, creating double payment. Escrow account reconciliation does not automatically track policy switches. Homeowners must dispute overpayments through a slow servicer process.
Loan Servicers Failing to Remove Prior Owner Insurance After FHA Loan Assumptions
When consumers assume FHA loans, servicers fail to remove the prior owner insurance policy from escrow, resulting in double insurance charges that deplete escrow accounts. New owners are billed for coverage they do not benefit from alongside their own valid policy. This operational handoff failure in loan assumption processing creates immediate financial harm.
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