Setting up an impound account on a seller-carry note runs in defined steps from the closing table through the first annual analysis. Each step ties to a specific rule in Regulation X and a specific record in the loan file. The procedure below is the workflow a holder runs to produce a compliant impound from origination.
Step 1 — Identify whether the carry requires an impound
Read the note language and the borrower profile against the impound decision matrix. Owner-occupied carries with thin payment history, high tax exposure relative to the loan balance, or coastal/fire-zone property tend to require an impound. Investor-purpose carries with experienced borrowers and low exposure tend to run without. Document the decision in the loan file.
Step 2 — Set up the segregated trust account
Open a bank account separate from the holder’s operating funds. Title the account to identify the trust purpose (e.g., “Holder Name, as servicer for borrower name”). Capture the bank statement, the account-titling documentation, and the FDIC coverage in the loan file. The trust account holds the impound funds across the life of the loan, separate from every other account the holder manages.
Step 3 — Run the initial impound projection
Project the next twelve months of disbursements — property tax, hazard insurance, flood insurance (where applicable), and other escrow items as defined under §1024.17. Identify the cushion within the §1024.17(c)(5) cap of one-sixth of the projected annual disbursements. Sum the projected disbursements and the cushion, divide by twelve, and identify the monthly impound figure.
Step 4 — Set the monthly payment structure
Add the monthly impound figure to the principal-and-interest installment to produce the total monthly payment. Document the breakdown in the borrower notification and the §1026.41 statement template. The borrower remits the total monthly payment; the holder allocates against principal, interest, and impound on the sub-ledger.
Step 5 — Build the disbursement calendar
Capture the property tax due dates and the insurance renewal dates on a calendar tied to the trust account. Set reminders ahead of each due date so the disbursement runs before the delinquency or lapse. Document each disbursement on the sub-ledger with the date, the payee, the amount, and the receipt or canceled check.
Step 6 — Run the monthly sub-ledger reconciliation
Reconcile the trust account bank statement against the sub-ledger entries on a monthly schedule. Identify any gaps between the recorded transactions and the bank statement, investigate the cause, and correct the entries. The reconciliation produces the audit trail for the §1024.17 analysis and the state servicer audit.
Step 7 — Produce the annual §1024.17 escrow analysis
At the anniversary date, run the §1024.17 analysis. Compare the projected disbursements against the actual disbursements, identify any shortage or surplus, project the next twelve months on the updated tax and insurance figures, and produce the annual escrow analysis statement to the borrower. Adjust the monthly impound figure prospectively as the analysis requires.
Step 8 — Run the closing-out §1024.34 procedure at payoff
At loan payoff, run the final §1024.17 analysis through the payoff date, identify the borrower-side balance, and refund the balance within the twenty-business-day §1024.34 window. Document the disposition in the closing-out file alongside the recorded lien release, the final §1026.41 statement, and the Form 1098.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the single highest-leverage step in the workflow?
Step 2 — the segregated trust account. Without a segregated account, every downstream step inherits the commingling risk. With a segregated account, every downstream step runs against a clean foundation.
How long does the setup take from closing?
The trust account opens at the bank in a single visit with the closing-statement documentation. The initial projection runs against the closing-disclosure tax and insurance figures. The disbursement calendar populates from the property-tax due dates and the insurance declarations page. End-to-end, the setup runs inside the first week after closing.
When should the holder engage a licensed servicer for impound management?
At origination. The servicer sets up the trust account, runs the initial projection, produces the disbursement calendar, runs the monthly sub-ledger reconciliation, produces the annual §1024.17 analysis, and executes the §1024.34 closing-out at payoff. Engaging the servicer mid-loan requires reconstructing the impound position from origination.
This article is educational and does not constitute legal advice. Impound accounts on seller-carry notes involve federal Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and Regulation X requirements, state escrow statutes, and state servicer licensing rules that vary by jurisdiction. Consult qualified legal counsel on the impound requirements that apply to any specific seller-carry note.
Sources
- Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), 12 U.S.C. §2601 et seq. Cornell Legal Information Institute.
- Regulation X, 12 C.F.R. §1024.17 — Escrow accounts. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
- Regulation X, 12 C.F.R. §1024.34 — Timely escrow payments. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
- Regulation X, 12 C.F.R. §§1024.35, 1024.36, 1024.38. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
- Regulation Z, 12 C.F.R. §1026.41 — Periodic statements. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
- National Flood Insurance Program. Federal Emergency Management Agency.
- California Civil Code §2954. California Legislative Information.
- New York Department of Financial Services. New York Department of Financial Services.
Related Topics
- Impound Accounts on Seller Carries: When They Make Sense
- Charging Late Fees on Seller Carries Without Voiding the Note
- Seller Carry Payoff Demands Done Right
- Trust Accounting for Seller-Carried Notes
- The First 60 Days of a New Seller Carry
- Why Self-Servicing a Seller Carry Is the Most Expensive Mistake
