An impound account on a seller-carry note is the holder’s first defense against the two largest threats to the lien — a property tax sale and an insurance lapse. The decision to require an impound is set at the closing table, the mechanics run through Regulation X §1024.17, and the trust-account discipline runs through the §1024.34 escrow rules and the state-law trust-account framework. This guide walks the decision logic on whether to impound, the federal and state rules that govern the mechanics, the operational discipline that keeps the account compliant, and the failure modes that surface in self-served carries.
What is an impound account on a seller-carry note?
An impound account is a trust account the holder maintains on behalf of the borrower to collect funds for property taxes, hazard insurance, flood insurance, and other escrow items as defined under 12 C.F.R. §1024.17. The holder collects the impound figure as part of the monthly payment, holds the funds in trust, and disburses against the tax bill or the insurance premium when due. The impound account on a seller-carry note runs against the same Regulation X framework as an institutional servicer, with the trust-account discipline layered on top.
When does the impound make sense on a seller carry?
The impound makes sense on three borrower profiles. The first is the borrower with limited cash flow or a thin payment history, where a tax lapse risk runs above baseline. The second is the borrower on a property with high tax exposure relative to the loan balance, where a single year of unpaid taxes converts a clean lien into a tax-sale risk. The third is the borrower on a property with insurance-coverage volatility — coastal property, fire-zone property, older construction — where the holder requires hands-on monitoring of premium payment to maintain coverage on the lien collateral.
When does the impound add friction without value?
The impound runs against the holder’s reserve management cost and the borrower’s monthly payment size. The friction exceeds the value when the borrower has a long history of on-time tax and insurance payment, the property has low tax-and-insurance exposure relative to the loan balance, and the borrower has substantial reserves accessible to pay the tax bill directly. In those scenarios, an annual verification of tax and insurance status from the borrower runs cheaper than maintaining the impound across the life of the loan.
Expert Take
“The seller-carry holders who skip impounds at closing discover the gap three years in when a borrower misses a tax payment and the property hits the county tax sale list. The cure costs an order of magnitude more than the impound account itself. Impound at origination is cheap insurance against the failure modes that destroy the lien.” — Thomas Standen, President, Note Servicing Center
What does §1024.17 require on the impound mechanics?
12 C.F.R. §1024.17 sets the federal framework for escrow analysis on residential mortgage escrow accounts. The rule requires an annual escrow analysis comparing the projected disbursements against the projected receipts, identifying shortages or surpluses, and producing the annual escrow analysis statement to the borrower. The cushion is capped at one-sixth of the projected annual disbursements, the shortage cure runs over twelve months with the borrower’s consent, and the surplus refund runs above a stated dollar threshold. The §1024.17 framework applies to seller carries on owner-occupied residential 1-4 family properties.
What does the state-law framework add on top of §1024.17?
State servicer rules layer specific requirements on top of the §1024.17 framework. California Civil Code §2954 sets state-specific rules on residential mortgage escrow accounts. New York Department of Financial Services rules specify additional disclosure and trust-account standards. Texas Finance Code provisions apply to Texas escrow accounts. The state-law layer requires reading the property jurisdiction’s escrow statute alongside §1024.17 at the closing table.
How does the holder structure the trust account?
The impound funds run in a segregated trust account that is not commingled with the holder’s operating funds or the holder’s other servicing trust accounts. The trust account sits in a bank insured by the FDIC, the account titling identifies the trust purpose, and the reconciliation runs on a monthly schedule against the sub-ledger entries. The state servicer licensing framework where applicable requires specific trust-account standards beyond the federal baseline.
Expert Take
“The single largest escrow failure mode on a self-served seller carry is commingling the impound funds with the holder’s operating account. A state servicing audit identifies the commingling within an hour, and the finding carries the same regulatory weight as missing the §1024.17 analysis itself. A clean trust-account structure is the starting line for impound discipline, not the finish line.” — Thomas Standen, President, Note Servicing Center
What does the §1024.34 closing-out rule require?
12 C.F.R. §1024.34 governs the impound disposition at loan payoff. The rule requires the holder to refund the borrower-side balance within twenty business days of the final payment, with a final §1024.17 analysis through the payoff date documenting the disposition. A failure to refund inside the window converts the holder’s position from custodian to debtor, with state-side consequences on top of the federal §1024.34 finding.
What does the operational discipline look like across the life of the loan?
The operational discipline runs in four annual checkpoints. At each annual §1024.17 analysis, the holder runs the projection, identifies the shortage or surplus, and produces the borrower-side statement inside the rule window. At each tax bill, the holder pays the bill from the impound account before the delinquency date, captures the receipt, and posts the disbursement to the sub-ledger. At each insurance renewal, the holder pays the premium, captures the policy declarations page, and verifies continuous coverage on the lien collateral. At each monthly §1026.41 statement, the holder breaks out the impound balance, the disbursements in the period, and the projection for the remainder of the year.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a seller carry skip the impound entirely?
Yes, where the carry is investor-purpose or where the borrower’s profile and the property profile support a non-impound structure. The note language sets the impound requirement, and a note without an impound provision runs against an annual borrower-side verification of tax and insurance status rather than a holder-side disbursement.
Does the impound earn interest for the borrower?
State law specifies whether the impound earns interest and at what rate. Some states require interest accrual on borrower-side impound balances; other states do not. Read the state escrow statute alongside §1024.17 to identify the binding interest requirement in the property jurisdiction.
What happens if the impound runs short?
The §1024.17(f) framework specifies the shortage cure. The holder produces the analysis statement disclosing the shortage, offers the borrower a twelve-month cure plus the monthly impound adjustment, and posts the new monthly figure to the §1026.41 statement. A shortage outside the framework runs the §1024.35 dispute risk.
What happens if the impound runs surplus?
The §1024.17(f) framework specifies the surplus disposition. A surplus above the stated dollar threshold refunds to the borrower within thirty days of the analysis; a surplus below the threshold credits to the borrower’s impound account against the next year’s projection. The disposition documents on the annual escrow analysis statement.
Does the impound include flood insurance?
Yes, where the property sits in a special flood hazard area under the National Flood Insurance Program framework. The flood insurance premium runs alongside the hazard insurance premium in the impound projection, and the holder disburses against the flood policy renewal alongside the standard hazard renewal.
What is the single most important impound discipline a self-served seller carry should adopt?
Segregated trust-account titling from origination. A segregated account named for the trust purpose, separate from the holder’s operating funds, satisfies the federal and state baseline. Every other discipline runs against the foundation of a clean trust-account structure.
Related Topics
- Seven Impound Mistakes Seller-Carry Holders Make
- How to Set Up an Impound Account on a Seller Carry
- When a Missed Tax Bill Wipes Out a Seller-Carry Lien
- Impound vs Non-Impound Seller Carry: The Decision Math
- Seller-Carry Impound Account Questions Answered
- Charging Late Fees on Seller Carries Without Voiding the Note
- Seller Carry Payoff Demands Done Right
- Why Servicing History Adds Resale Value to Seller Carries
- The First 60 Days of a New Seller Carry
- Trust Accounting for Seller-Carried Notes
- Why Self-Servicing a Seller Carry Is the Most Expensive Mistake
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 and treatment of escrow account balances. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
- Regulation X, 12 C.F.R. §§1024.35, 1024.36, 1024.38 — Servicing duties. 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 servicer rules. New York Department of Financial Services.
- Texas Finance Code Title 5 — Mortgage loan servicer provisions. Texas Statutes.
- 12 U.S.C. §2605 — Servicing of mortgage loans and administration of escrow accounts. Cornell Legal Information Institute.
- 12 U.S.C. §2609 — Limitation on requirement of advance deposits in escrow accounts. Cornell Legal Information Institute.
