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Question 1 of 10
1. Question
A client relationship manager at a fintech lender seeks guidance on Tracing Hidden Assets and Income as part of conflicts of interest. They explain that a high-net-worth borrower is seeking a mortgage for a marital home buyout, but the reported income on the last two years of tax returns does not seem to support the borrower’s current lifestyle and debt obligations. The manager is concerned about potential fraudulent conveyance or undisclosed income streams that could impact the mortgage’s long-term viability and the equity division. When performing a forensic review to identify these discrepancies, which analytical approach is most effective for uncovering hidden financial resources?
Correct
Correct: A lifestyle analysis, also known as the ‘source and application of funds’ method, is a fundamental forensic tool in divorce financial planning. It involves comparing a spouse’s known income with their actual expenditures. If the expenditures significantly exceed the reported income, it provides strong circumstantial evidence that there are undisclosed income sources or hidden assets being liquidated to fund the lifestyle.
Incorrect: Verifying Schedule A deductions is a routine underwriting task that confirms reported expenses but does not reveal hidden income. Cross-referencing credit reports focuses on liabilities and debt-to-income ratios rather than the discovery of hidden assets or income streams. Analyzing depreciation schedules is a component of business valuation used to adjust book value to fair market value, but it does not trace the flow of hidden personal income or diverted marital funds.
Takeaway: Lifestyle analysis is the primary forensic method for identifying discrepancies between reported income and actual spending, which often signals the presence of hidden assets or income in divorce cases.
Incorrect
Correct: A lifestyle analysis, also known as the ‘source and application of funds’ method, is a fundamental forensic tool in divorce financial planning. It involves comparing a spouse’s known income with their actual expenditures. If the expenditures significantly exceed the reported income, it provides strong circumstantial evidence that there are undisclosed income sources or hidden assets being liquidated to fund the lifestyle.
Incorrect: Verifying Schedule A deductions is a routine underwriting task that confirms reported expenses but does not reveal hidden income. Cross-referencing credit reports focuses on liabilities and debt-to-income ratios rather than the discovery of hidden assets or income streams. Analyzing depreciation schedules is a component of business valuation used to adjust book value to fair market value, but it does not trace the flow of hidden personal income or diverted marital funds.
Takeaway: Lifestyle analysis is the primary forensic method for identifying discrepancies between reported income and actual spending, which often signals the presence of hidden assets or income in divorce cases.
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Question 2 of 10
2. Question
Following an on-site examination at a credit union, regulators raised concerns about Underwriting Challenges and Solutions for Divorcing Borrowers in the context of change management. Their preliminary finding is that the institution’s mortgage department failed to consistently apply secondary market standards when excluding court-assigned liabilities from the debt-to-income (DTI) ratio. Specifically, during a review of files from the last 12 months, auditors noted several instances where the departing spouse was still being qualified with the full monthly obligation of the marital residence despite a finalized decree. To align with standard agency guidelines for excluding a mortgage debt assigned to an ex-spouse, which action must the underwriter take?
Correct
Correct: According to standard secondary market guidelines (such as Fannie Mae B3-6-05), a mortgage debt can be excluded from the borrower’s DTI ratio if the underwriter obtains a copy of the divorce decree or separation agreement that assigns the debt to the other party. Additionally, the underwriter must verify that the debt is not currently delinquent and has had no late payments since the time of the assignment.
Incorrect: Requiring a formal release of liability is a common misconception; while it is the only way to fully remove the legal obligation, it is not a requirement for excluding the debt for underwriting purposes. A six-month waiting period is not a standard agency requirement for debt exclusion. A Quitclaim Deed transfers ownership interest but does not address the underlying mortgage liability, and therefore is not the primary document used to exclude debt from the DTI ratio.
Takeaway: Underwriters can exclude court-assigned mortgage debt from a borrower’s DTI ratio if the divorce decree assigns the liability to the ex-spouse and the payment history is verified as current.
Incorrect
Correct: According to standard secondary market guidelines (such as Fannie Mae B3-6-05), a mortgage debt can be excluded from the borrower’s DTI ratio if the underwriter obtains a copy of the divorce decree or separation agreement that assigns the debt to the other party. Additionally, the underwriter must verify that the debt is not currently delinquent and has had no late payments since the time of the assignment.
Incorrect: Requiring a formal release of liability is a common misconception; while it is the only way to fully remove the legal obligation, it is not a requirement for excluding the debt for underwriting purposes. A six-month waiting period is not a standard agency requirement for debt exclusion. A Quitclaim Deed transfers ownership interest but does not address the underlying mortgage liability, and therefore is not the primary document used to exclude debt from the DTI ratio.
Takeaway: Underwriters can exclude court-assigned mortgage debt from a borrower’s DTI ratio if the divorce decree assigns the liability to the ex-spouse and the payment history is verified as current.
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Question 3 of 10
3. Question
Your team is drafting a policy on Impact of Divorce on Business Ownership and Operations as part of onboarding for a credit union. A key unresolved point is how the institution should address the risk of double dipping when a self-employed borrower is subject to both a business-based property division and spousal support obligations. In a scenario where a borrower is seeking a cash-out refinance to buyout a former spouse’s 50% interest in a professional practice, the underwriting team must reconcile the business’s valuation with the borrower’s post-divorce cash flow. Which approach best aligns with prudent risk management and professional standards for evaluating the borrower’s ability to repay?
Correct
Correct: The correct approach involves a dual-layered analysis of cash flow and asset quality. In divorce lending, double dipping occurs when the same income stream is used to value the business for property division and to calculate spousal support. A prudent lender must ensure that the income used for mortgage qualification is the actual net income available after support obligations are met. Furthermore, distinguishing between enterprise goodwill (value inherent in the business entity) and personal goodwill (value tied to the individual’s reputation) is critical because personal goodwill often cannot be collateralized or transferred, affecting the true value of the business interest being bought out.
Incorrect: The other options fail to address the specific financial risks inherent in divorce-related business valuations. Using gross income without netting out support payments ignores a mandatory legal obligation that reduces the borrower’s capacity to pay the mortgage. Relying solely on the divorce decree’s legal characterization of property ignores the operational and market risks that a lender must independently assess. Finally, requiring a five-year post-divorce waiting period is an arbitrary constraint that does not align with standard underwriting guidelines, which typically require a history of stable income rather than a specific duration of post-divorce operation.
Takeaway: Lenders must reconcile business valuations with actual post-divorce cash flow by accounting for support obligations and the nature of business goodwill to avoid overestimating a borrower’s repayment capacity.
Incorrect
Correct: The correct approach involves a dual-layered analysis of cash flow and asset quality. In divorce lending, double dipping occurs when the same income stream is used to value the business for property division and to calculate spousal support. A prudent lender must ensure that the income used for mortgage qualification is the actual net income available after support obligations are met. Furthermore, distinguishing between enterprise goodwill (value inherent in the business entity) and personal goodwill (value tied to the individual’s reputation) is critical because personal goodwill often cannot be collateralized or transferred, affecting the true value of the business interest being bought out.
Incorrect: The other options fail to address the specific financial risks inherent in divorce-related business valuations. Using gross income without netting out support payments ignores a mandatory legal obligation that reduces the borrower’s capacity to pay the mortgage. Relying solely on the divorce decree’s legal characterization of property ignores the operational and market risks that a lender must independently assess. Finally, requiring a five-year post-divorce waiting period is an arbitrary constraint that does not align with standard underwriting guidelines, which typically require a history of stable income rather than a specific duration of post-divorce operation.
Takeaway: Lenders must reconcile business valuations with actual post-divorce cash flow by accounting for support obligations and the nature of business goodwill to avoid overestimating a borrower’s repayment capacity.
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Question 4 of 10
4. Question
After identifying an issue related to Post-Judgment Modifications of Divorce Orders, what is the best next step? A borrower is seeking to refinance a marital home awarded in a divorce finalized three years ago. During the application process, the borrower discloses that the alimony payments they receive were reduced six months ago via a court-ordered modification due to the payor’s involuntary job change. The borrower’s ability to qualify for the new loan depends on the stability and duration of this modified income.
Correct
Correct: In mortgage underwriting, specifically under agency guidelines (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac), any income used for qualification must be documented as legally obligated and likely to continue for at least three years. When a post-judgment modification occurs, it legally supersedes the original decree. The CDLP must ensure the modification is fully executed (court-stamped) and then verify that the income will continue for the required three-year duration from the date of the mortgage application to ensure the stability of the income source.
Incorrect: Using the original decree’s amount is incorrect because it no longer reflects the legal obligation or the actual income received, which would lead to an inaccurate debt-to-income ratio. An affidavit from an ex-spouse is not a legally binding substitute for a court order and does not satisfy formal underwriting requirements for income verification. Disregarding the income entirely is an unnecessary measure that may disqualify a borrower who otherwise meets the criteria; the professional’s role is to validate and apply the income correctly according to the most recent legal orders.
Takeaway: Post-judgment modifications legally supersede original divorce decrees and must be validated for both legal standing and three-year income continuity in mortgage qualification.
Incorrect
Correct: In mortgage underwriting, specifically under agency guidelines (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac), any income used for qualification must be documented as legally obligated and likely to continue for at least three years. When a post-judgment modification occurs, it legally supersedes the original decree. The CDLP must ensure the modification is fully executed (court-stamped) and then verify that the income will continue for the required three-year duration from the date of the mortgage application to ensure the stability of the income source.
Incorrect: Using the original decree’s amount is incorrect because it no longer reflects the legal obligation or the actual income received, which would lead to an inaccurate debt-to-income ratio. An affidavit from an ex-spouse is not a legally binding substitute for a court order and does not satisfy formal underwriting requirements for income verification. Disregarding the income entirely is an unnecessary measure that may disqualify a borrower who otherwise meets the criteria; the professional’s role is to validate and apply the income correctly according to the most recent legal orders.
Takeaway: Post-judgment modifications legally supersede original divorce decrees and must be validated for both legal standing and three-year income continuity in mortgage qualification.
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Question 5 of 10
5. Question
A procedure review at a listed company has identified gaps in Legal Terminology Relevant to Divorce and Real Estate as part of conflicts of interest. The review highlights that underwriting teams often fail to identify when a borrower’s claim to separate property has been legally altered through financial actions taken during the marriage. For instance, a borrower seeking a cash-out refinance to buy out a spouse claims a portion of the home’s equity is separate property because the down payment was made using a pre-marital savings account, despite the home being titled jointly for over ten years. Which legal concept should the internal audit team emphasize as the primary risk factor for the loss of separate property status in this scenario?
Correct
Correct: Transmutation refers to the legal process where an asset that was once considered separate property (such as pre-marital savings or an inheritance) is transformed into marital property. This often occurs through commingling (mixing separate and marital funds) or by retitling the asset into both spouses’ names. For a mortgage professional or auditor, identifying transmutation is critical because it directly impacts the legal determination of equity and the validity of a borrower’s claim to non-marital assets during a buyout.
Incorrect: Equitable distribution is a judicial framework used in many states to divide marital property fairly, but it is not the term for the process of an asset changing its character from separate to marital. Lis pendens is a formal notice filed in public records indicating that a property’s title is subject to a pending lawsuit, which serves as a procedural red flag for lenders but does not define the characterization of the property itself. Right of partition is a legal remedy that allows a co-owner to force the division or sale of real estate, which addresses the resolution of ownership disputes rather than the initial classification of assets as marital or separate.
Takeaway: Transmutation is the legal principle where separate property loses its individual status and becomes marital property through commingling or joint titling, significantly affecting equity calculations in divorce lending.
Incorrect
Correct: Transmutation refers to the legal process where an asset that was once considered separate property (such as pre-marital savings or an inheritance) is transformed into marital property. This often occurs through commingling (mixing separate and marital funds) or by retitling the asset into both spouses’ names. For a mortgage professional or auditor, identifying transmutation is critical because it directly impacts the legal determination of equity and the validity of a borrower’s claim to non-marital assets during a buyout.
Incorrect: Equitable distribution is a judicial framework used in many states to divide marital property fairly, but it is not the term for the process of an asset changing its character from separate to marital. Lis pendens is a formal notice filed in public records indicating that a property’s title is subject to a pending lawsuit, which serves as a procedural red flag for lenders but does not define the characterization of the property itself. Right of partition is a legal remedy that allows a co-owner to force the division or sale of real estate, which addresses the resolution of ownership disputes rather than the initial classification of assets as marital or separate.
Takeaway: Transmutation is the legal principle where separate property loses its individual status and becomes marital property through commingling or joint titling, significantly affecting equity calculations in divorce lending.
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Question 6 of 10
6. Question
A transaction monitoring alert at a listed company has triggered regarding Client Communication and Managing Emotional Clients during business continuity. The alert details show that a Certified Divorce Lending Professional (CDLP) is managing a high-conflict buyout scenario where the client has missed three consecutive 48-hour deadlines for submitting updated retirement account statements. The client is frequently calling the loan officer to discuss the emotional grievances of the divorce rather than the financial requirements of the mortgage. To ensure the mortgage contingency is met while managing the client’s emotional state, which of the following is the most effective professional approach?
Correct
Correct: In the context of divorce lending, a CDLP must balance empathy with the technical requirements of mortgage underwriting. Acknowledging the client’s emotional state builds necessary rapport and trust, while redirecting them to the financial requirements ensures the loan process stays on track. This approach maintains professional boundaries while helping the client understand that their emotional venting, while valid, is a secondary priority to the legal and financial deadlines of the mortgage contingency.
Incorrect: Placing the file on hold is counterproductive and may cause the client to breach their divorce decree or lose their housing option. Contacting the opposing counsel without specific authorization is a breach of confidentiality and can escalate conflict in the divorce proceedings. Moving to a strictly automated system ignores the CDLP’s role in guiding the client through a complex life transition and may lead to further confusion or missed documents if the client feels unsupported.
Takeaway: Effective client management in divorce lending requires a balance of emotional empathy and firm redirection to technical financial requirements to meet underwriting deadlines.
Incorrect
Correct: In the context of divorce lending, a CDLP must balance empathy with the technical requirements of mortgage underwriting. Acknowledging the client’s emotional state builds necessary rapport and trust, while redirecting them to the financial requirements ensures the loan process stays on track. This approach maintains professional boundaries while helping the client understand that their emotional venting, while valid, is a secondary priority to the legal and financial deadlines of the mortgage contingency.
Incorrect: Placing the file on hold is counterproductive and may cause the client to breach their divorce decree or lose their housing option. Contacting the opposing counsel without specific authorization is a breach of confidentiality and can escalate conflict in the divorce proceedings. Moving to a strictly automated system ignores the CDLP’s role in guiding the client through a complex life transition and may lead to further confusion or missed documents if the client feels unsupported.
Takeaway: Effective client management in divorce lending requires a balance of emotional empathy and firm redirection to technical financial requirements to meet underwriting deadlines.
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Question 7 of 10
7. Question
Following an alert related to VA and FHA Loan Guidelines in Divorce Situations, what is the proper response when a veteran borrower seeks to exclude a marital mortgage debt from their debt-to-income ratio while their ex-spouse remains in the home and is responsible for the payment per the court order?
Correct
Correct: Under VA and FHA guidelines, if a divorce decree or legal separation agreement assigns a debt to an ex-spouse, the debt can be excluded from the borrower’s debt-to-income (DTI) ratio provided there is no record of delinquency since the date of the assignment. However, for VA loans, the veteran’s entitlement used for the original purchase remains tied to that property until the loan is paid in full or another veteran substitutes their entitlement, regardless of what the divorce decree says about liability.
Incorrect: One alternative incorrectly suggests that entitlement restoration is automatic upon divorce, which is false as the loan remains active and the entitlement is still in use. Another alternative suggests a mandatory twelve-month payment history requirement, which is a common conventional (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac) guideline but is more restrictive than the specific FHA and VA allowances for court-ordered assignments. The final alternative suggests the debt must always be included until a refinance occurs, which ignores the specific agency provisions that allow for DTI exclusion based on court-ordered debt assignment.
Takeaway: VA and FHA guidelines allow for the exclusion of court-assigned debts from DTI with a clean payment history, but VA entitlement is not restored until the underlying loan is satisfied or substituted.
Incorrect
Correct: Under VA and FHA guidelines, if a divorce decree or legal separation agreement assigns a debt to an ex-spouse, the debt can be excluded from the borrower’s debt-to-income (DTI) ratio provided there is no record of delinquency since the date of the assignment. However, for VA loans, the veteran’s entitlement used for the original purchase remains tied to that property until the loan is paid in full or another veteran substitutes their entitlement, regardless of what the divorce decree says about liability.
Incorrect: One alternative incorrectly suggests that entitlement restoration is automatic upon divorce, which is false as the loan remains active and the entitlement is still in use. Another alternative suggests a mandatory twelve-month payment history requirement, which is a common conventional (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac) guideline but is more restrictive than the specific FHA and VA allowances for court-ordered assignments. The final alternative suggests the debt must always be included until a refinance occurs, which ignores the specific agency provisions that allow for DTI exclusion based on court-ordered debt assignment.
Takeaway: VA and FHA guidelines allow for the exclusion of court-assigned debts from DTI with a clean payment history, but VA entitlement is not restored until the underlying loan is satisfied or substituted.
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Question 8 of 10
8. Question
The supervisory authority has issued an inquiry to a fund administrator concerning Client Education and Empowerment Strategies in the context of record-keeping. The letter states that a recent internal audit identified a failure to properly document the education provided to clients regarding the ‘stability and continuity’ of income during the mortgage application process post-divorce. In one specific file, a client is required by a court order to refinance the marital home within 180 days, using $5,000 in monthly spousal support as their primary qualifying income. To ensure the client is empowered to meet this deadline and the file meets underwriting standards, which educational strategy should the professional employ?
Correct
Correct: In divorce lending, specifically for conventional loans (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac), support income such as alimony or child support must meet two specific tests: stability and continuity. The stability test generally requires proof that the income has been received for at least six months (though some programs may vary, six months is the standard for stability). The continuity test requires documentation, such as the divorce decree or separation agreement, proving the income will continue for at least three years after the mortgage application date. Educating the client on these specific timeframes is essential for empowerment and successful refinancing within a court-mandated window.
Incorrect: Option B is incorrect because the finalization of the decree does not satisfy the three-year forward-looking continuity requirement. Option C is incorrect because the ex-spouse’s tax returns prove their ability to pay but do not satisfy the requirement for the borrower to prove actual receipt of the funds to establish stability. Option D is incorrect because a letter of guarantee from an attorney does not override the secondary mortgage market’s underwriting guidelines regarding the three-year continuity rule.
Takeaway: To qualify for a mortgage using support income, a client must demonstrate a six-month history of receipt (stability) and a three-year future duration (continuity).
Incorrect
Correct: In divorce lending, specifically for conventional loans (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac), support income such as alimony or child support must meet two specific tests: stability and continuity. The stability test generally requires proof that the income has been received for at least six months (though some programs may vary, six months is the standard for stability). The continuity test requires documentation, such as the divorce decree or separation agreement, proving the income will continue for at least three years after the mortgage application date. Educating the client on these specific timeframes is essential for empowerment and successful refinancing within a court-mandated window.
Incorrect: Option B is incorrect because the finalization of the decree does not satisfy the three-year forward-looking continuity requirement. Option C is incorrect because the ex-spouse’s tax returns prove their ability to pay but do not satisfy the requirement for the borrower to prove actual receipt of the funds to establish stability. Option D is incorrect because a letter of guarantee from an attorney does not override the secondary mortgage market’s underwriting guidelines regarding the three-year continuity rule.
Takeaway: To qualify for a mortgage using support income, a client must demonstrate a six-month history of receipt (stability) and a three-year future duration (continuity).
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Question 9 of 10
9. Question
The monitoring system at a fund administrator has flagged an anomaly related to Marketing and Business Development for CDLP Professionals during record-keeping. Investigation reveals that a CDLP professional has entered into a 12-month strategic partnership with a prominent family law firm. As part of this arrangement, the CDLP pays a monthly ‘administrative fee’ to the law firm for the inclusion of the CDLP’s brochures in all new client intake folders. The audit identifies that this fee is significantly higher than the actual cost of printing and distribution, and the law firm exclusively refers clients with complex real estate portfolios to this specific CDLP. When evaluating the compliance of this business development strategy, which of the following represents the most significant regulatory concern?
Correct
Correct: Under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) Section 8, any ‘thing of value’ given or received in exchange for the referral of settlement service business is prohibited. When a CDLP pays a fee that exceeds the fair market value of the services provided (in this case, brochure distribution), the excess payment is generally viewed by regulators as a disguised referral fee or kickback, which is a serious compliance violation.
Incorrect: Option b is incorrect because while professional neutrality is important, the legal and regulatory violation of RESPA takes precedence as a ‘significant concern’ in an audit context. Option c is incorrect because the Fair Housing Act focuses on discrimination against protected classes in housing-related transactions, not the exclusivity of marketing agreements between professionals. Option d is incorrect because while the CFPB oversees RESPA, there is no specific ‘educational disclosure’ requirement that would legalize a referral fee that otherwise violates Section 8.
Takeaway: Marketing and business development activities must ensure that all payments to referral sources are for actual services rendered and are priced at fair market value to avoid RESPA Section 8 violations.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) Section 8, any ‘thing of value’ given or received in exchange for the referral of settlement service business is prohibited. When a CDLP pays a fee that exceeds the fair market value of the services provided (in this case, brochure distribution), the excess payment is generally viewed by regulators as a disguised referral fee or kickback, which is a serious compliance violation.
Incorrect: Option b is incorrect because while professional neutrality is important, the legal and regulatory violation of RESPA takes precedence as a ‘significant concern’ in an audit context. Option c is incorrect because the Fair Housing Act focuses on discrimination against protected classes in housing-related transactions, not the exclusivity of marketing agreements between professionals. Option d is incorrect because while the CFPB oversees RESPA, there is no specific ‘educational disclosure’ requirement that would legalize a referral fee that otherwise violates Section 8.
Takeaway: Marketing and business development activities must ensure that all payments to referral sources are for actual services rendered and are priced at fair market value to avoid RESPA Section 8 violations.
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Question 10 of 10
10. Question
A whistleblower report received by a listed company alleges issues with Client Education and Empowerment Strategies during complaints handling. The allegation claims that the mortgage division failed to adequately educate a client regarding the continuity of income requirements for spousal support, resulting in a loan denial six months after the divorce was finalized. The client had relied on a Marital Settlement Agreement (MSA) that only guaranteed support for 24 months post-decree. To ensure client empowerment and successful mortgage qualification, which strategy should the Certified Divorce Lending Professional (CDLP) have implemented during the pre-decree phase?
Correct
Correct: To empower the client and ensure mortgage eligibility, the CDLP must educate the client on the three-year rule. Most conventional mortgage guidelines, such as those from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, require that alimony or child support income must be documented to continue for at least three years from the date of the mortgage application to be considered qualifying income. By reviewing the draft MSA and collaborating with legal counsel, the CDLP helps the client secure a settlement that supports their long-term housing goals.
Incorrect: Utilizing a portfolio lender is a reactive measure that may result in less favorable terms and does not address the core failure of educating the client during the settlement phase. Providing a standard disclosure form is too generic and fails to address the specific legal requirements of divorce-related income. Suggesting the client wait until the divorce is finalized is a common misconception that often leads to the discovery of eligibility issues when it is too late to modify the legal settlement.
Takeaway: Proactive education on income continuity requirements during the settlement negotiation phase is essential for empowering divorcing clients to achieve post-divorce homeownership.
Incorrect
Correct: To empower the client and ensure mortgage eligibility, the CDLP must educate the client on the three-year rule. Most conventional mortgage guidelines, such as those from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, require that alimony or child support income must be documented to continue for at least three years from the date of the mortgage application to be considered qualifying income. By reviewing the draft MSA and collaborating with legal counsel, the CDLP helps the client secure a settlement that supports their long-term housing goals.
Incorrect: Utilizing a portfolio lender is a reactive measure that may result in less favorable terms and does not address the core failure of educating the client during the settlement phase. Providing a standard disclosure form is too generic and fails to address the specific legal requirements of divorce-related income. Suggesting the client wait until the divorce is finalized is a common misconception that often leads to the discovery of eligibility issues when it is too late to modify the legal settlement.
Takeaway: Proactive education on income continuity requirements during the settlement negotiation phase is essential for empowering divorcing clients to achieve post-divorce homeownership.