MISMO white paper details path to standardize mortgage fee descriptions

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The Mortgage Industry Standards Maintenance Organization (MISMO) on Tuesday announced the publication of a new white paper, “Fee Standardization in the Mortgage Industry,” outlining how its consumer-facing charge and fee guide can improve consistency and reduce costs tied to mortgage fee disclosures.

Released in September 2025, the guide replaces inconsistent free-text fee descriptions with a standardized library of about 200 fee types and definitions aligned with the MISMO Reference Model. The organization said the framework is intended to support clearer, more comparable disclosures for borrowers and more efficient fee transmission throughout the mortgage sales and servicing process.

“Fee naming has been a longstanding source of friction and cost across the mortgage lifecycle,” Brian Vieaux, president of MISMO, said in a statement. “By standardizing how consumer-facing fees are defined and exchanged, MISMO is helping the industry reduce rework, improve transparency, and deliver clearer, more consistent outcomes for borrowers.”

MISMO said fee-related errors have remained a persistent operational challenge since the implementation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure (TRID) rule in 2013. The rule replaced HUD-1 line items with fee descriptions on loan estimates and closing disclosures.

Industry studies cited by MISMO estimate fee-related cures affect more than 30% of loans and cost lenders about $1,200 per loan because of redisclosures, rework and borrower reimbursements.

The white paper was developed by MISMO’s Fee Modernization Development Work Group. It focuses on the need for uniform fee naming and standardized data structures across the mortgage ecosystem. The group included representatives from lenders, title and settlement companies, investors and technology firms. It is co-chaired by Elizabeth Bowser of Fannie Mae and Suzanne Garwood of JPMorgan Chase.

In the paper, MISMO said inconsistent fee naming continues to create confusion for consumers and inefficiencies for lenders, investors and settlement providers. The organization said standardization efforts must extend beyond consumer-facing disclosures to the underlying loan data transmitted between systems.

According to the paper, a fee may appear correctly labeled on a closing disclosure while still being categorized inconsistently in the underlying loan file, creating problems for investors, quality control systems and secondary market participants.

MISMO said broader adoption of standardized fee structures could reduce manual reconciliation work, improve interoperability across mortgage platforms and strengthen data quality as the industry relies more heavily on automated data exchanges.

The Consumer Facing Charge and Fee Guide has achieved MISMO’s “Candidate Recommendation” status, indicating the framework has reached broad industry consensus and is ready for implementation, according to the organization.

MISMO is encouraging lenders, investors, title and settlement companies, and technology providers to review the white paper and guide as they plan system and operational updates.

Sarah Wolak reported and wrote this article with drafting assistance from HousingWire Automation, an editorial tool that helps transform announcements and industry data into HousingWire-style news coverage.

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