CFPB Updates Mortgage Servicing Exam Procedures


On January 18, 2023, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) released an updated version of its Mortgage Servicing Examination Manual. As the CFPB described in a corresponding blog post, the manual outlines “the types of information that CFPB examiners gather to evaluate mortgage servicers’ policies and procedures; assess whether servicers are complying with applicable laws; and identify risks to consumers related to mortgage servicing.” Therefore, it is an important tool for servicers’ compliance professionals, in-house counsel, and internal examination teams to ensure they are meeting the CFPB’s expectations and avoiding potential scrutiny.

The last time the CFPB updated the mortgage servicing examination procedures was in 2016, so this update included many developments since that time. For the most part, though, the updates to the mortgage servicing manual incorporate issues and findings that have already been publicized by the CFPB. For example, the Fall 2022 Supervisory Highlights report outlined a potential issue whereby servicer personnel verbally conveyed to a borrower that a certain payment amount would be required to accept a loss mitigation option while written correspondence contained a different required payment amount. The last Supervisory Highlights also addressed issues the CFPB had observed with phone payment fees and CARES Act forbearances. Those issues are now directly addressed in the new manual and presumably will be tested across the board going forward.

Below is an outline of the changes and updates made by the CFPB in this version of the manual:

General Observations

Module 1 – Servicing and Loan Ownership Transfers

Module 2 – Payment Processing, Account Maintenance and Optional Products

Module 4 – Maintenance of Escrow Accounts and Insurance Products

Module 8 – Loss Mitigation, Early Intervention, and Continuity of Contact

Module 9 – Foreclosures

Examiners will determine whether foreclosures were initiated when the borrower was told foreclosures would not be initiated or continued. Examiners will also consider whether servicers tell consumers that foreclosure will begin before the “servicer actually intends to initiate foreclosure.” Also, examiners will determine if servicers began foreclosure actions when they knew or should have known that the prior servicer waived the charges that caused the default.


© 2025 Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP
National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 33