Bank of America has announced that it will no longer accept reverse mortgage applications containing a broker advisor agreement in response to the new law called the National Housing Act (HR 3221). I suspect that other reverse mortgage lenders are likely to interpret the new law in the same way and follow suit. This means that non-FHA approved brokers will no longer be able to receive the common 25% "application assistance fee" (read: referral fee) on the FHA reverse mortgage.
The good news is that this same bill will increase the FHA 203(B) (HECM reverse mortgage) lending limit. This means that senior homeowners, whose homes are currently worth more than the lending limit for their area, will likely see an increase in the amount of money available to them under the FHA HECM reverse mortgage. The specific increases for each county are still under review with HUD.
