A payoff letter is a document that provides detailed instructions on how to pay off a loan.
If you have the funds to pay off an installment loan early, request a payoff letter from your lender. It tells you the amount due (including interest charges up to a specific date), where to send the money, how to pay, and any additional charges due. Payoff letters help you avoid surprises by providing all the information you need in one place.
When you want to pay off a loan all at once, it's challenging to predict exactly how much you need to pay.
Interest charges get added to your loan balance every day (or every month), so the amount you owe changes constantly. If you just try to write a check using the loan balance shown on your last statement, there’s a chance you’ll fail to pay everything you owe. The result will be frustrating; you’ll need to make phone calls, send additional payments, and wait longer than you expected to eliminate your debt.
To prevent problems, you can request a payoff letter and your lender will provide an official document with instructions on how to completely pay off the loan in one transaction.
Payoff letters generally supply the following information:
To get a payoff letter, ask your lender for an official payoff statement. Call or write to customer service or make the request online. While logged into your account, look for options to request or calculate a payoff amount, and provide details such as your desired payoff date.
You only need to request a payoff letter if you’re paying off debt yourself. If you’re refinancing or selling your home, your new lender or a title company will most likely make the payoff letter request on your behalf.
You may run into fees when you pay off a loan early. They may include:
Spend a few minutes reading the fine print in your loan agreement or talking with customer service. Make sure you understand what it will cost to pay off the loan and that you send enough to close the account on your first try.
You can also request verbal payoff quotes from your lender. You won’t have an official and legally binding document, but you’ll have a rough idea of how much money you need on hand to pay off your loan. You can even move forward with payment based on a verbal quote, but if you got bad information, you won’t have any recourse.
Using a verbal quote is risky, but if you’re not worried about how long it takes to sort things out—and you can wait around while money gets shuffled and accounts get adjusted—a verbal payoff amount helps you get the ball rolling.
Another type of payoff letter is a letter you get after you've successfully paid off a loan. This letter informs you the debt has been satisfied and it might help if you need to prove the loan no longer exists.
For example, if you’re selling a car you recently owed money on, your buyer might be reluctant to move forward if you don’t have a clear title. It can take lenders a while to remove liens and send titles, so this type of letter might keep things moving.
A payoff letter can also come in handy if you’ve got errors in your credit report. If a credit bureau is incorrectly reporting a loan as open that you’ve paid off, they’ll need documentation to remove that error. A letter from the lender helps you get errors removed.
It's the same as a payoff letter, but it can be used when you're paying off a loan that involves collateral, such as a home or a car. In the letter, you are asking the lender not only to acknowledge that you've paid off the debt, but also to release the collateral, which could be a car title or deed to your home.
In most cases, a creditor has seven business days to send a payoff letter after it has been requested.
A 10-day payoff letter is a letter that is used when you are getting a new loan that will include an existing loan being paid off. For instance, if you are refinancing your car with a new lender, your new lender would send your existing lender a letter asking for the payoff amount on your loan plus 10 days' worth of interest. This would allow time for the new lender to payoff the old one.
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