[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 12, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 12CFR226.36]

[Page 299-500]
 
                       TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
 
                   CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
 
PART 226_TRUTH IN LENDING (REGULATION Z)--Table of Contents
 
                   Subpart F_Electronic Communication
 
Sec.  226.36  Requirements for electronic communication.


    (a) Definition. ``Electronic communication'' means a message 
transmitted electronically between a creditor and a consumer in a format 
that allows visual text to be displayed on equipment, for example, a 
personal computer monitor.
    (b) General rule. In accordance with the Electronic Signatures in 
Global and National Commerce Act (the E-Sign Act) (15 U.S.C. 7001 et 
seq.) and the rules of this part, a creditor may provide by electronic 
communication any disclosure required by this part to be in writing.
    (c) When consent is required. Under the E-Sign Act, a creditor is 
required to obtain a consumer's affirmative consent when providing 
disclosures related to a transaction. For purposes of this requirement, 
the disclosures required under Sec. Sec.  226.5a, 226.5b(d) and 
226.5b(e), 226.16, 226.17(g)(1) through (5), 226.19(b) and 226.24 are 
deemed not to be related to a transaction.
    (d) Address or location to receive electronic communication. A 
creditor that uses electronic communication to provide disclosures 
required by this part shall:
    (1) Send the disclosure to the consumer's electronic address; or
    (2) Make the disclosure available at another location such as an 
Internet web site; and
    (i) Alert the consumer of the disclosure's availability by sending a 
notice to the consumer's electronic address (or to a postal address, at 
the creditor's option). The notice shall identify the account involved 
and the address of the Internet web site or other location where the 
disclosure is available; and
    (ii) Make the disclosure available for at least 90 days from the 
date the disclosure first becomes available or from the date of the 
notice alerting the consumer of the disclosure, whichever comes later.
    (3) Exceptions. A creditor need not comply with paragraphs (d)(2)(i) 
and (ii) of this section for the disclosures required under Sec. Sec.  
226.5a, 226.5b(d) and 226.5b(e), 226.16, 226.17(g)(1) through (5), 
226.19(b) and 226.24.
    (e) Redelivery. When a disclosure provided by electronic 
communication is returned to a creditor undelivered, the creditor shall 
take reasonable steps to attempt redelivery using information in its 
files.

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    (f) Electronic signatures. An electronic signature as defined under 
the E-Sign satisfies any requirement under this part for a consumer's 
signature or initials.

[Reg. Z, 66 FR 17339, Mar. 30, 2001]

              Appendix A to Part 226--Effect on State Laws

                        Request for Determination

    A request for a determination that a State law is inconsistent or 
that a State law is substantially the same as the Act and regulation 
shall be in writing and addressed to the Secretary, Board of Governors 
of the Federal Reserve System, Washington, DC 20551. The request shall 
be made pursuant to the procedures herein and the Board's Rules of 
Procedure (12 CFR Part 262).

                          Supporting Documents

    A request for a determination shall include the following items:
    (1) The text of the State statute, regulation, or other document 
that is the subject of the request.
    (2) Any other statute, regulation, or judicial or administrative 
opinion that implements, interprets, or applies the relevant provision.
    (3) A comparison of the State law with the corresponding provision 
of the Federal law, including a full discussion of the basis for the 
requesting party's belief that the State provision is either 
inconsistent or substantially the same.
    (4) Any other information that the requesting party believes may 
assist the Board in its determination.

                     Public Notice of Determination

    Notice that the Board intends to make a determination (either on 
request or on its own motion) will be published in the Federal Register, 
with an opportunity for public comment, unless the Board finds that 
notice and opportunity for comment would be impracticable, unnecessary, 
or contrary to the public interest and publishes its reasons for such 
decision.
    Subject to the Board's Rules Regarding Availability of Information 
(12 CFR Part 261), all requests made, including any documents and other 
material submitted in support of the requests, will be made available 
for public inspection and copying.

                       Notice After Determination

    Notice of a final determination will be published in the Federal 
Register, and the Board will furnish a copy of such notice to the party 
who made the request and to the appropriate State official.

                        Reversal of Determination

    The Board reserves the right to reverse a determination for any 
reason bearing on the coverage or effect of State or Federal law.
    Notice of reversal of a determination will be published in the 
Federal Register and a copy furnished to the appropriate State official.

[Reg. Z, 46 FR 20892, Apr. 7, 1981; 46 FR 29246, June 1, 1981]

                Appendix B to Part 226--State Exemptions

                               Application

    Any State may apply to the Board for a determination that a class of 
transactions subject to State law is exempt from the requirements of the 
Act and this regulation. An application shall be in writing and 
addressed to the Secretary, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
System, Washington, DC 20551, and shall be signed by the appropriate 
State official. The application shall be made pursuant to the procedures 
herein and the Board's Rules of Procedure (12 CFR Part 262).

                          Supporting Documents

    An application shall be accompanied by:
    (1) The text of the State statute or regulation that is the subject 
of the application, and any other statute, regulation, or judicial or 
administrative opinion that implements, interprets, or applies it.
    (2) A comparison of the State law with the corresponding provisions 
of the Federal law.
    (3) The text of the State statute or regulation that provides for 
civil and criminal liability and administrative enforcement of the State 
law.
    (4) A statement of the provisions for enforcement, including an 
identification of the State office that administers the relevant law, 
information on the funding and the number and qualifications of 
personnel engaged in enforcement, and a description of the enforcement 
procedures to be followed, including information on examination 
procedures, practices, and policies. If an exemption application extends 
to federally chartered institutions, the applicant must furnish evidence 
that arrangements have been made with the appropriate Federal agencies 
to ensure adequate enforcement of State law in regard to such creditors.
    (5) A statement of reasons to support the applicant's claim that an 
exemption should be granted.

                      Public Notice of Application

    Notice of an application will be published, with an opportunity for 
public comment, in the Federal Register, unless the Board finds that 
notice and opportunity for comment would be impracticable, unnecessary,

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or contrary to the public interest and publishes its reasons for such 
decision.
    Subject to the Board's Rules Regarding Availability of Information 
(12 CFR Part 261), all applications made, including any documents and 
other material submitted in support of the applications, will be made 
available for public inspection and copying. A copy of the application 
also will be made available at the Federal Reserve Bank of each district 
in which the applicant is situated.

                         Favorable Determination

    If the Board determines on the basis of the information before it 
that an exemption should be granted, notice of the exemption will be 
published in the Federal Register, and a copy furnished to the applicant 
and to each Federal official responsible for administrative enforcement.
    The appropriate State official shall inform the Board within 30 days 
of any change in its relevant law or regulations. The official shall 
file with the Board such periodic reports as the Board may require.
    The Board will inform the appropriate State official of any 
subsequent amendments to the Federal law, regulation, interpretations, 
or enforcement policies that might require an amendment to State law, 
regulation, interpretations, or enforcement procedures.

                          Adverse Determination

    If the Board makes an initial determination that an exemption should 
not be granted, the Board will afford the applicant a reasonable 
opportunity to demonstrate further that an exemption is proper. If the 
Board ultimately finds that an exemption should not be granted, notice 
of an adverse determination will be published in the Federal Register 
and a copy furnished to the applicant.

                         Revocation of Exemption

    The Board reserves the right to revoke an exemption if at any time 
it determines that the standards required for an exemption are not met.
    Before taking such action, the Board will notify the appropriate 
State official of its intent, and will afford the official such 
opportunity as it deems appropriate in the circumstances to demonstrate 
that revocation is improper. If the Board ultimately finds that 
revocation is proper, notice of the Board's intention to revoke such 
exemption will be published in the Federal Register with a reasonable 
period of time for interested persons to comment.
    Notice of revocation of an exemption will be published in the 
Federal Register. A copy of such notice will be furnished to the 
appropriate State official and to the Federal officials responsible for 
enforcement. Upon revocation of an exemption, creditors in that State 
shall then be subject to the requirements of the Federal law.

        Appendix C to Part 226--Issuance of Staff Interpretations

                     Official Staff Interpretations

    Officials in the Board's Division of Consumer and Community Affairs 
are authorized to issue official staff interpretations of this 
regulation. These interpretations provide the protection afforded under 
section 130(f) of the Act. Except in unusual circumstances, such 
interpretations will not be issued separately but will be incorporated 
in an official commentary to the regulation which will be amended 
periodically.

         Requests for Issuance of Official Staff Interpretations

    A request for an official staff interpretation shall be in writing 
and addressed to the Director, Division of Consumer and Community 
Affairs, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Washington, 
DC 20551. The request shall contain a complete statement of all relevant 
facts concerning the issue, including copies of all pertinent documents.

                        Scope of Interpretations

    No staff interpretations will be issued approving creditors' forms, 
statements, or calculation tools or methods. This restriction does not 
apply to forms, statements, tools, or methods whose use is required or 
sanctioned by a government agency.

       Appendix D to Part 226--Multiple Advance Construction Loans

    Section 226.17(c)(6) permits creditors to treat multiple advance 
loans to finance construction of a dwelling that may be permanently 
financed by the same creditor either as a single transaction or as more 
than one transaction. If the actual schedule of advances is not known, 
the following methods may be used to estimate the interest portion of 
the finance charge and the annual percentage rate and to make 
disclosures. If the creditor chooses to disclose the construction phase 
separately, whether interest is payable periodically or at the end of 
construction, part I may be used. If the creditor chooses to disclose 
the construction and the permanent financing as one transaction, part II 
may be used.

            Part I--Construction Period Disclosed Separately

    A. If interest is payable only on the amount actually advanced for 
the time it is outstanding:

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    1. Estimated interest--Assume that one-half of the commitment amount 
is outstanding at the contract interest rate for the entire construction 
period.
    2. Estimated annual percentage rate--Assume a single payment loan 
that matures at the end of the construction period. The finance charge 
is the sum of the estimated interest and any prepaid finance charge. The 
amount financed for computation purposes is determined by subtracting 
any prepaid finance charge from one-half of the commitment amount.
    3. Repayment schedule--The number and amounts of any interest 
payments may be omitted in disclosing the payment schedule under Sec.  
226.18(g). The fact that interest payments are required and the timing 
of such payments shall be disclosed.
    4. Amount financed--The amount financed for disclosure purposes is 
the entire commitment amount less any prepaid finance charge.
    B. If interest is payable on the entire commitment amount without 
regard to the dates or amounts of actual disbursement:
    1. Estimated interest--Assume that the entire commitment amount is 
outstanding at the contract interest rate for the entire construction 
period.
    2. Estimated annual percentage rate--Assume a single payment loan 
that matures at the end of the construction period. The finance charge 
is the sum of the estimated interest and any prepaid finance charge. The 
amount financed for computation purposes is determined by subtracting 
any prepaid finance charge from one-half of the commitment amount.
    3. Repayment schedule--Interest payments shall be disclosed in 
making the repayment schedule disclosure under Sec.  226.18(g).

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     Appendix E to Part 226--Rules For Card Issuers That Bill on a 
                    Transaction-By-Transaction Basis

    The following provisions of Subpart B apply if credit cards are 
issued and (1) the card issuer and the seller are the same or related 
persons; (2) no finance charge is imposed; (3) consumers are billed in 
full for each use of the card on a transaction-by-transaction basis, by 
means of an invoice or other statement reflecting each use of the card; 
and (4) no cumulative account is maintained which reflects the 
transactions by each consumer during a period of time, such as a month:
    Section 226.6(d), and, as applicable, Sec.  226.6(b) and (c). The 
disclosure required by Sec.  226.6(b) shall be limited to those charges 
that are or may be imposed as a result of the deferral of payment by use 
of the card, such as late payment or delinquency charges.
    Section 226.7(b) and Sec.  226.7(k). Creditors may comply by placing 
the required disclosures on the invoice or statement sent to the 
consumer for each transaction.
    Section 226.9(a). Creditors may comply by mailing or delivering the 
statement required by Sec.  226.6(d) (See appendix G-3) to each consumer 
receiving a transaction invoice during a one-month period chosen by the 
card issuer or by sending either the statement prescribed by Sec.  
226.6(d) or an alternative billing error rights statement substantially 
similar

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to that in appendix G-4, with each invoice sent to a consumer.
    Section 226.9(c).
    Section 226.10.
    Section 226.11. This section applies when a card issuer receives a 
payment or other credit that exceeds by more than $1 the amount due, as 
shown on the transaction invoice. The requirement to credit amounts to 
an account may be complied with by other reasonable means, such as by a 
credit memorandum. Since no periodic statement is provided, a notice of 
the credit balance shall be sent to the consumer within a reasonable 
period of time following its occurrence unless a refund of the credit 
balance is mailed or delivered to the consumer within 7 business days of 
its receipt by the card issuer.
    Section 226.12 including Sec.  226.12(c) and (d), as applicable. 
Section 226.12(e) is inapplicable.
    Section 226.13, as applicable. All references to periodic statement 
shall be read to indicate the invoice or other statement for the 
relevant transaction. All actions with regard to correcting and 
adjusting a consumer's account may be taken by issuing a refund or a new 
invoice, or by other appropriate means consistent with the purposes of 
the section.
    Section 226.15, as applicable.

[Reg. Z, 46 FR 20892, Apr. 7, 1981, as amended at 46 FR 60190, Dec. 9, 
1981]

Appendix F to Part 226--Annual Percentage Rate Computations for Certain 
                          Open-End Credit Plans

    In determining the denominator of the fraction under Sec.  
226.14(c)(3), no amount will be used more than once when adding the sum 
of the balances \1\ subject to periodic rates to the sum of the amounts 
subject to specific transaction charges. In every case, the full amount 
of transactions subject to specific transaction charges shall be 
included in the denominator. Other balances or parts of balances shall 
be included according to the manner of determining the balance subject 
to a periodic rate, as illustrated in the following examples of accounts 
on monthly billing cycles:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ Where a portion of the finance charge is determined by 
application of one or more daily periodic rates, the phrase sum of the 
balances shall also mean the average of daily balances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    1. Previous balance--none.
    A specific transaction of $100 occurs on the first day of the 
billing cycle. The average daily balance is $100. A specific transaction 
charge of 3% is applicable to the specific transaction. The periodic 
rate is 1\1/2\% applicable to the average daily balance. The numerator 
is the amount of the finance charge, which is $4.50. The denominator is 
the amount of the transaction (which is $100), plus the amount by which 
the balance subject to the periodic rate exceeds the amount of the 
specific transactions (such excess in this case is 0), totaling $100.
    The annual percentage rate is the quotient (which is 4\1/2\%) 
multiplied by 12 (the number of months in a year), i.e., 54%.
    2. Previous balance--$100.
    A specific transaction of $100 occurs at the midpoint of the billing 
cycle. The average daily balance is $150. A specific transaction charge 
of 3% is applicable to the specific transaction. The periodic rate is 
1\1/2\% applicable to the average daily balance. The numerator is the 
amount of the finance charge which is $5.25. The denominator is the 
amount of the transaction (which is $100), plus the amount by which the 
balance subject to the periodic rate exceeds the amount of the specific 
transaction (such excess in this case is $50), totaling $150. As 
explained in example 1, the annual percentage rate is 3\1/2\% x 12 = 
42%.
    3. If, in example 2, the periodic rate applies only to the previous 
balance, the numerator is $4.50 and the denominator is $200 (the amount 
of the transaction, $100, plus the balance subject only to the periodic 
rate, the $100 previous balance). As explained in example 1, the annual 
percentage rate is 2\1/4\% x 12 = 27%.
    4. If, in example 2, the periodic rate applies only to an adjusted 
balance (previous balance less payments and credits) and the consumer 
made a payment of $50 at the midpoint of the billing cycle, the 
numerator is $3.75 and the denominator is $150 (the amount of the 
transaction, $100, plus the balance subject to the periodic rate, the 
$50 adjusted balance). As explained in example 1, the annual percentage 
rate is 2\1/2\% x 12 = 30%.
    5. Previous balance--$100.
    A specific transaction (check) of $100 occurs at the midpoint of the 
billing cycle. The average daily balance is $150. The specific 
transaction charge is $.25 per check. The periodic rate is 1\1/2\% 
applied to the average daily balance. The numerator is the amount of the 
finance charge, which is $2.50 and includes the $.25 check charge and 
the $2.25 resulting from the application of the periodic rate. The 
denominator is the full amount of the specific transaction (which is 
$100) plus the amount by which the average daily balance exceeds the 
amount of the specific transaction (which in this case is $50), totaling 
$150. As explained in example 1, the annual percentage rate would be 
1\2/3\% x 12 = 20%.
    6. Previous balance--none.
    A specific transaction of $100 occurs at the midpoint of the billing 
cycle. The average daily balance is $50. The specific transaction charge 
is 3% of the transaction amount or

[[Page 307]]

$3.00. The periodic rate is 1\1/2\% per month applied to the average 
daily balance. The numerator is the amount of the finance charge, which 
is $3.75, including the $3.00 transaction charge and $.75 resulting from 
application of the periodic rate. The denominator is the full amount of 
the specific transaction ($100) plus the amount by which the balance 
subject to the periodic rate exceeds the amount of the transaction ($0). 
Where the specific transaction amount exceeds the balance subject to the 
periodic rate, the resulting number is considered to be zero rather than 
a negative number ($50-$100=-$50). The denominator, in this case, is 
$100. As explained in example 1, the annual percentage rate is 3\3/4\% x 
12 = 45%.

        Appendix G to Part 226--Open-End Model Forms and Clauses

G-1 Balance-Computation Methods Model Clauses (Sec. Sec.  226.6 and 
          226.7)
G-2 Liability for Unauthorized Use Model Clause (Sec.  226.12)
G-3 Long-Form Billing-Error Rights Model Form (Sec. Sec.  226.6 and 
          226.9)
G-4 Alternative Billing-Error Rights Model Form (Sec.  226.9)
G-5 Rescission Model Form (When Opening an Account) (Sec.  226.15)
G-6 Rescission Model Form (For Each Transaction) (Sec.  226.15)
G-7 Rescission Model Form (When Increasing the Credit Limit) (Sec.  
          226.15)
G-8 Rescission Model Form (When Adding a Security Interest) (Sec.  
          226.15)
G-9 Rescission Model Form (When Increasing the Security) (Sec.  226.15)
G-10(A) Applications and Solicitations Model Forms (Credit Cards) (Sec.  
          226.5a(b))
G-10(B) Applications and Solicitations Sample (Credit Card) (Sec.  
          226.5a(b))
G-10(C) Applications and Solicitations Model Form (Charge Cards) (Sec.  
          226.5a(b))
G-11 Applications and Solicitations Made Available to General Public 
          Model Clauses (Sec.  226.5a(e))
G-12 Charge Card Model Clause (When Access to Plan Offered by Another) 
          (Sec.  226.5a(f))
G-13(A) Change in Insurance Provider Model Form (Combined Notice) (Sec.  
          226.9(f))
G-13(B) Change in Insurance Provider Model Form (Sec.  226.9(f)(2))
G-14A Home Equity Sample
G-14B Home Equity Sample
G-15 Home Equity Model Clauses

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[Reg. Z, 46 FR 20892, Apr. 7, 1981, as amended at 46 FR 60191, Dec. 9, 
1981; 54 FR 13868, Apr. 6, 1989; 54 FR 24689, June 9, 1989; 55 FR 38312, 
Sept. 18, 1990; 65 FR 58908, Oct. 3, 2000]

       Appendix H to Part 226--Closed-End Model Forms and Clauses

H-1--Credit Sale Model Form (Sec.  226.18)
H-2--Loan Model Form (Sec.  226.18)
H-3--Amount Financed Itemization Model Form (Sec.  226.18(c))
H-4(A)--Variable-Rate Model Clauses (Sec.  226.18(f)(1))
H-4(B)--Variable-Rate Model Clauses (Sec.  226.18(f)(2))
H-4(C)--Variable-Rate Model Clauses (Sec.  226.19(b))
H-4(D)--Variable-Rate Model Clauses (Sec.  226.20(c))
H-5--Demand Feature Model Clauses (Sec.  226.18(I))
H-6--Assumption Policy Model Clause (Sec.  226.18(q))
H-7--Required Deposit Model Clause (Sec.  226.18(r))
H-8--Rescission Model Form (General) (Sec.  226.23)
H-9--Rescission Model Form (Refinancing With Original Creditor) (Sec.  
          226.23)
H-10--Credit Sale Sample
H-11--Installment Loan Sample
H-12--Refinancing Sample
H-13--Mortgage with Demand Feature Sample
H-14--Variable-Rate Mortgage Sample (Sec.  226.19(b))
H-15--Graduated Payment Mortgage Sample
H-16--Mortgage Sample (Sec.  226.32)

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                   H-4(C)--Variable-Rate Model Clauses

    This disclosure describes the features of the adjustable-rate 
mortgage (ARM) program you are considering. Information on other ARM 
programs is available upon request.

            How Your Interest Rate and Payment Are Determined

    [sbull] Your interest rate will be based on [an index plus a margin] 
[a formula].
    [sbull] Your payment will be based on the interest rate, loan 
balance, and loan term.
--[The interest rate will be based on (identification of index) plus our 
margin. Ask for our current interest rate and margin.]
--[The interest rate will be based on (identification of formula). Ask 
us for our current interest rate.]
--Information about the index [formula for rate adjustments] is 
published [can be found] ----------------.
--[The initial interest rate is not based on the (index) (formula) used 
to make later adjustments. Ask us for the amount of current interest 
rate discounts.]

                    How Your Interest Rate Can Change

    [sbull] Your interest rate can change (frequency).
    [sbull] [Your interest rate cannot increase or decrease more than --
---- percentage points at each adjustment.]
    [sbull] Your interest rate cannot increase [or decrease] more than 
------ percentage points over the term of the loan.

                       How Your Payment Can Change

    [sbull] Your payment can change (frequency) based on changes in the 
interest rate.
    [sbull] [Your payment cannot increase more than (amount or 
percentage) at each adjustment.]
    [sbull] You will be notified in writing -------- days before the due 
date of a payment at a new level. This notice will contain information 
about your interest rates, payment amount, and loan balance.
    [sbull] [You will be notified once each year during which interest 
rate adjustments, but no payment adjustments, have been made to your 
loan. This notice will contain information about your interest rates, 
payment amount, and loan balance.]
    [sbull] [For example, on a $10,000 [term] loan with an initial 
interest rate of -------- [(the rate shown in the interest rate column 
below for the year 19 --------)] [(in effect (month) (year)], the 
maximum amount that the interest rate can rise under this program is --
------ percentage points, to --------%, and the monthly payment can rise 
from a first-year payment of $-------- to a maximum of $-------- in the 
---------- year. To see what your payments would be, divide your 
mortgage amount by $10,000; then multiply the monthly payment by that 
amount. (For example, the monthly payment for a mortgage amount of 
$60,000 would be: $60,000 / $10,000 = 6; 6 x -------- = $-------- per 
month.)]

                                [Example

    The example below shows how your payments would have changed under 
this ARM program based on actual changes in the index from 1982 to 1996. 
This does not necessarily indicate how your index will change in the 
future.
    The example is based on the following assumptions:




Amount...................................  $10,000
Term.....................................  ----------
Change date..............................  ----------
Payment adjustment.......................  (frequency)
Interest adjustment......................  (frequency)
[Margin] *...............................  --------
Caps -------- [periodic interest rate
 cap]
 -------- [lifetime interest rate cap
 -------- [payment cap]
[Interest rate carryover]
[Negative amortization]
[Interest rate discount] **
Index.......(identification of index or
 formula)

* This is a margin we have used recently, your margin may be different.
** This is the amount of a discount we have provided recently; your loan
  may be discounted by a different amount.]


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Margin
                   Year                      Index  (%)    (Percentage    Interest       Monthly      Remaining
                                                             points)      Rate  (%)   Payment  ($)  Balance  ($)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1982......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1983......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1984......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1985......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1986......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1987......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1988......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1989......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1990......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1991......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1992......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............

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1993......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1994......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1995......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
1996......................................  ............  ............  ............  ............  ............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: To see what your payments would have been during that period, divide your mortgage amount by $10,000; then
  multiply the monthly payment by that amount. (For example, in 1996 the monthly payment for a mortgage amount
  of $60,000 taken out in 1982 would be: $60,000/$10,000=6; 6x--------=$-------- per month.)

  [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.029
  

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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.030


[[Page 333]]

     H-9--Rescission Model Form (Refinancing with Original Creditor)

                        NOTICE OF RIGHT TO CANCEL

                          Your Right to Cancel

    You are entering into a new transaction to increase the amount of 
credit previously provided to you. Your home is the security for this 
new transaction. You have a legal right under federal law to cancel this 
new transaction, without cost, within three business days from whichever 
of the following events occurs last:
    (1) the date of this new transaction, which is ----------------; or
    (2) the date you received your new Truth in Lending disclosures; or
    (3) the date you received this notice of your right to cancel.
    If you cancel this new transaction, it will not affect any amount 
that you presently owe. Your home is the security for that amount. 
Within 20 calendar days after we receive your notice of cancellation of 
this new transaction, we must take the steps necessary to reflect the 
fact that your home does not secure the increase of credit. We must also 
return any money you have given to us or anyone else in connection with 
this new transaction.
    You may keep any money we have given you in this new transaction 
until we have done the things mentioned above, but you must then offer 
to return the money at the address below.
    If we do not take possession of the money within 20 calendar days of 
your offer, you may keep it without further obligation.

                              How To Cancel

    If you decide to cancel this new transaction, you may do so by 
notifying us in writing, at

________________________________________________________________________
(Creditor's name and business address).
    You may use any written statement that is signed and dated by you 
and states your intention to cancel, or you may use this notice by 
dating and signing below. Keep one copy of this notice because it 
contains important information about your rights.
    If you cancel by mail or telegram, you must send the notice no later 
than midnight of

________________________________________________________________________

(Date)__________________________________________________________________

(or midnight of the third business day following the latest of the three 
events listed above).
    If you send or deliver your written notice to cancel some other way, 
it must be delivered to the above address no later than that time.

I WISH TO CANCEL

________________________________________________________________________

Consumer's Signature
________________________________________________________________________

Date

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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.033


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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.034

                   H-14--Variable-Rate Mortgage Sample

    This disclosure describes the features of the adjustable-rate 
mortgage (ARM) program you are considering. Information on other ARM 
programs is available upon request.

            How Your Interest Rate and Payment Are Determined

    [sbull] Your interest rate will be based on an index rate plus a 
margin.
    [sbull] Your payment will be based on the interest rate, loan 
balance, and loan term.

--The interest rate will be based on the weekly average yield on United 
States Treasury securities adjusted to a constant maturity of 1 year 
(your index), plus our margin. Ask us for our current interest rate and 
margin.
--Information about the index rate is published weekly in the Wall 
Street Journal.
    [sbull] Your interest rate will equal the index rate plus our margin 
unless your interest rate ``caps'' limit the amount of change in the 
interest rate.

                    How Your Interest Rate Can Change

    [sbull] Your interest rate can change yearly.
    [sbull] Your interest rate cannot increase or decrease more than 2 
percentage points per year.
    [sbull] Your interest rate cannot increase or decrease more than 5 
percentage points over the term of the loan.

[[Page 338]]

                   How Your Monthly Payment Can Change

    [sbull] Your monthly payment can increase or decrease substantially 
based on annual changes in the interest rate.
    [sbull] [For example, on a $10,000, 30-year loan with an initial 
interest rate of 12.41 percent in effect in July 1996, the maximum 
amount that the interest rate can rise under this program is 5 
percentage points, to 17.41 percent, and the monthly payment can rise 
from a first-year payment of $106.03 to a maximum of $145.34 in the 
fourth year. To see what your payment is, divide your mortgage amount by 
$10,000; then multiply the monthly payment by that amount. (For example, 
the monthly payment for a mortgage amount of $60,000 would be: $60,000/
$10,000=6; 6x106.03=$636.18 per month.)
    [sbull] You will be notified in writing 25 days before the annual 
payment adjustment may be made. This notice will contain information 
about your interest rates, payment amount and loan balance.]

                                [Example

    The example below shows how your payments would have changed under 
this ARM program based on actual changes in the index from 1982 to 1996. 
This does not necessarily indicate how your index will change in the 
future. The example is based on the following assumptions:

Amount.................................  $10,000
Term...................................  30 years
Payment adjustment.....................  1 year
Interest adjustment....................  1 year
Margin.................................  3 percentage points
Caps-------- 2 percentage points annual interest rate
 -------- 5 percentage points lifetime interest rate
Index-------- Weekly average yield on U.S. Treasury securities adjusted
 to a constant maturity of one year.



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Margin*
   Year  (as of 1st week ending in July)     Index  (%)    (percentage    Interest       Monthly      Remaining
                                                             points)      Rate  (%)   Payment  ($)  Balance  ($)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1982......................................         14.41             3         17.41        145.90      9,989.37
1983......................................          9.78             3       **15.41        129.81      9,969.66
1984......................................         12.17             3         15.17        127.91      9,945.51
1985......................................          7.66             3       **13.17        112.43      9,903.70
1986......................................          6.36             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,848.94
1987......................................          6.71             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,786.98
1988......................................          7.52             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,716.88
1989......................................          7.97             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,637.56
1990......................................          8.06             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,547.83
1991......................................          6.40             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,446.29
1992......................................          3.96             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,331.56
1993......................................          3.42             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,201.61
1994......................................          5.47             3      ***12.41        106.73      9,054.72
1995......................................          5.53             3      ***12.41        106.73      8,888.52
1996......................................          5.82             3      ***12.41        106.73      8,700.37
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*This is a margin we have used recently; your margin may be different.
**This interest rate reflects a 2 percentage point annual interest rate cap.
***This interest rate reflects a 5 percentage point lifetime interest rate cap.
Note: To see what your payments would have been during that period, divide your mortgage amount by $10,000; then
  multiply the monthly payment by that amount. (For example, in 1996 the monthly payment for a mortgage amount
  of $60,000 taken out in 1982 would be: $60,000/$10,000=6; 6x$106.73=$640.38.)

    [sbull] You will be notified in writing 25 days before the annual 
payment adjustment may be made. This notice will contain information 
about your interest rates, payment amount and loan balance.]

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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.037


[[Page 340]]


[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR20DE01.000


[46 FR 20892, Apr. 7, 1981, as amended at 46 FR 29246, June 1, 1981; 52 
FR 52 FR 48671, Dec. 24, 1987; 53 FR 467, Jan. 7, 1988; Reg. Z, 60 FR 
15473, Mar. 24, 1995; 61 FR 49247, Sept. 19, 1996; 62 FR 63444, 63445, 
Dec. 1, 1997; 62 FR 66179, Dec. 17, 1997; Reg. Z, 63 FR 2723, Jan. 16, 
1998; 66 FR 65618, Dec. 20, 2001]

          Appendix I to Part 226--Federal Enforcement Agencies

    The following list indicates which federal agency enforces 
Regulation Z for particular classes of businesses. Any questions 
concerning compliance by a particular business should be directed to the 
appropriate enforcement agency. Terms that are not defined in the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(s)) shall have the meaning 
given to them in the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3101).

[[Page 341]]

  National banks and federal branches and federal agencies of foreign 
                                  banks

    District office of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for 
the district in which the institution is located.

 State member banks, branches and agencies of foreign banks (other than 
   federal branches, federal agencies, and insured state branches of 
  foreign banks), commercial lending companies owned or controlled by 
 foreign banks, and organizations operating under section 25 or 25A of 
                         the Federal Reserve Act

    Federal Reserve Bank serving the district in which the institution 
is located.

  Non-member insured banks and insured state branches of foreign banks

    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Regional director for the 
region in which the institution is located.

  Savings institutions insured under the Savings Association Insurance 
Fund of the FDIC and federally chartered savings banks insured under the 
   Bank Insurance Fund of the FDIC (but not including state-chartered 
          savings banks insured under the Bank Insurance Fund).

    Office of Thrift Supervision Regional Director for the region in 
which the institution is located.

                          Federal Credit Unions

    Regional office of the National Credit Union Administration serving 
the area in which the Federal credit union is located.

                              Air Carriers

    Assistant General Counsel for Aviation Enforcement and Proceedings, 
Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 
20590.

             Creditors Subject to Packers and Stockyards Act

    Nearest Packers and Stockyards Administration area supervisor.

Federal Land Banks, Federal Land Bank Associations, Federal Intermediate 
            Credit Banks and Production Credit Associations.

    Farm Credit Administration, 490 L'Enfant Plaza, SW., Washington, DC 
20578.

    Retail, Department Stores, Consumer Finance Companies, All Other 
Creditors, and All Nonbank Credit Card Issuers (Creditors operating on a 
   local or regional basis should use the address of the FTC Regional 
                     Office in which they operate.)

    Division of Credit Practices, Bureau of Consumer Protection, Federal 
Trade Commission, Washington, DC 20580.

[Reg. Z, 46 FR 20892, Apr. 7, 1981, as amended at 50 FR 8708, Mar. 5, 
1985; 54 FR 53539, Dec. 29, 1989; 56 FR 51322, Oct. 11, 1991; 57 FR 
20400, May 13, 1992]

 Appendix J to Part 226--Annual Percentage Rate Computations for Closed-
                         End Credit Transactions

                            (a) Introduction

    (1) Section 226.22(a) of Regulation Z provides that the annual 
percentage rate for other than open end credit transactions shall be 
determined in accordance with either the actuarial method or the United 
States Rule method. This appendix contains an explanation of the 
actuarial method as well as equations, instructions and examples of how 
this method applies to single advance and multiple advance transactions.
    (2) Under the actuarial method, at the end of each unit-period (or 
fractional unit-period) the unpaid balance of the amount financed is 
increased by the finance charge earned during that period and is 
decreased by the total payment (if any) made at the end of that period. 
The determination of unit-periods and fractional unit-periods shall be 
consistent with the definitions and rules in paragraphs (b) (3), (4) and 
(5) of this section and the general equation in paragraph (b)(8) of this 
section.
    (3) In contrast, under the United States Rule method, at the end of 
each payment period, the unpaid balance of the amount financed is 
increased by the finance charge earned during that payment period and is 
decreased by the payment made at the end of that payment period. If the 
payment is less than the finance charge earned, the adjustment of the 
unpaid balance of the amount financed is postponed until the end of the 
next payment period. If at that time the sum of the two payments is 
still less than the total earned finance charge for the two payment 
periods, the adjustment of the unpaid balance of the amount financed is 
postponed still another payment period, and so forth.

         (b) Instructions and Equations for the Actuarial Method

                            (1) General Rule

    The annual percentage rate shall be the nominal annual percentage 
rate determined

[[Page 342]]

by multiplying the unit-period rate by the number of unit-periods in a 
year.

                       (2) Term of the Transaction

    The term of the transaction begins on the date of its consummation, 
except that if the finance charge or any portion of it is earned 
beginning on a later date, the term begins on the later date. The term 
ends on the date the last payment is due, except that if an advance is 
scheduled after that date, the term ends on the later date. For 
computation purposes, the length of the term shall be equal to the time 
interval between any point in time on the beginning date to the same 
point in time on the ending date.

                    (3) Definitions of Time Intervals

    (i) A period is the interval of time between advances or between 
payments and includes the interval of time between the date the finance 
charge begins to be earned and the date of the first advance thereafter 
or the date of the first payment thereafter, as applicable.
    (ii) A common period is any period that occurs more than once in a 
transaction.
    (iii) A standard interval of time is a day, week, semimonth, month, 
or a multiple of a week or a month up to, but not exceeding, 1 year.
    (iv) All months shall be considered equal. Full months shall be 
measured from any point in time on a given date of a given month to the 
same point in time on the same date of another month. If a series of 
payments (or advances) is scheduled for the last day of each month, 
months shall be measured from the last day of the given month to the 
last day of another month. If payments (or advances) are scheduled for 
the 29th or 30th of each month, the last day of February shall be used 
when applicable.

                             (4) Unit-period

    (i) In all transactions other than a single advance, single payment 
transaction, the unit-period shall be that common period, not to exceed 
1 year, that occurs most frequently in the transaction, except that
    (A) If 2 or more common periods occur with equal frequency, the 
smaller of such common periods shall be the unit-period; or
    (B) If there is no common period in the transaction, the unit-period 
shall be that period which is the average of all periods rounded to the 
nearest whole standard interval of time. If the average is equally near 
2 standard intervals of time, the lower shall be the unit-period.
    (ii) In a single advance, single payment transaction, the unit-
period shall be the term of the transaction, but shall not exceed 1 
year.

            (5) Number of Unit-periods Between 2 Given Dates

    (i) The number of days between 2 dates shall be the number of 24-
hour intervals between any point in time on the first date to the same 
point in time on the second date.
    (ii) If the unit-period is a month, the number of full unit-periods 
between 2 dates shall be the number of months measured back from the 
later date. The remaining fraction of a unit-period shall be the number 
of days measured forward from the earlier date to the beginning of the 
first full unit-period, divided by 30. If the unit-period is a month, 
there are 12 unit-periods per year.
    (iii) If the unit-period is a semimonth or a multiple of a month not 
exceeding 11 months, the number of days between 2 dates shall be 30 
times the number of full months measured back from the later date, plus 
the number of remaining days. The number of full unit-periods and the 
remaining fraction of a unit-period shall be determined by dividing such 
number of days by 15 in the case of a semimonthly unit-period or by the 
appropriate multiple of 30 in the case of a multimonthly unit-period. If 
the unit-period is a semimonth, the number of unit-periods per year 
shall be 24. If the number of unit-periods is a multiple of a month, the 
number of unit-periods per year shall be 12 divided by the number of 
months per unit-period.
    (iv) If the unit-period is a day, a week, or a multiple of a week, 
the number of full unit-periods and the remaining fractions of a unit-
period shall be determined by dividing the number of days between the 2 
given dates by the number of days per unit-period. If the unit-period is 
a day, the number of unit-periods per year shall be 365. If the unit-
period is a week or a multiple of a week, the number of unit-periods per 
year shall be 52 divided by the number of weeks per unit-period.
    (v) If the unit-period is a year, the number of full unit-periods 
between 2 dates shall be the number of full years (each equal to 12 
months) measured back from the later date. The remaining fraction of a 
unit-period shall be
    (A) The remaining number of months divided by 12 if the remaining 
interval is equal to a whole number of months, or
    (B) The remaining number of days divided by 365 if the remaining 
interval is not equal to a whole number of months.
    (vi) In a single advance, single payment transaction in which the 
term is less than a year and is equal to a whole number of months, the 
number of unit-periods in the term shall be 1, and the number of unit-
periods per year shall be 12 divided by the number of months in the term 
or 365 divided by the number of days in the term.
    (vii) In a single advance, single payment transaction in which the 
term is less than a year and is not equal to a whole number of

[[Page 343]]

months, the number of unit-periods in the term shall be 1, and the 
number of unit-periods per year shall be 365 divided by the number of 
days in the term.

           (6) Percentage Rate for a Fraction of a Unit-period

    The percentage rate of finance charge for a fraction (less than 1) 
of a unit-period shall be equal to such fraction multiplied by the 
percentage rate of finance charge per unit-period.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.038


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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.039


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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.043


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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.044


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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.045


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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.046


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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.047


[Reg. Z, 46 FR 20892, Apr. 7, 1981, as amended at 46 FR 29246, June 1, 
1981]

[[Page 353]]

  Appendix K to Part 226--Total Annual Loan Cost Rate Computations for 
                      Reverse Mortgage Transactions

    (a) Introduction. Creditors are required to disclose a series of 
total annual loan cost rates for each reverse mortgage transaction. This 
appendix contains the equations creditors must use in computing the 
total annual loan cost rate for various transactions, as well as 
instructions, explanations, and examples for various transactions. This 
appendix is modeled after Appendix J of this part (Annual Percentage 
Rates Computations for Closed-end Credit Transactions); creditors should 
consult Appendix J of this part for additional guidance in using the 
formulas for reverse mortgages.
    (b) Instructions and equations for the total annual loan cost rate.
    (1) General rule. The total annual loan cost rate shall be the 
nominal total annual loan cost rate determined by multiplying the unit-
period rate by the number of unit-periods in a year.
    (2) Term of the transaction. For purposes of total annual loan cost 
disclosures, the term of a reverse mortgage transaction is assumed to 
begin on the first of the month in which consummation is expected to 
occur. If a loan cost or any portion of a loan cost is initially 
incurred beginning on a date later than consummation, the term of the 
transaction is assumed to begin on the first of the month in which that 
loan cost is incurred. For purposes of total annual loan cost 
disclosures, the term ends on each of the assumed loan periods specified 
in Sec.  226.33(c)(6).
    (3) Definitions of time intervals.
    (i) A period is the interval of time between advances.
    (ii) A common period is any period that occurs more than once in a 
transaction.
    (iii) A standard interval of time is a day, week, semimonth, month, 
or a multiple of a week or a month up to, but not exceeding, 1 year.
    (iv) All months shall be considered to have an equal number of days.
    (4) Unit-period.
    (i) In all transactions other than single-advance, single-payment 
transactions, the unit-period shall be that common period, not to exceed 
one year, that occurs most frequently in the transaction, except that:
    (A) If two or more common periods occur with equal frequency, the 
smaller of such common periods shall be the unit-period; or
    (B) If there is no common period in the transaction, the unit-period 
shall be that period which is the average of all periods rounded to the 
nearest whole standard interval of time. If the average is equally near 
two standard intervals of time, the lower shall be the unit-period.
    (ii) In a single-advance, single-payment transaction, the unit-
period shall be the term of the transaction, but shall not exceed one 
year.
    (5) Number of unit-periods between two given dates.
    (i) The number of days between two dates shall be the number of 24-
hour intervals between any point in time on the first date to the same 
point in time on the second date.
    (ii) If the unit-period is a month, the number of full unit-periods 
between two dates shall be the number of months. If the unit-period is a 
month, the number of unit-periods per year shall be 12.
    (iii) If the unit-period is a semimonth or a multiple of a month not 
exceeding 11 months, the number of days between two dates shall be 30 
times the number of full months. The number of full unit-periods shall 
be determined by dividing the number of days by 15 in the case of a 
semimonthly unit-period or by the appropriate multiple of 30 in the case 
of a multimonthly unit-period. If the unit-period is a semimonth, the 
number of unit-periods per year shall be 24. If the number of unit-
periods is a multiple of a month, the number of unit-periods per year 
shall be 12 divided by the number of months per unit-period.
    (iv) If the unit-period is a day, a week, or a multiple of a week, 
the number of full unit-periods shall be determined by dividing the 
number of days between the two given dates by the number of days per 
unit-period. If the unit-period is a day, the number of unit-periods per 
year shall be 365. If the unit-period is a week or a multiple of a week, 
the number of unit-periods per year shall be 52 divided by the number of 
weeks per unit-period.
    (v) If the unit-period is a year, the number of full unit-periods 
between two dates shall be the number of full years (each equal to 12 
months).
    (6) Symbols. The symbols used to express the terms of a transaction 
in the equation set forth in paragraph (b)(8) of this appendix are 
defined as follows:

Aj=The amount of each periodic or lump-sum advance to the 
consumer under the reverse mortgage transaction.
i=Percentage rate of the total annual loan cost per unit-period, 
expressed as a decimal equivalent.
j=The number of unit-periods until the jth advance.
n=The number of unit-periods between consummation and repayment of the 
debt.
Pn=Min (Baln, Valn). This is the 
maximum amount that the creditor can be repaid at the specified loan 
term.
Baln=Loan balance at time of repayment, including all costs 
and fees incurred by the consumer (including any shared appreciation or 
shared equity amount) compounded to time n at the creditor's contract 
rate of interest.

[[Page 354]]

Valn=Val0 (1 + [sigma])\y\, where Val0 
is the property value at consummation, [sigma] is the assumed annual 
rate of appreciation for the dwelling, and y is the number of years in 
the assumed term. Valn must be reduced by the amount of any 
equity reserved for the consumer by agreement between the parties, or by 
7 percent (or the amount or percentage specified in the credit 
agreement), if the amount required to be repaid is limited to the net 
proceeds of sale.
[sigma] = The summation operator.
    Symbols used in the examples shown in this appendix are defined as 
follows:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR24MR95.015

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR24MR95.007

w=The number of unit-periods per year.
I=wi x 100=the nominal total annual loan cost rate.
    (7) General equation. The total annual loan cost rate for a reverse 
mortgage transaction must be determined by first solving the following 
formula, which sets forth the relationship between the advances to the 
consumer and the amount owed to the creditor under the terms of the 
reverse mortgage agreement for the loan cost rate per unit-period (the 
loan cost rate per unit-period is then multiplied by the number of unit-
periods per year to obtain the total annual loan cost rate I; that is, I 
= wi):
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR24MR95.008

    (8) Solution of general equation by iteration process. (i) The 
general equation in paragraph (b)(7) of this appendix, when applied to a 
simple transaction for a reverse mortgage loan of equal monthly advances 
of $350 each, and with a total amount owed of $14,313.08 at an assumed 
repayment period of two years, takes the special form:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR24MR95.009

Using the iteration procedures found in steps 1 through 4 of (b)(9)(i) 
of Appendix J of this part, the total annual loan cost rate, correct to 
two decimals, is 48.53%.
    (ii) In using these iteration procedures, it is expected that 
calculators or computers will be programmed to carry all available 
decimals throughout the calculation and that enough iterations will be 
performed to make virtually certain that the total annual loan cost rate 
obtained, when rounded to two decimals, is correct. Total annual loan 
cost rates in the examples below were obtained by using a 10-digit 
programmable calculator and the iteration procedure described in 
Appendix J of this part.
    (9) Assumption for discretionary cash advances. If the consumer 
controls the timing of advances made after consummation (such as in a 
credit line arrangement), the creditor must use the general formula in 
paragraph (b)(7) of this appendix. The total annual loan cost rate shall 
be based on the assumption that 50 percent of the principal loan amount 
is advanced at closing, or in the case of an open-end transaction, at 
the time the consumer becomes obligated under the plan. Creditors shall 
assume the advances are made at the interest rate then in effect and 
that no further advances are made to, or repayments made by, the 
consumer during the term of the transaction or plan.
    (10) Assumption for variable-rate reverse mortgage transactions. If 
the interest rate for a reverse mortgage transaction may increase during 
the loan term and the amount or timing is not known at consummation, 
creditors shall base the disclosures on the initial interest rate in 
effect at the time the disclosures are provided.
    (11) Assumption for closing costs. In calculating the total annual 
loan cost rate, creditors shall assume all closing and other consumer 
costs are financed by the creditor.
    (c) Examples of total annual loan cost rate computations.
    (1) Lump-sum advance at consummation.

Lump-sum advance to consumer at consummation: $30,000
Total of consumer's loan costs financed at consummation: $4,500
Contract interest rate: 11.60%
Estimated time of repayment (based on life expectancy of a consumer at 
age 78): 10 years
Appraised value of dwelling at consummation: $100,000
Assumed annual dwelling appreciation rate: 4%
P10 = Min (103,385.84, 137,662.72)

[[Page 355]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR29SE95.004

i = .1317069438
Total annual loan cost rate (100(.1317069438 x 1)) = 13.17%
    (2) Monthly advance beginning at consummation.

Monthly advance to consumer, beginning at consummation: $492.51
Total of consumer's loan costs financed at consummation: $4,500
Contract interest rate: 9.00%
Estimated time of repayment (based on life expectancy of a consumer at 
age 78): 10 years
Appraised value of dwelling at consummation: $100,000
Assumed annual dwelling appreciation rate: 8%
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR24MR95.011

Total annual loan cost rate (100(.009061140 x 12))=10.87%
    (3) Lump sum advance at consummation and monthly advances 
thereafter.
Lump sum advance to consumer at consummation: $10,000
Monthly advance to consumer, beginning at consummation: $725
Total of consumer's loan costs financed at consummation: $4,500
Contract rate of interest: 8.5%
Estimated time of repayment (based on life expectancy of a consumer at 
age 75): 12 years
Appraised value of dwelling at consummation: $100,000
Assumed annual dwelling appreciation rate: 8%
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR24MR95.012

Total annual loan cost rate (100(.007708844 x 12)) = 9.25%
    (d) Reverse mortgage model form and sample form.
    (1) Model form.

                       Total Annual Loan Cost Rate

                               Loan Terms

Age of youngest borrower:
Appraised property value:
Interest rate:
Monthly advance:
Initial draw:
Line of credit:

                          Initial Loan Charges

Closing costs:
Mortgage insurance premium:
Annuity cost:

                          Monthly Loan Charges

Servicing fee:

                             Other Charges:

Mortgage insurance:
Shared Appreciation:

                            Repayment Limits

[[Page 356]]



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          Total annual loan cost rate
                                                             ---------------------------------------------------
                 Assumed annual appreciation                  2-year loan    [ ]-year     [ ]-year     [ ]-year
                                                                  term      loan term]   loan term    loan term
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0%..........................................................  ...........          [ ]  ...........  ...........
4%..........................................................  ...........          [ ]  ...........  ...........
8%..........................................................  ...........          [ ]  ...........  ...........
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The cost of any reverse mortgage loan depends on how long you keep 
the loan and how much your house appreciates in value. Generally, the 
longer you keep a reverse mortgage, the lower the total annual loan cost 
rate will be.
    This table shows the estimated cost of your reverse mortgage loan, 
expressed as an annual rate. It illustrates the cost for three [four] 
loan terms: 2 years, [half of life expectancy for someone your age,] 
that life expectancy, and 1.4 times that life expectancy. The table also 
shows the cost of the loan, assuming the value of your home appreciates 
at three different rates: 0%, 4% and 8%.
    The total annual loan cost rates in this table are based on the 
total charges associated with this loan. These charges typically include 
principal, interest, closing costs, mortgage insurance premiums, annuity 
costs, and servicing costs (but not costs when you sell the home).
    The rates in this table are estimates. Your actual cost may differ 
if, for example, the amount of your loan advances varies or the interest 
rate on your mortgage changes.

 Signing an Application or Receiving These Disclosures Does Not Require 
                        You To Complete This Loan

    (2) Sample Form.

                       Total Annual Loan Cost Rate

                               Loan Terms

Age of youngest borrower: 75
Appraised property value: $100,000
Interest rate: 9%
Monthly advance: $301.80
Initial draw: $1,000
Line of credit: $4,000

                          Initial Loan Charges

Closing costs: $5,000
Mortgage insurance premium: None
Annuity cost: None

                          Monthly Loan Charges

Servicing fee: None

                              Other Charges

Mortgage insurance: None
Shared Appreciation: None

                            Repayment Limits

Net proceeds estimated at 93% of projected home sale

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          Total annual loan cost rate
                                                             ---------------------------------------------------
                 Assumed annual appreciation                  2-year loan    [6-year      12-year      17-year
                                                                  term      loan term]   loan term    loan term
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0%..........................................................       39.00%     [14.94%]        9.86%        3.87%
4%..........................................................       39.00%     [14.94%]       11.03%       10.14%
8%..........................................................       39.00%     [14.94%]       11.03%       10.20%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The cost of any reverse mortgage loan depends on how long you keep 
the loan and how much your house appreciates in value. Generally, the 
longer you keep a reverse mortgage, the lower the total annual loan cost 
rate will be.
    This table shows the estimated cost of your reverse mortgage loan, 
expressed as an annual rate. It illustrates the cost for three [four] 
loan terms: 2 years, [half of life expectancy for someone your age,] 
that life expectancy, and 1.4 times that life expectancy. The table also 
shows the cost of the loan, assuming the value of your home appreciates 
at three different rates: 0%,4% and 8%.
    The total annual loan cost rates in this table are based on the 
total charges associated with this loan. These charges typically include 
principal, interest, closing costs, mortgage insurance premiums, annuity 
costs, and servicing costs (but not disposition costs--costs when you 
sell the home).
    The rates in this table are estimates. Your actual cost may differ 
if, for example, the amount of your loan advances varies or the interest 
rate on your mortgage changes.

[[Page 357]]

 Signing an Application or Receiving These Disclosures Does Not Require 
                        You To Complete This Loan

[Reg. Z, 60 FR 15474, Mar. 24, 1995, as amended at 60 FR 50400, Sept. 
29, 1995]

 Appendix L to Part 226--Assumed Loan Periods for Computations of Total 
                         Annual Loan Cost Rates

    (a) Required tables. In calculating the total annual loan cost rates 
in accordance with Appendix K of this part, creditors shall assume three 
loan periods, as determined by the following table.
    (b) Loan periods.
    (1) Loan Period 1 is a two-year loan period.
    (2) Loan Period 2 is the life expectancy in years of the youngest 
borrower to become obligated on the reverse mortgage loan, as shown in 
the U.S. Decennial Life Tables for 1979-1981 for females, rounded to the 
nearest whole year.
    (3) Loan Period 3 is the life expectancy figure in Loan Period 3, 
multiplied by 1.4 and rounded to the nearest full year (life expectancy 
figures at .5 have been rounded up to 1).
    (4) At the creditor's option, an additional period may be included, 
which is the life expectancy figure in Loan Period 2, multiplied by .5 
and rounded to the nearest full year (life expectancy figures at .5 have 
been rounded up to 1).

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        Loan period
                                                              Loan period   [Optional     2 (life    Loan period
                  Age of youngest borrower                       1 (in     loan period  expectancy)     3 (in
                                                                 years)    (in years)]   (in years)     years)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
62..........................................................            2         [11]           21           29
63..........................................................            2         [10]           20           28
64..........................................................            2         [10]           19           27
65..........................................................            2          [9]           18           25
66..........................................................            2          [9]           18           25
67..........................................................            2          [9]           17           24
68..........................................................            2          [8]           16           22
69..........................................................            2          [8]           16           22
70..........................................................            2          [8]           15           21
71..........................................................            2          [7]           14           20
72..........................................................            2          [7]           13           18
73..........................................................            2          [7]           13           18
74..........................................................            2          [6]           12           17
75..........................................................            2          [6]           12           17
76..........................................................            2          [6]           11           15
77..........................................................            2          [5]           10           14
78..........................................................            2          [5]           10           14
79..........................................................            2          [5]            9           13
80..........................................................            2          [5]            9           13
81..........................................................            2          [4]            8           11
82..........................................................            2          [4]            8           11
83..........................................................            2          [4]            7           10
84..........................................................            2          [4]            7           10
85..........................................................            2          [3]            6            8
86..........................................................            2          [3]            6            8
87..........................................................            2          [3]            6            8
88..........................................................            2          [3]            5            7
89..........................................................            2          [3]            5            7
90..........................................................            2          [3]            5            7
91..........................................................            2          [2]            4            6
92..........................................................            2          [2]            4            6
93..........................................................            2          [2]            4            6
94..........................................................            2          [2]            4            6
95 and over.................................................            2          [2]            3            4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


[60 FR 15476, Mar. 24, 1995]

        Supplement I to Part 226--Official Staff Interpretations

                              Introduction

    1. Official status. This commentary is the vehicle by which the 
staff of the Division of Consumer and Community Affairs of the Federal 
Reserve Board issues official staff interpretations of Regulation Z, as 
revised effective April 1, 1981. Good faith compliance with this 
commentary affords protection from liability under 130(f) of the Truth 
in Lending Act. Section 130(f) (15 U.S.C. 1640) protects creditors from 
civil liability for any act done or omitted in good faith in conformity 
with any interpretation issued by a duly authorized official or employee 
of the Federal Reserve System.
    2. Procedure for requesting interpretations. Under appendix C of the 
regulation, anyone may request an official staff interpretation.

[[Page 358]]

Interpretations that are adopted will be incorporated in this commentary 
following publication in the Federal Register. No official staff 
interpretations are expected to be issued other than by means of this 
commentary.
    3. Status of previous interpretations. All statements and opinions 
issued by the Federal Reserve Board and its staff interpreting previous 
Regulation Z remain effective until October 1, 1982, only insofar as 
they interpret that regulation. When compliance with revised Regulation 
Z becomes mandatory on October 1, 1982, the Board and staff 
interpretations of the previous regulation will be entirely superseded 
by the revised regulation and this commentary except with regard to 
liability under the previous regulation.
    4. Rules of construction. (a) Lists that appear in the commentary 
may be exhaustive or illustrative; the appropriate construction should 
be clear from the context. In most cases, illustrative lists are 
introduced by phrases such as ``including, but not limited to,'' ``among 
other things,'' ``for example,'' or ``such as.''
    (b) Throughout the commentary and regulation, reference to the 
regulation should be construed to refer to revised Regulation Z, unless 
the context indicates that a reference to previous Regulation Z is also 
intended.
    (c) Throughout the commentary, reference to ``this section'' or 
``this paragraph'' means the section or paragraph in the regulation that 
is the subject of the comment.
    5. Comment designations. Each comment in the commentary is 
identified by a number and the regulatory section or paragraph which it 
interprets. The comments are designated with as much specificity as 
possible according to the particular regulatory provision addressed. For 
example, some of the comments to Sec.  226.18(b) are further divided by 
paragraph, such as Comment 18(b)(1)-1 and Comment 18(b)(2)-1. In other 
cases, comments have more general application and are designated, for 
example, as Comment 18-1 or Comment 18(b)-1. This introduction may be 
cited as Comments I-1 through I-7. Comments to the appendices may be 
cited, for example, as Comment app. A-1.
    6. Cross-references. The following cross-references to related 
material appear at the end of each section of the commentary:
    (a) ``Statute''--those sections of the Truth in Lending Act on which 
the regulatory provision is based (and any other relevant statutes);
    (b) ``Other sections''--other provisions in the regulation necessary 
to understand that section;
    (c) ``Previous regulation''--parallel provisions in previous 
Regulation Z; and
    (d) ``1981 changes''--a brief description of the major changes made 
by the 1981 revisions to Regulation Z.

Where appropriate a fifth category (``Other regulations'') provides 
cross-references to other regulations.
    7. Transition rules. (a) Though compliance with the revised 
regulation is not mandatory until April 1, 1982, creditors may begin 
complying as of April 1, 1981. During the intervening year, a creditor 
may convert its entire operation to the new requirements at one time, or 
it may convert to the new requirements in stages. In general, however, a 
creditor may not mix the regulatory requirements when making disclosures 
for a particular closed-end transaction or open-end account; all the 
disclosures for a single closed-end transaction (or open-end account) 
must be made in accordance with the previous regulation, or all the 
disclosures must be made in accordance with the revised regulation. As 
an exception to the general rule, the revised rescission rules and the 
revised advertising rules may be followed even if the disclosures are 
based on the previous regulation. For purposes of this regulation, the 
creditor is not required to take any particular action beyond the 
requirements of the revised regulation to indicate its conversion to the 
revised regulation.
    (b) The revised regulation may be relied on to determine if any 
disclosures are required for a particular transaction or to determine if 
a person is a creditor subject to Truth in Lending requirements, whether 
or not other operations have been converted to the revised regulation. 
For example, layaway plans are not subject to the revised regulation, 
nor are oral agreements to lend money if there is no finance charge. 
These provisions may be relied on even if the creditor is making other 
disclosures under the previous regulation. The new rules governing 
whether or not disclosures must be made for refinancings and assumptions 
are also available to a creditor that has not yet converted its 
operations to the revised regulation.
    (c) In addition to the above rules, applicable to both open-end and 
closed-end credit, the following guidelines are relevant to open-end 
credit:

    [sbull] The creditor need not remake initial disclosures that were 
made under the previous regulation, even if the revised periodic 
statements contain terminology that is inconsistent with those initial 
disclosures.
    [sbull] A creditor may add inserts to its old open-end forms in 
order to convert them to the revised rules until such time as the old 
forms are used up.
    [sbull] No change-in-terms notice is required for changes resulting 
from the conversion to the revised regulation.
    [sbull] The previous billing rights statements are substantially 
similar to the revised billing rights statements and may continue to be 
used, except that, if the creditor has an automatic debit program, it 
must use the revised automatic debit provision.

[[Page 359]]

    [sbull] For those creditors wishing to use the annual billing rights 
statement, the creditor may count from the date on which it sent its 
last statement under the previous regulation in determining when to give 
the first statement under the new regulation. For example, if the 
creditor sent a semi-annual statement in June 1981, and converts to the 
new regulation in October 1981, the creditor must give the billing 
rights statement sometime in 1982, and it must not be fewer than 6 nor 
more than 18 months after the June statement.
    [sbull] Section 226.11 of the revised regulation affects only credit 
balances that are created on or after the date the creditor converts the 
account to the revised regulation.

                           Subpart A--General

 Section 226.1--Authority, Purpose, Coverage, Organization, Enforcement 
                              and Liability

    1(c) Coverage.
    1. Foreign applicability. Regulation Z applies to all persons 
(including branches of foreign banks and sellers located in the United 
States) that extend consumer credit to residents (including resident 
aliens) of any state as defined in Sec.  226.2. If an account is located 
in the United States and credit is extended to a U.S. resident, the 
transaction is subject to the regulation. This will be the case whether 
or not a particular advance or purchase on the account takes place in 
the United States and whether or not the extender of credit is chartered 
or based in the United States or a foreign country. Thus, a U.S. 
resident's use in Europe of a credit card issued by a bank in the 
consumer's home town is covered by the regulation. The regulation does 
not apply to a foreign branch of a U.S. bank when the foreign branch 
extends credit to a U.S. citizen residing or visiting abroad or to a 
foreign national abroad.

                               References

    Statute: Section 102.
    Other sections: None.
    Previous regulation: Sec.  226.1.
    1981 changes: A discussion of coverage has been added to Sec.  226.1 
so that the reader will understand from the start what is subject to the 
regulation. Language has also been added to explain the reorganization 
of the regulation into subparts that group together the provisions 
relating to general matters, open-end credit, closed-end credit, and 
miscellaneous rules. The provisions on consumer leasing have been issued 
by the Board as a separate regulation, Regulation M (12 CFR part 213).

          Section 226.2--Definitions and Rules of Construction

    2(a) Definitions.
    2(a)(2) Advertisement.
    1. Coverage. Only commercial messages that promote consumer credit 
transactions requiring disclosures are advertisements. Messages 
inviting, offering, or otherwise announcing generally to prospective 
customers the availability of credit transactions, whether in visual, 
oral, or print media, are covered by Regulation Z (12 CFR part 226).

    i. Examples include:
    A. Messages in a newspaper, magazine, leaflet, promotional flyer, or 
catalog.
    B. Announcements on radio, television, or public address system.
    C. On-line messages, such as on the Internet.
    D. Direct mail literature or other printed material on any exterior 
or interior sign.
    E. Point-of-sale displays.
    F. Telephone solicitations.
    G. Price tags that contain credit information.
    H. Letters sent to customers as part of an organized solicitation of 
business.
    I. Messages on checking account statements offering auto loans at a 
stated annual percentage rate.
    J. Communications promoting a new open-end plan or closed-end 
transaction.
    ii. The term does not include:
    A. Direct personal contacts, such as follow-up letters, cost 
estimates for individual consumers, or oral or written communication 
relating to the negotiation of a specific transaction.
    B. Informational material, for example, interest rate and loan term 
memos, distributed only to business entities.
    C. Notices required by federal or state law, if the law mandates 
that specific information be displayed and only the information so 
mandated is included in the notice.
    D. News articles the use of which is controlled by the news medium.
    E. Market research or educational materials that do not solicit 
business.
    F. Communications about an existing credit account (for example, a 
promotion encouraging additional or different uses of an existing credit 
card account).

    2. Persons covered. All persons must comply with the advertising 
provisions in Sec. Sec.  226.16 and 226.24, not just those that meet the 
definition of creditor in Sec.  226.2(a)(17). Thus, home builders, 
merchants, and others who are not themselves creditors must comply with 
the advertising provisions of the regulation if they advertise consumer 
credit transactions. However, under section 145 of the act, the owner 
and the personnel of the medium, in which an advertisement appears, or 
through which it is disseminated, are not subject to civil liability for 
violations.
    2(a)(3) [Reserved]
    2(a)(4) Billing cycle or cycle.

[[Page 360]]

    1. Intervals. In open-end credit plans, the billing cycle determines 
the intervals for which periodic disclosure statements are required; 
these intervals are also used as measuring points for other duties of 
the creditor. Typically, billing cycles are monthly, but they may be 
more frequent or less frequent (but not less frequent than quarterly).
    2. Creditors that do not bill. The term cycle is interchangeable 
with billing cycle for definitional purposes, since some creditors' 
cycles do not involve the sending of bills in the traditional sense but 
only statements of account activity. This is commonly the case with 
financial institutions when periodic payments are made through payroll 
deduction or through automatic debit of the consumer's asset account.
    3. Equal cycles. Although cycles must be equal, there is a 
permissible variance to account for weekends, holidays, and differences 
in the number of days in months. If the actual date of each statement 
does not vary by more than 4 days from a fixed day (for example, the 
third Thursday of each month) or date (for example, the 15th of each 
month) that the creditor regularly uses, the intervals between 
statements are considered equal. The requirement that cycles be equal 
applies even if the creditor applies a daily periodic rate to determine 
the finance charge. The requirement that intervals be equal does not 
apply to the transitional billing cycle that can occur when the creditor 
occasionally changes its billing cycles so as to establish a new 
statement day or date. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.9(c).)
    4. Payment reminder. The sending of a regular payment reminder 
(rather than a late payment notice) establishes a cycle for which the 
creditor must send periodic statements.
    2(a)(6) Business day.
    1. Business function test. Activities that indicate that the 
creditor is open for substantially all of its business functions include 
the availability of personnel to make loan disbursements, to open new 
accounts, and to handle credit transaction inquiries. Activities that 
indicate that the creditor is not open for substantially all of its 
business functions include a retailer merely accepting credit cards for 
purchases or a bank having its customer-service windows open only for 
limited purposes such as deposits and withdrawals, bill paying, and 
related services.
    2. Rescission rule. A more precise rule for what is a business day 
(all calendar days except Sundays and the federal legal holidays listed 
in 5 U.S.C. 6103(a)) applies when the right of rescission or mortgages 
subject to Sec.  226.32 are involved. (See also comment 31(c)(1)-1.) 
Four federal legal holidays are identified in 5 U.S.C. 6103(a) by a 
specific date: New Year's Day, January 1; Independence Day, July 4; 
Veterans Day, November 11; and Christmas Day, December 25. When one of 
these holidays (July 4, for example) falls on a Saturday, federal 
offices and other entities might observe the holiday on the preceding 
Friday (July 3). The observed holiday (in the example, July 3) is a 
business day for purposes of rescission or the delivery of disclosures 
for certain high-cost mortgages covered by Sec.  226.32.
    2(a)(7) Card issuer.
    1. Agent. An agent of a card issuer is considered a card issuer. 
Because agency relationships are traditionally defined by contract and 
by state or other applicable law, the regulation does not define agent. 
Merely providing services relating to the production of credit cards or 
data processing for others, however, does not make one the agent of the 
card issuer. In contrast, a financial institution may become the agent 
of the card issuer if an agreement between the institution and the card 
issuer provides that the cardholder may use a line of credit with the 
financial institution to pay obligations incurred by use of the credit 
card.
    2(a)(8) Cardholder.
    1. General rule. A cardholder is a natural person at whose request a 
card is issued for consumer credit purposes or who is a co-obligor or 
guarantor for such a card issued to another. The second category does 
not include an employee who is a co-obligor or guarantor on a card 
issued to the employer for business purposes, nor does it include a 
person who is merely the authorized user of a card issued to another.
    2. Limited application of regulation. For the limited purposes of 
the rules on issuance of credit cards and liability for unauthorized 
use, a cardholder includes any person, including an organization, to 
whom a card is issued for any purpose--including a business, 
agricultural, or commercial purpose.
    3. Issuance. See the commentary to Sec.  226.12(a).
    4. Dual-purpose cards and dual-card systems. Some card issuers offer 
dual-purpose cards that are for business as well as consumer purposes. 
If a card is issued to an individual for consumer purposes, the fact 
that an organization has guaranteed to pay the debt does not make it 
business credit. On the other hand, if a card is issued for business 
purposes, the fact that an individual sometimes uses it for consumer 
purchases does not subject the card issuer to the provisions on periodic 
statements, billing error resolution, and other protections afforded to 
consumer credit. Some card issuers offer dual-card systems--that is, 
they issue two cards to the same individual, one intended for business 
use, the other for consumer or personal use. With such a system, the 
same person may be a cardholder for general purposes when using the card 
issued for consumer use, and a cardholder only for the limited purposes 
of the restrictions on issuance and liability when using the card issued 
for business purposes.

[[Page 361]]

    2(a)(9) Cash price.
    1. Components. This amount is a starting point in computing the 
amount financed and the total sale price under Sec.  226.18 for credit 
sales. Any charges imposed equally in cash and credit transactions may 
be included in the cash price, or they may be treated as other amounts 
financed under Sec.  226.18(b)(2).
    2. Service contracts. Service contracts include contracts for the 
repair or the servicing of goods, such as mechanical breakdown coverage, 
even if such a contract is characterized as insurance under state law.
    3. Rebates. The creditor has complete flexibility in the way it 
treats rebates for purposes of disclosure and calculation. See the 
commentary to Sec.  226.18(b).
    2(a)(10) Closed-end credit.
    1. General. The coverage of this term is defined by exclusion. That 
is, it includes any credit arrangement that does not fall within the 
definition of open-end credit. Subpart C contains the disclosure rules 
for closed-end credit when the obligation is subject to a finance charge 
or is payable by written agreement in more than 4 installments.
    2(a)(11) Consumer.
    1. Scope. Guarantors, endorsers, and sureties are not generally 
consumers for purposes of the regulation, but they may be entitled to 
rescind under certain circumstances and they may have certain rights if 
they are obligated on credit card plans.
    2. Rescission rules. For purposes of rescission under Sec. Sec.  
226.15 and 226.23, a consumer includes any natural person whose 
ownership interest in his or her principal dwelling is subject to the 
risk of loss. Thus, if a security interest is taken in A's ownership 
interest in a house and that house is A's principal dwelling, A is a 
consumer for purposes of rescission, even if A is not liable, either 
primarily or secondarily, on the underlying consumer credit transaction. 
An ownership interest does not include, for example, leaseholds or 
inchoate rights, such as dower.
    3. Land trusts. Credit extended to land trusts, as described in the 
commentary to Sec.  226.3(a), is considered to be extended to a natural 
person for purposes of the definition of consumer.
    2(a)(12) Consumer credit.
    1. Primary purpose. There is no precise test for what constitutes 
credit offered or extended for personal, family, or household purposes, 
nor for what constitutes the primary purpose. See, however, the 
discussion of business purposes in the commentary to Sec.  226.3(a).
    2(a)(13) Consummation.
    1. State law governs. When a contractual obligation on the 
consumer's part is created is a matter to be determined under applicable 
law; Regulation Z does not make this determination. A contractual 
commitment agreement, for example, that under applicable law binds the 
consumer to the credit terms would be consummation. Consummation, 
however, does not occur merely because the consumer has made some 
financial investment in the transaction (for example, by paying a 
nonrefundable fee) unless, of course, applicable law holds otherwise.
    2. Credit v. sale. Consummation does not occur when the consumer 
becomes contractually committed to a sale transaction, unless the 
consumer also becomes legally obligated to accept a particular credit 
arrangement. For example, when a consumer pays a nonrefundable deposit 
to purchase an automobile, a purchase contact may be created, but 
consummation for purposes of the regulation does not occur unless the 
consumer also contracts for financing at that time.
    2(a)(14) Credit.
    1. Exclusions. The following situations are not considered credit 
for purposes of the regulation:
    [sbull] Layaway plans, unless the consumer is contractually 
obligated to continue making payments. Whether the consumer is so 
obligated is a matter to be determined under applicable law. The fact 
that the consumer is not entitled to a refund of any amounts paid 
towards the cash price of the merchandise does not bring layaways within 
the definition of credit.
    [sbull] Tax liens, tax assessments, court judgments, and court 
approvals of reaffirmation of debts in bankruptcy. However, third-party 
financing of such obligations (for example, a bank loan obtained to pay 
off a tax lien) is credit for purposes of the regulation.
    [sbull] Insurance premium plans that involve payment in installments 
with each installment representing the payment for insurance coverage 
for a certain future period of time, unless the consumer is 
contractually obligated to continue making payments.
    [sbull] Home improvement transactions that involve progress 
payments, if the consumer pays, as the work progresses, only for work 
completed and has no contractual obligation to continue making payments.
    [sbull] Borrowing against the accrued cash value of an insurance 
policy or a pension account, if there is no independent obligation to 
repay.
    [sbull] Letters of credit.
    [sbull] The execution of option contracts. However, there may be an 
extension of credit when the option is exercised, if there is an 
agreement at that time to defer payment of a debt.
    [sbull] Investment plans in which the party extending capital to the 
consumer risks the loss of the capital advanced. This includes, for 
example, an arrangement with a home purchaser in which the investor pays 
a portion of the downpayment and of the periodic mortgage payments in 
return for an ownership interest in the property, and shares in any gain 
or loss of property value.

[[Page 362]]

    [sbull] Mortgage assistance plans administered by a government 
agency in which a portion of the consumer's monthly payment amount is 
paid by the agency. No finance charge is imposed on the subsidy amount 
and that amount is due in a lump-sum payment on a set date or upon the 
occurrence of certain events. (If payment is not made when due, a new 
note imposing a finance charge may be written, which may then be subject 
to the regulation.)
    2. Payday loans; deferred presentment. Credit includes a transaction 
in which a cash advance is made to a consumer in exchange for the 
consumer's personal check, or in exchange for the consumer's 
authorization to debit the consumer's deposit account, and where the 
parties agree either that the check will not be cashed or deposited, or 
that the consumer's deposit account will not be debited, until a 
designated future date. This type of transaction is often referred to as 
a ``payday loan'' or ``payday advance'' or ``deferred presentment 
loan.'' A fee charged in connection with such a transaction may be a 
finance charge for purposes of Sec.  226.4, regardless of how the fee is 
characterized under state law. Where the fee charged constitutes a 
finance charge under Sec.  226.4 and the person advancing funds 
regularly extends consumer credit, that person is a creditor and is 
required to provide disclosures consistent with the requirements of 
Regulation Z. See Sec.  226.2(a)(17).
    2(a)(15) Credit card.
    1. Usable from time to time. A credit card must be usable from time 
to time. Since this involves the possibility of repeated use of a single 
device, checks and similar instruments that can be used only once to 
obtain a single credit extension are not credit cards.
    2. Examples. i. Examples of credit cards include:
    A. A card that guarantees checks or similar instruments, if the 
asset account is also tied to an overdraft line or if the instrument 
directly accesses a line of credit.
    B. A card that accesses both a credit and an asset account (that is, 
a debit-credit card).
    C. An identification card that permits the consumer to defer payment 
on a purchase.
    D. An identification card indicating loan approval that is presented 
to a merchant or to a lender, whether or not the consumer signs a 
separate promissory note for each credit extension.
    E. A card or device that can be activated upon receipt to access 
credit, even if the card has a substantive use other than credit, such 
as a purchase-price discount card. Such a card or device is a credit 
card notwithstanding the fact that the recipient must first contact the 
card issuer to access or activate the credit feature.
    ii. In contrast, a credit card does not include, for example:
    A. A check-guarantee or debit card with no credit feature or 
agreement, even if the creditor occasionally honors an inadvertent 
overdraft.
    B. Any card, key, plate, or other device that is used in order to 
obtain petroleum products for business purposes from a wholesale 
distribution facility or to gain access to that facility, and that is 
required to be used without regard to payment terms.
    3. Charge card. Generally, charge cards are cards used in connection 
with an account on which outstanding balances cannot be carried from one 
billing cycle to another and are payable when a periodic statement is 
received. Under the regulation, a reference to credit cards generally 
includes charge cards. The term charge card is, however, distinguished 
from credit card in Sec. Sec.  226.5a, 226.9(e), 226.9(f), and 
226.28(d), and appendices G-10 through G-13. When the term credit card 
is used in those provisions, it refers to credit cards other than charge 
cards.
    2(a)(16) Credit sale.
    1. Special disclosure. If the seller is a creditor in the 
transaction, the transaction is a credit sale and the special credit 
sale disclosures (that is, the disclosures under Sec.  226.18(j)) must 
be given. This applies even if there is more than one creditor in the 
transaction and the creditor making the disclosures is not the seller. 
See the commentary to Sec.  226.17(d).
    2. Sellers who arrange credit. If the seller of the property or 
services involved arranged for financing but is not a creditor as to 
that sale, the transaction is not a credit sale. Thus, if a seller 
assists the consumer in obtaining a direct loan from a financial 
institution and the consumer's note is payable to the financial 
institution, the transaction is a loan and only the financial 
institution is a creditor.
    3. Refinancings. Generally, when a credit sale is refinanced within 
the meaning of Sec.  226.20(a), loan disclosures should be made. 
However, if a new sale of goods or services is also involved, the 
transaction is a credit sale.
    4. Incidental sales. Some lenders sell a product or service--such as 
credit, property, or health insurance--as part of a loan transaction. 
Section 226.4 contains the rules on whether the cost of credit life, 
disability or property insurance is part of the finance charge. If the 
insurance is financed, it may be disclosed as a separate credit sale 
transaction or disclosed as part of the primary transaction; if the 
latter approach is taken, either loan or credit sale disclosures may be 
made. See the commentary to Sec.  226.17(c)(1) for further discussion of 
this point.
    5. Credit extensions for educational purposes. A credit extension 
for educational purposes in which an educational institution is the 
creditor may be treated as either a credit sale or a loan, regardless of 
whether the

[[Page 363]]

funds are given directly to the student, credited to the student's 
account, or disbursed to other persons on the student's behalf. The 
disclosure of the total sale price need not be given if the transaction 
is treated as a loan.
    2(a)(17) Creditor.
    1. General. The definition contains four independent tests. If any 
one of the tests is met, the person is a creditor for purposes of that 
particular test.
    Paragraph 2(a)(17)(i).
    1. Prerequisites. This test is composed of 2 requirements, both of 
which must be met in order for a particular credit extension to be 
subject to the regulation and for the credit extension to count towards 
satisfaction of the numerical tests mentioned in footnote 3 to Sec.  
226.2(a)(17). First, there must be either or both of the following:
    [sbull] A written (rather than oral) agreement to pay in more than 4 
installments. A letter that merely confirms an oral agreement does not 
constitute a written agreement for purposes of the definition.
    [sbull] A finance charge imposed for the credit. The obligation to 
pay the finance charge need not be in writing.
    Second, the obligation must be payable to the person in order for 
that person to be considered a creditor. If an obligation is made 
payable to bearer, the creditor is the one who initially accepts the 
obligation.
    2. Assignees. If an obligation is initially payable to one person, 
that person is the creditor even if the obligation by its terms is 
simultaneously assigned to another person. For example:

    [sbull] An auto dealer and a bank have a business relationship in 
which the bank supplies the dealer with credit sale contracts that are 
initially made payable to the dealer and provide for the immediate 
assignment of the obligation to the bank. The dealer and purchaser 
execute the contract only after the bank approves the creditworthiness 
of the purchaser. Because the obligation is initially payable on its 
face to the dealer, the dealer is the only creditor in the transaction.
    3. Numerical tests. The examples below illustrate how the numerical 
tests of footnote 3 are applied. The examples assume that consumer 
credit with a finance charge or written agreement for more than 4 
installments was extended in the years in question and that the person 
did not extend such credit in 1982.
    4. Counting transactions. For purposes of closed-end credit, the 
creditor counts each credit transaction. For open-end credit, 
transactions means accounts, so that outstanding accounts are counted 
instead of individual credit extensions. Normally the number of 
transactions is measured by the preceding calendar year; if the 
requisite number is met, then the person is a creditor for all 
transactions in the current year. However, if the person did not meet 
the test in the preceding year, the number of transactions is measured 
by the current calendar year. For example, if the person extends 
consumer credit 26 times in 1983, it is a creditor for purposes of the 
regulation for the last extension of credit in 1983 and for all 
extensions of consumer credit in 1984. On the other hand, if a business 
begins in 1983 and extends consumer credit 20 times, it is not a 
creditor for purposes of the regulation in 1983. If it extends consumer 
credit 75 times in 1984, however, it becomes a creditor for purposes of 
the regulation (and must begin making disclosures) after the 25th 
extension of credit in that year and is a creditor for all extensions of 
consumer credit in 1985.
    5. Relationship between consumer credit in general and credit 
secured by a dwelling. Extensions of credit secured by a dwelling are 
counted towards the 25-extensions test. For example, if in 1983 a person 
extends unsecured consumer credit 23 times and consumer credit secured 
by a dwelling twice, it becomes a creditor for the succeeding extensions 
of credit, whether or not they are secured by a dwelling. On the other 
hand, extensions of consumer credit not secured by a dwelling are not 
counted towards the number of credit extensions secured by a dwelling. 
For example, if in 1983 a person extends credit not secured by a 
dwelling 8 times and credit secured by a dwelling 3 times, it is not a 
creditor.
    6. Effect of satisfying one test. Once one of the numerical tests is 
satisfied, the person is also a creditor for the other type of credit. 
For example, in 1983 a person extends consumer credit secured by a 
dwelling 5 times. That person is a creditor for all succeeding credit 
extensions, whether they involve credit secured by a dwelling or not.
    7. Trusts. In the case of credit extended by trusts, each individual 
trust is considered a separate entity for purposes of applying the 
criteria. For example:

    [sbull] A bank is the trustee for 3 trusts: Trust A makes 15 
extensions of consumer credit annually; Trust B makes 10 extensions of 
consumer credit annually; and Trust C makes 30 extensions of consumer 
credit annually. Only Trust C is a creditor for purposes of the 
regulation.
    8. Loans from employee savings plan. Some employee savings plans 
permit participants to borrow money up to a certain percentage of their 
account balances, and use a trust to administer the receipt and 
disbursement of funds. Unless each participant's account is an 
individual plan and trust, the creditor should apply the numerical tests 
to the plan as a whole rather than to the individual account, even if 
the loan amount is determined by reference to the balance in the 
individual account and the repayments are credited to the individual 
account. The person to whom the obligation is originally made payable 
(whether the plan, the trust, or the trustee)

[[Page 364]]

is the creditor for purposes of the act and regulation.

    Paragraph 2(a)(17)(ii). [Reserved]
    Paragraph 2(a)(17)(iii).
    1. Card issuers subject to Subpart B. Section 226.2(a)(17)(iii) 
makes certain card issuers creditors for purposes of the open-end credit 
provisions of the regulation. This includes, for example, the issuers of 
so-called travel and entertainment cards that expect repayment at the 
first billing and do not impose a finance charge. Since all disclosures 
are to be made only as applicable, such card issuers would omit finance 
charge disclosures. Other provisions of the regulation regarding such 
areas as scope, definitions, determination of which charges are finance 
charges, Spanish language disclosures, record retention, and use of 
model forms, also apply to such card issuers.
    Paragraph 2(a)(17)(iv).
    1. Card issuers subject to Subparts B and C. Section 
226.2(a)(17)(iv) includes as creditors card issuers extending closed-end 
credit in which there is a finance charge or an agreement to pay in more 
than 4 installments. These card issuers are subject to the appropriate 
provisions of Subparts B and C, as well as to the general provisions.
    2(a)(18) Downpayment.
    1. Allocation. If a consumer makes a lump-sum payment, partially to 
reduce the cash price and partially to pay prepaid finance charges, only 
the portion attributable to reducing the cash price is part of the 
downpayment. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.2(a)(23).)
    2. Pick-up payments. Creditors may treat the deferred portion of the 
down-payment, often referred to as pick-up payments, in a number of 
ways. If the pick-up payment is treated as part of the downpayment:

    [sbull] It is subtracted in arriving at the amount financed under 
Sec.  226.18(b).
    [sbull] It may, but need not, be reflected in the payment schedule 
under Sec.  226.18(g).

    If the pick-up payment does not meet the definition (for example, if 
it is payable after the second regularly scheduled payment) or if the 
creditor chooses not to treat it as part of the downpayment:

    [sbull] It must be included in the amount financed.
    [sbull] It must be shown in the payment schedule.

    Whichever way the pick-up payment is treated, the total of payments 
under Sec.  226.18(h) must equal the sum of the payments disclosed under 
Sec.  226.18(g).
    3. Effect of existing liens. i. No cash payment. In a credit sale, 
the ``downpayment'' may only be used to reduce the cash price. For 
example, when a trade-in is used as the downpayment and the existing 
lien on an automobile to be traded in exceeds the value of the 
automobile, creditors must disclose a zero on the downpayment line 
rather than a negative number. To illustrate, assume a consumer owes 
$10,000 on an existing automobile loan and that the trade-in value of 
the automobile is only $8,000, leaving a $2,000 deficit. The creditor 
should disclose a downpayment of $0, not -$2,000.
    ii. Cash payment. If the consumer makes a cash payment, creditors 
may, at their option, disclose the entire cash payment as the 
downpayment, or apply the cash payment first to any excess lien amount 
and disclose any remaining cash as the downpayment. In the above 
example:
    A. If the downpayment disclosed is equal to the cash payment, the 
$2,000 deficit must be reflected as an additional amount financed under 
Sec.  226.18(b)(2).
    B. If the consumer provides $1,500 in cash (which does not 
extinguish the $2,000 deficit), the creditor may disclose a downpayment 
of $1,500 or of $0.
    C. If the consumer provides $3,000 in cash, the creditor may 
disclose a downpayment of $3,000 or of $1,000.
    2(a)(19) Dwelling.
    1. Scope. A dwelling need not be the consumer's principal residence 
to fit the definition and thus a vacation or second home could be a 
dwelling. However, for purposes of the definition of residential 
mortgage transaction and the right to rescind, a dwelling must be the 
principal residence of the consumer. See the commentary to Sec. Sec.  
226.2(a)(24), 226.15, and 226.23.
    2. Use as a residence. Mobile homes, boats, and trailers are 
dwellings if they are in fact used as residences, just as are 
condominium and cooperative units. Recreational vehicles, campers, and 
the like not used as residences are not dwellings.
    3. Relation to exemptions. Any transaction involving a security 
interest in a consumer's principal dwelling (as well as in any real 
property) remains subject to the regulation despite the general 
exemption in Sec.  226.3(b) for credit extensions over $25,000.
    2(a)(20) Open-end credit.
    1. General. This definition describes the characteristics of open-
end credit (for which the applicable disclosure and other rules are 
contained in Subpart B), as distinct from closed-end credit. Open-end 
credit is consumer credit that is extended under a plan and meets all 3 
criteria set forth in the definition.
    2. Existence of a plan. The definition requires that there be a 
plan, which connotes a contractual arrangement between the creditor and 
the consumer. Some creditors offer programs containing a number of 
different credit features. The consumer has a single account with the 
institution that can be accessed repeatedly via a number of sub-accounts 
established for the different program features and rate structures. Some 
features of the program might be used repeatedly (for example, an 
overdraft line) while others

[[Page 365]]

might be used infrequently (such as the part of the credit line 
available for secured credit). If the program as a whole is subject to 
prescribed terms and otherwise meets the definition of open-end credit, 
such a program would be considered a single, multi-featured plan.
    3. Repeated transactions. Under this criterion, the creditor must 
reasonably contemplate repeated transactions. This means that the credit 
plan must be usable from time to time and the creditor must legitimately 
expect that there will be repeat business rather than a one-time credit 
extension. The creditor must expect repeated dealings with consumers 
under the credit plan as a whole and need not believe a consumer will 
reuse a particular feature of the plan. The determination of whether a 
creditor can reasonably contemplate repeated transactions requires an 
objective analysis. Information that much of the creditor's customer 
base with accounts under the plan make repeated transactions over some 
period of time is relevant to the determination, particularly when the 
plan is opened primarily for the financing of infrequently purchased 
products or services. A standard based on reasonable belief by a 
creditor necessarily includes some margin for judgmental error. The fact 
that particular consumers do not return for further credit extensions 
does not prevent a plan from having been properly characterized as open-
end. For example, if much of the customer base of a clothing store makes 
repeat purchases, the fact that some consumers use the plan only once 
would not affect the characterization of the store's plan as open-end 
credit. The criterion regarding repeated transactions is a question of 
fact to be decided in the context of the creditor's type of business and 
the creditor's relationship with its customers. For example:
    i. It would be more reasonable for a thrift institution chartered 
for the benefit of its members to contemplate repeated transactions with 
a member than for a seller of aluminum siding to make the same 
assumption about its customers.
    ii. It would be more reasonable for a financial institution to make 
advances from a line of credit for the purchase of an automobile than 
for an automobile dealer to sell a car under an open-end plan.

    4. Finance charge on an outstanding balance. The requirement that a 
finance charge may be computed and imposed from time to time on the 
outstanding balance means that there is no specific amount financed for 
the plan for which the finance charge, total of payments, and payment 
schedule can be calculated. A plan may meet the definition of open-end 
credit even though a finance charge is not normally imposed, provided 
the creditor has the right, under the plan, to impose a finance charge 
from time to time on the outstanding balance. For example, in some 
plans, such as certain china club plans, a finance charge is not imposed 
if the consumer pays all or a specified portion of the outstanding 
balance within a given time period. Such a plan could meet the finance 
charge criterion, if the creditor has the right to impose a finance 
charge, even though the consumer actually pays no finance charges during 
the existence of the plan because the consumer takes advantage of the 
option to pay the balance (either in full or in installments) within the 
time necessary to avoid finance charges.
    5. Reusable line. The total amount of credit that may be extended 
during the existence of an open-end plan is unlimited because available 
credit is generally replenished as earlier advances are repaid. A line 
of credit is self-replenishing even though the plan itself has a fixed 
expiration date, as long as during the plan's existence the consumer may 
use the line, repay, and reuse the credit. The creditor may verify 
credit information such as the consumer's continued income and 
employment status or information for security purposes. This criterion 
of unlimited credit distinguishes open-end credit from a series of 
advances made pursuant to a close-end credit loan commitment. For 
example:

    [sbull] Under a closed-end commitment, the creditor might agree to 
lend a total of $10,000 in a series of advances as needed by the 
consumer. When a consumer has borrowed the full $10,000, no more is 
advanced under that particular agreement, even if there has been 
repayment of a portion of the debt.

    This criterion does not mean that the creditor must establish a 
specific credit limit for the line of credit or that the line of credit 
must always be replenished to its original amount. The creditor may 
reduce a credit limit or refuse to extend new credit in a particular 
case due to changes in the economy, the creditor's financial condition, 
or the consumer's creditworthiness. (The rules in Sec.  226.5b(f), 
however, limit the ability of a creditor to suspend credit advances for 
home equity plans.) While consumers should have a reasonable expectation 
of obtaining credit as long as they remain current and within any preset 
credit limits, further extensions of credit need not be an absolute 
right in order for the plan to meet the self-replenishing criterion.
    6. Open-end real estate mortgages. Some credit plans call for 
negotiated advances under so-called open-end real estate mortgages. Each 
such plan must be independently measured against the definition of open-
end credit, regardless of the terminology used in the industry to 
describe the plan. The fact that a particular plan is called an open-end 
real estate mortgage, for example, does not, by itself, mean that it is 
open-end credit under the regulation.
    2(a)(21) Periodic rate.

[[Page 366]]

    1. Basis. The periodic rate may be stated as a percentage (for 
example, 1\1/2\% per month) or as a decimal equivalent (for example, 
.015 monthly). It may be based on any portion of a year the creditor 
chooses. Some creditors use \1/360\ of an annual rate as their periodic 
rate. These creditors:

    [sbull] May disclose a \1/360\ rate as a daily periodic rate, 
without further explanation, if it is in fact only applied 360 days per 
year. But if the creditor applies that rate for 365 days, the creditor 
must note that fact and, of course, disclose the true annual percentage 
rate.
    [sbull] Would have to apply the rate to the balance to disclose the 
annual percentage rate with the degree of accuracy required in the 
regulation (that is, within \1/8\ of 1 percentage point of the rate 
based on the actual 365 days in the year).

    2. Transaction charges. Periodic rate does not include initial one-
time transaction charges, even if the charge is computed as a percentage 
of the transaction amount.
    2(a)(22) Person.
    1. Joint ventures. A joint venture is an organization and is 
therefore a person.
    2. Attorneys. An attorney and his or her client are considered to be 
the same person for purposes of this regulation when the attorney is 
acting within the scope of the attorney-client relationship with regard 
to a particular transaction.
    3. Trusts. A trust and its trustee are considered to be the same 
person for purposes of this regulation.
    2(a)(23) Prepaid finance charge.
    1. General. Prepaid finance charges must be taken into account under 
Sec.  226.18(b) in computing the disclosed amount financed, and must be 
disclosed if the creditor provides an itemization of the amount financed 
under Sec.  226.18(c).
    2. Examples. Common examples of prepaid finance charges include:

[sbull] Buyer's points.
[sbull] Service fees.
[sbull] Loan fees.
[sbull] Finder's fees.
[sbull] Loan guarantee insurance.
[sbull] Credit investigation fees.

However, in order for these or any other finance charges to be 
considered prepaid, they must be either paid separately in cash or check 
or withheld from the proceeds. Prepaid finance charges include any 
portion of the finance charge paid prior to or at closing or settlement.

    3. Exclusions. Add-on and discount finance charges are not prepaid 
finance charges for purposes of this regulation. Finance charges are not 
prepaid merely because they are precomputed, whether or not a portion of 
the charge will be rebated to the consumer upon prepayment. See the 
commentary to Sec.  226.18(b).
    4. Allocation of lump-sum payments. In a credit sale transaction 
involving a lump-sum payment by the consumer and a discount or other 
item that is a finance charge under Sec.  226.4, the discount or other 
item is a prepaid finance charge to the extent the lump-sum payment is 
not applied to the cash price. For example, a seller sells property to a 
consumer for $10,000, requires the consumer to pay $3,000 at the time of 
the purchase, and finances the remainder as a closed-end credit 
transaction. The cash price of the property is $9,000. The seller is the 
creditor in the transaction and therefore the $1,000 difference between 
the credit and cash prices (the discount) is a finance charge. (See the 
commentary to Sec. Sec.  226.4(b)(9) and 226.4(c)(5).) If the creditor 
applies the entire $3,000 to the cash price and adds the $1,000 finance 
charge to the interest on the $6,000 to arrive at the total finance 
charge, all of the $3,000 lump-sum payment is a downpayment and the 
discount is not a prepaid finance charge. However, if the creditor only 
applies $2,000 of the lump-sum payment to the cash price, then $2,000 of 
the $3,000 is a downpayment and the $1,000 discount is a prepaid finance 
charge.

    2(a)(24) Residential mortgage transaction.
    1. Relation to other sections. This term is important in six 
provisions in the regulation:

[sbull] Section 226.4(c)(7)--exclusions from the finance charge.
[sbull] Section 226.15(f)--exemption from the right of rescission.
[sbull] Section 226.18(q)--whether or not the obligation is assumable.
[sbull] Section 226.19--special timing rules.
[sbull] Section 226.20(b)--disclosure requirements for assumptions.
[sbull] Section 226.23(f)--exemption from the right of rescission.

    2. Lien status. The definition is not limited to first lien 
transactions. For example, a consumer might assume a paid-down first 
mortgage (or borrow part of the purchase price) and borrow the balance 
of the purchase price from a creditor who takes a second mortgage. The 
second mortgage transaction is a residential mortgage transaction if the 
dwelling purchased is the consumer's principal residence.
    3. Principal dwelling. A consumer can only have one principal 
dwelling at a time. Thus, a vacation or other second home would not be a 
principal dwelling. However, if a consumer buys or builds a new dwelling 
that will become the consumer's principal dwelling within a year or upon 
the completion of construction, the new dwelling is considered the 
principal dwelling for purposes of applying this definition to a 
particular transaction. See the commentary to Sec. Sec.  226.15(a) and 
226.23(a).
    4. Construction financing. If a transaction meets the definition of 
a residential mortgage transaction and the creditor chooses to

[[Page 367]]

disclose it as several transactions under Sec.  226.17(c)(6), each one 
is considered to be a residential mortgage transaction, even if 
different creditors are involved. For example:
    [sbull] The creditor makes a construction loan to finance the 
initial construction of the consumer's principal dwelling, and the loan 
will be disbursed in 5 advances. The creditor gives 6 sets of 
disclosures (5 for the construction phase and 1 for the permanent 
phase). Each one is a residential mortgage transaction.
    [sbull] One creditor finances the initial construction of the 
consumer's principal dwelling and another creditor makes a loan to 
satisfy the construction loan and provide permanent financing. Both 
transactions are residential mortgage transactions.
    5. Acquisition. i. A residential mortgage transaction finances the 
acquisition of a consumer's principal dwelling. The term does not 
include a transaction involving a consumer's principal dwelling if the 
consumer had previously purchased and acquired some interest to the 
dwelling, even though the consumer had not acquired full legal title.
    ii. Examples of new transactions involving a previously acquired 
dwelling include the financing of a balloon payment due under a land 
sale contract and an extension of credit made to a joint owner of 
property to buy out the other joint owner's interest. In these 
instances, disclosures are not required under Sec.  226.18(q) or Sec.  
226.19(a) (assumability policies and early disclosures for residential 
mortgage transactions). However, the rescission rules of Sec. Sec.  
226.15 and 226.23 do apply to these new transactions.
    iii. In other cases, the disclosure and rescission rules do not 
apply. For example, where a buyer enters into a written agreement with 
the creditor holding the seller's mortgage, allowing the buyer to assume 
the mortgage, if the buyer had previously purchased the property and 
agreed with the seller to make the mortgage payments, Sec.  226.20(b) 
does not apply (assumptions involving residential mortgages).
    6. Multiple purpose transactions. A transaction meets the definition 
of this section if any part of the loan proceeds will be used to finance 
the acquisition or initial construction of the consumer's principal 
dwelling. For example, a transaction to finance the initial construction 
of the consumer's principal dwelling is a residential mortgage 
transaction even if a portion of the funds will be disbursed directly to 
the consumer or used to satisfy a loan for the purchase of the land on 
which the dwelling will be built.
    7. Construction on previously acquired vacant land. A residential 
mortgage transaction includes a loan to finance the construction of a 
consumer's principal dwelling on a vacant lot previously acquired by the 
consumer.

    2(a)(25) Security interest.
    1. Threshold test. The threshold test is whether a particular 
interest in property is recognized as a security interest under 
applicable law. The regulation does not determine whether a particular 
interest is a security interest under applicable law. If the creditor is 
unsure whether a particular interest is a security interest under 
applicable law (for example, if statutes and case law are either silent 
or inconclusive on the issue), the creditor may at its option consider 
such interests as security interests for Truth in Lending purposes. 
However, the regulation and the commentary do exclude specific 
interests, such as after-acquired property and accessories, from the 
scope of the definition regardless of their categorization under 
applicable law, and these named exclusions may not be disclosed as 
security interests under the regulation. (But see the discussion of 
exclusions elsewhere in the commentary to Sec.  226.2(a)(25).)
    2. Exclusions. The general definition of security interest excludes 
three groups of interests: Incidental interests, interests in after-
acquired property, and interests that arise solely by operation of law. 
These interests may not be disclosed with the disclosures required under 
Sec.  226.18, but the creditor is not precluded from preserving these 
rights elsewhere in the contract documents, or invoking and enforcing 
such rights, if it is otherwise lawful to do so. If the creditor is 
unsure whether a particular interest is one of the excluded interests, 
the creditor may, at its option, consider such interests as security 
interests for Truth in Lending purposes.
    3. Incidental interests. Incidental interests in property that are 
not security interests include, among other things:

    [sbull] Assignment of rents.
    [sbull] Right to condemnation proceeds.
    [sbull] Interests in accessories and replacements.
    [sbull] Interests in escrow accounts, such as for taxes and 
insurance.
    [sbull] Waiver of homestead or personal property rights.

    The notion of an incidental interest does not encompass an explicit 
security interest in an insurance policy if that policy is the primary 
collateral for the transaction--for example, in an insurance premium 
financing transaction.
    4. Operation of law. Interests that arise solely by operation of law 
are excluded from the general definition. Also excluded are interests 
arising by operation of law that are merely repeated or referred to in 
the contract. However, if the creditor has an interest that arises by 
operation of law, such as a vendor's lien, and takes an independent 
security interest in the same property, such as a UCC security interest, 
the latter interest is a disclosable security interest unless otherwise 
provided.

[[Page 368]]

    5. Rescission rules. Security interests that arise solely by 
operation of law are security interests for purposes of rescission. 
Examples of such interests are mechanics' and materialmen's liens.
    6. Specificity of disclosure. A creditor need not separately 
disclose multiple security interests that it may hold in the same 
collateral. The creditor need only disclose that the transaction is 
secured by the collateral, even when security interests from prior 
transactions remain of record and a new security interest is taken in 
connection with the transaction. In disclosing the fact that the 
transaction is secured by the collateral, the creditor also need not 
disclose how the security interest arose. For example, in a closed-end 
credit transaction, a rescission notice need not specifically state that 
a new security interest is ``acquired'' or an existing security interest 
is ``retained'' in the transaction.
    The acquisition or retention of a security interest in the 
consumer's principal dwelling instead may be disclosed in a rescission 
notice with a general statement such as the following: ``Your home is 
the security for the new transaction.''
    2(b) Rules of construction.
    1. Footnotes. Footnotes are used extensively in the regulation to 
provide special exceptions and more detailed explanations and examples. 
Material that appears in a footnote has the same legal weight as 
material in the body of the regulation.

                               References

    Statute: Section 103.
    Other sections: None.
    Other regulations: Regulation E (12 CFR 205.2(d)).
    Previous regulation: Sections 226.2, 226.8, and 226.9.
    1981 changes: Section 226.2 implements amended section 103 of the 
act. Separate definitions for comparative index of credit cost, 
discount, organization, period, real property, real property 
transaction, regular price, and surcharge have been deleted. The 
definitions relating specifically to consumer leases are now found in 
the separate consumer leasing regulation, Regulation M (12 CFR Part 
213).
    Several terms are now defined elsewhere in the regulation or 
commentary rather than in Sec.  226.2. For example, finance charge is 
described and explained in Sec.  226.4, and agricultural purpose is 
discussed in the commentary to Sec.  226.3. Some terms, such as 
unauthorized use, are now defined as part of the substantive sections to 
which they apply. Other terms previously defined, such as customer and 
organization, are merged into new definitions. Section 226.2 contains 
new definitions for arranger of credit, business day, closed-end credit, 
consumer, consummation, downpayment, prepaid finance charge, and 
residential mortgage transaction.
    The major changes in the definitions are as follows:
    Arranger of credit has a significantly different meaning. It 
reflects the statutory amendment that limits arrangers to those who 
regularly arrange credit extensions for persons who are not themselves 
creditors. This definition was deleted effective October 1, 1982.
    Billing cycle largely restates the prior definition, but requires 
cycles to be regular, and allows the four-day variance to be measured 
from a regular day as well as date. The definition also incorporates an 
interpretation that cycles may be no longer than quarterly.
    Business day is new in the sense that the term previously appeared 
only in a footnote to the rescission provision, but it is now of general 
applicability. The general rule that it is a day when the creditor is 
open for business is new, but the rule for rescission purposes is the 
same as in the previous regulation.
    Cash price now explicitly permits inclusion of various incidental 
charges imposed equally in cash and credit transactions.
    Consumer has a narrower meaning in that guarantors, sureties, and 
endorsers are excluded from the general definition.
    Consumer credit reflects the new statutory exemption for 
agricultural credit.
    Consummation is a significant departure from longstanding 
interpretations of the previous definition. It now focuses only on the 
time the consumer becomes contractually obligated, rather than the time 
the consumer pays a nonrefundable fee or suffers an economic penalty for 
failing to go forward with the credit transaction.
    Credit generally parallels the previous definition, but modifies the 
previous interpretations of the definition by excluding more 
transactions.
    Creditor reflects the statutory amendments to the act that were 
intended to eliminate the problem of multiple creditors in a 
transaction. The regularly standard is still used, but it is now defined 
in terms of the frequency of the credit extensions. The new definition 
also requires that there be a written agreement to pay in more than 4 
installments if no finance charge is imposed. Finally, the obligation 
must be initially payable to a person for that person to be the 
creditor.
    Dwelling reflects the statutory amendment that expanded the scope of 
the definition to include any residential structure, whether or not it 
is real property under state law.
    Open-end credit reflects the amended statutory definition requiring 
that the creditor reasonably contemplate repeated transactions. The new 
definition no longer requires the consumer to have the privilege of 
paying either in installments or in full.

[[Page 369]]

    Periodic rate combines the previous definitions of period and 
periodic rate with clarification in the commentary concerning 
transaction charges and 360-day-year factors.
    Security interest is much narrower than the previous definition. 
Reflecting the legislative history of the simplification amendments, 
incidental interests are expressly excluded from the definition. Except 
for purposes of rescission, interests that arise solely by operation of 
law are also excluded.

                   Section 226.3--Exempt Transactions

    3(a) Business, commercial, agricultural, or organizational credit.
    1. Primary purposes. A creditor must determine in each case if the 
transaction is primarily for an exempt purpose. If some question exists 
as to the primary purpose for a credit extension, the creditor is, of 
course, free to make the disclosures, and the fact that disclosures are 
made under such circumstances is not controlling on the question of 
whether the transaction was exempt.
    2. Factors. In determining whether credit to finance an 
acquisition--such as securities, antiques, or art--is primarily for 
business or commercial purposes (as opposed to a consumer purpose), the 
following factors should be considered:

    [sbull] The relationship of the borrower's primary occupation to the 
acquisition. The more closely related, the more likely it is to be 
business purpose.
    [sbull] The degree to which the borrower will personally manage the 
acquisition. The more personal involvement there is, the more likely it 
is to be business purpose.
    [sbull] The ratio of income from the acquisition to the total income 
of the borrower. The higher the ratio, the more likely it is to be 
business purpose.
    [sbull] The size of the transaction. The larger the transaction, the 
more likely it is to be business purpose.
    [sbull] The borrower's statement of purpose for the loan.
    Examples of business-purpose credit include:

    [sbull] A loan to expand a business, even if it is secured by the 
borrower's residence or personal property.
    [sbull] A loan to improve a principal residence by putting in a 
business office.
    [sbull] A business account used occasionally for consumer purposes.

    Examples of consumer-purpose credit include:

    [sbull] Credit extensions by a company to its employees or agents if 
the loans are used for personal purposes.
    [sbull] A loan secured by a mechanic's tools to pay a child's 
tuition.
    [sbull] A personal account used occasionally for business purposes.

    3. Non-owner-occupied rental property. Credit extended to acquire, 
improve, or maintain rental property (regardless of the number of 
housing units) that is not owner-occupied is deemed to be for business 
purposes. This includes, for example, the acquisition of a warehouse 
that will be leased or a single-family house that will be rented to 
another person to live in. If the owner expects to occupy the property 
for more than 14 days during the coming year, the property cannot be 
considered non-owner-occupied and this special rule will not apply. For 
example, a beach house that the owner will occupy for a month in the 
coming summer and rent out the rest of the year is owner occupied and is 
not governed by this special rule. See Comment 3(a)-4, however, for 
rules relating to owner-occupied rental property.
    4. Owner-occupied rental property. If credit is extended to acquire, 
improve, or maintain rental property that is or will be owner-occupied 
within the coming year, different rules apply:

    [sbull] Credit extended to acquire the rental property is deemed to 
be for business purposes if it contains more than 2 housing units.
    [sbull] Credit extended to improve or maintain the rental property 
is deemed to be for business purposes if it contains more than 4 housing 
units. Since the amended statute defines dwelling to include 1 to 4 
housing units, this rule preserves the right of rescission for credit 
extended for purposes other than acquisition.

    Neither of these rules means that an extension of credit for 
property containing fewer than the requisite number of units is 
necessarily consumer credit. In such cases, the determination of whether 
it is business or consumer credit should be made by considering the 
factors listed in Comment 3(a)-2.
    5. Business credit later refinanced. Business-purpose credit that is 
exempt from the regulation may later be rewritten for consumer purposes. 
Such a transaction is consumer credit requiring disclosures only if the 
existing obligation is satisfied and replaced by a new obligation made 
for consumer purposes undertaken by the same obligor.
    6. Agricultural purpose. An agricultural purpose includes the 
planting, propagating, nurturing, harvesting, catching, storing, 
exhibiting, marketing, transporting, processing, or manufacturing of 
food, beverages (including alcoholic beverages), flowers, trees, 
livestock, poultry, bees, wildlife, fish, or shellfish by a natural 
person engaged in farming, fishing, or growing crops, flowers, trees, 
livestock, poultry, bees, or wildlife. The exemption also applies to a 
transaction involving real property that includes a dwelling (for 
example, the purchase of a farm with a homestead) if the transaction is 
primarily for agricultural purposes.

[[Page 370]]

    7. Organizational credit. The exemption for transactions in which 
the borrower is not a natural person applies, for example, to loans to 
corporations, partnerships, associations, churches, unions, and 
fraternal organizations. The exemption applies regardless of the purpose 
of the credit extension and regardless of the fact that a natural person 
may guarantee or provide security for the credit.
    8. Land trusts. Credit extended for consumer purposes to a land 
trust is considered to be credit extended to a natural person rather 
than credit extended to an organization. In some jurisdictions, a 
financial institution financing a residential real estate transaction 
for an individual uses a land trust mechanism. Title to the property is 
conveyed to the land trust for which the financial institution itself is 
trustee. The underlying installment note is executed by the financial 
institution in its capacity as trustee and payment is secured by a trust 
deed, reflecting title in the financial institution as trustee. In some 
instances, the consumer executes a personal guaranty of the 
indebtedness. The note provides that it is payable only out of the 
property specifically described in the trust deed and that the trustee 
has no personal liability on the note. Assuming the transactions are for 
personal, family, or household purposes, these transactions are subject 
to the regulation since in substance (if not form) consumer credit is 
being extended.
    3(b) Credit over $25,000 not secured by real property or a dwelling.
    1. Coverage. Since a mobile home can be a dwelling under Sec.  
226.2(a)(19), this exemption does not apply to a credit extension 
secured by a mobile home used or expected to be used as the principal 
dwelling of the consumer, even if the credit exceeds $25,000. A loan 
commitment for closed-end credit in excess of $25,000 is exempt even 
though the amounts actually drawn never actually reach $25,000.
    2. Open-end credit. An open-end credit plan is exempt under Sec.  
226.3(b) (unless secured by real property or personal property used or 
expected to be used as the consumer's principal dwelling) if either of 
the following conditions is met:

    [sbull] The creditor makes a firm commitment to lend over $25,000 
with no requirement of additional credit information for any advances.
    [sbull] The initial extension of credit on the line exceeds $25,000.

If a security interest is taken at a later time in any real property, or 
in personal property used or expected to be used as the consumer's 
principal dwelling, the plan would no longer be exempt. The creditor 
must comply with all of the requirements of the regulation including, 
for example, providing the consumer with an initial disclosure 
statement. If the security interest being added is in the consumer's 
principal dwelling, the creditor must also give the consumer the right 
to rescind the security interest. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.15 
concerning the right of rescission.)
    3. Closed-end credit--subsequent changes. A closed-end loan for over 
$25,000 may later be rewritten for $25,000 or less, or a security 
interest in real property or in personal property used or expected to be 
used as the consumer's principal dwelling may be added to an extension 
of credit for over $25,000. Such a transaction is consumer credit 
requiring disclosures only if the existing obligation is satisfied and 
replaced by a new obligation made for consumer purposes undertaken by 
the same obligor. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.23(a)(1) regarding 
the right of rescission when a security interest in a consumer's 
principal dwelling is added to a previously exempt transaction.)
    3(c) Public utility credit.
    1. Examples. Examples of public utility services include:

    [sbull] Gas, water, or electrical services.
    [sbull] Cable television services.
    [sbull] Installation of new sewer lines, water lines, conduits, 
telephone poles, or metering equipment in an area not already serviced 
by the utility.

    The exemption does not apply to extensions of credit, for example:

    [sbull] To purchase appliances such as gas or electric ranges, 
grills, or telephones.
    [sbull] To finance home improvements such as new heating or air 
conditioning systems.

    3(d) Securities or commodities accounts.
    1. Coverage. This exemption does not apply to a transaction with a 
broker registered solely with the state, or to a separate credit 
extension in which the proceeds are used to purchase securities.
    3(e) Home fuel budget plans.
    1. Definition. Under a typical home fuel budget plan, the fuel 
dealer estimates the total cost of fuel for the season, bills the 
customer for an average monthly payment, and makes an adjustment in the 
final payment for any difference between the estimated and the actual 
cost of the fuel. Fuel is delivered as needed, no finance charge is 
assessed, and the customer may withdraw from the plan at any time. Under 
these circumstances, the arrangement is exempt from the regulation, even 
if a charge to cover the billing costs is imposed.
    3(f) Student loan programs.
    1. Coverage. This exemption applies to the Guaranteed Student Loan 
program (administered by the Federal government, State, and private non-
profit agencies), the Auxiliary Loans to Assist Students (also known as 
PLUS) program, and the National Direct Student Loan program.

[[Page 371]]

                               References

    Statute: Sections 103 (s) and (t) and 104.
    Other sections: Section 226.12 (a) and (b).
    Previous regulation: Section 226.3 and Interpretations Sec. Sec.  
226.301 and 226.302.
    1981 changes: The business credit exemption has been expanded to 
include credit for agricultural purposes. The rule of Interpretation 
Sec.  226.302, concerning credit relating to structures containing more 
than 4 housing units, has been modified and somewhat expanded by 
providing more exclusions for transactions involving rental property.
    The exemption for transactions above $25,000 secured by real estate 
has been narrowed; all transactions secured by the consumer's principal 
dwelling (even if not considered real property) are now subject to the 
regulation.
    The public utility exemption now covers the financing of the 
extension of a utility into an area not earlier served by the utility, 
in addition to the financing of services.
    The securities credit exemption has been extended to broker-dealers 
registered with the CFTC as well as the SEC.
    A new exemption has been created for home fuel budget plans.

                      Section 226.4--Finance Charge

    4(a) Definition.
    1. Charges in comparable cash transactions. Charges imposed 
uniformly in cash and credit transactions are not finance charges. In 
determining whether an item is a finance charge, the creditor should 
compare the credit transaction in question with a similar cash 
transaction. A creditor financing the sale of property or services may 
compare charges with those payable in a similar cash transaction by the 
seller of the property or service.
    i. For example, the following items are not finance charges:
    A. Taxes, license fees, or registration fees paid by both cash and 
credit customers.
    B. Discounts that are available to cash and credit customers, such 
as quantity discounts.
    C. Discounts available to a particular group of consumers because 
they meet certain criteria, such as being members of an organization or 
having accounts at a particular financial institution. This is the case 
even if an individual must pay cash to obtain the discount, provided 
that credit customers who are members of the group and do not qualify 
for the discount pay no more than the nonmember cash customers.
    D. Charges for a service policy, auto club membership, or policy of 
insurance against latent defects offered to or required of both cash and 
credit customers for the same price.
    ii. In contrast, the following items are finance charges:
    A. Inspection and handling fees for the staged disbursement of 
construction loan proceeds.
    B. Fees for preparing a Truth in Lending disclosure statement, if 
permitted by law (for example, the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act 
prohibits such charges in certain transactions secured by real 
property).
    C. Charges for a required maintenance or service contract imposed 
only in a credit transaction.
    iii. If the charge in a credit transaction exceeds the charge 
imposed in a comparable cash transaction, only the difference is a 
finance charge. For example:
    A. If an escrow agent is used in both cash and credit sales of real 
estate and the agent's charge is $100 in a cash transaction and $150 in 
a credit transaction, only $50 is a finance charge.
    2. Costs of doing business. Charges absorbed by the creditor as a 
cost of doing business are not finance charges, even though the creditor 
may take such costs into consideration in determining the interest rate 
to be charged or the cash price of the property or service sold. 
However, if the creditor separately imposes a charge on the consumer to 
cover certain costs, the charge is a finance charge if it otherwise 
meets the definition. For example:

    [sbull] A discount imposed on a credit obligation when it is 
assigned by a seller-creditor to another party is not a finance charge 
as long as the discount is not separately imposed on the consumer. (See 
Sec.  226.4(b)(6).)
    [sbull] A tax imposed by a state or other governmental body on a 
creditor is not a finance charge if the creditor absorbs the tax as a 
cost of doing business and does not separately impose the tax on the 
consumer. (For additional discussion of the treatment of taxes, see 
other commentary to Sec.  226.4(a).)

    3. Forfeitures of interest. If the creditor reduces the interest 
rate it pays or stops paying interest on the consumer's deposit account 
or any portion of it for the term of a credit transaction (including, 
for example, an overdraft on a checking account or a loan secured by a 
certificate of deposit), the interest lost is a finance charge. (See the 
commentary to Sec.  226.4(c)(6).) For example:

    [sbull] A consumer borrows $5,000 for 90 days and secures it with a 
$10,000 certificate of deposit paying 15% interest. The creditor charges 
the consumer an interest rate of 6% on the loan and stops paying 
interest on $5,000 of the $10,000 certificate for the term of the loan. 
The interest lost is a finance charge and must be reflected in the 
annual percentage rate on the loan.

    However, the consumer must be entitled to the interest that is not 
paid in order for the lost interest to be a finance charge. For example:


[[Page 372]]


    [sbull] A consumer wishes to buy from a financial institution a 
$10,000 certificate of deposit paying 15% interest but has only $4,000. 
The financial institution offers to lend the consumer $6,000 at an 
interest rate of 6%, but will pay the 15% interest only on the amount of 
the consumer's deposit, $4,000. The creditor's failure to pay interest 
on the $6,000 does not result in an additional finance charge on the 
extension of credit, provided the consumer is entitled by the deposit 
agreement with the financial institution to interest only on the amount 
of the consumer's deposit.
    [sbull] A consumer enters into a combined time deposit/credit 
agreement with a financial institution that establishes a time deposit 
account and an open-end line of credit. The line of credit may be used 
to borrow against the funds in the time deposit. The agreement provides 
for an interest rate on any credit extension of, for example, 1%. In 
addition, the agreement states that the creditor will pay 0% interest on 
the amount of the time deposit that corresponds to the amount of the 
credit extension(s). The interest that is not paid on the time deposit 
by the financial institution is not a finance charge (and therefore does 
not affect the annual percentage rate computation).

    4. Treatment of fees for use of automated teller machines. Any 
charge imposed on a cardholder by a card issuer for the use of an 
automated teller machine (ATM) to obtain a cash advance (whether in a 
proprietary, shared, interchange, or other system) is not a finance 
charge to the extent that it does not exceed the charge imposed by the 
card issuer on its cardholders for using the ATM to withdraw cash from a 
consumer asset account, such as a checking or savings account. (See the 
commentary to Sec.  226.6(b).)
    5. Taxes. i. Generally, a tax imposed by a state or other 
governmental body solely on a creditor is a finance charge if the 
creditor separately imposes the charge on the consumer.
    ii. In contrast, a tax is not a finance charge (even if the tax is 
collected by the creditor) if applicable law imposes the tax:
    A. Solely on the consumer;
    B. On the creditor and the consumer jointly;
    C. On the credit transaction, without indicating which party is 
liable for the tax; or
    D. On the creditor, if applicable law directs or authorizes the 
creditor to pass the tax on to the consumer. (For purposes of this 
section, if applicable law is silent as to passing on the tax, the law 
is deemed not to authorize passing it on.)
    iii. For example, a stamp tax, property tax, intangible tax, or any 
other state or local tax imposed on the consumer, or on the credit 
transaction, is not a finance charge even if the tax is collected by the 
creditor.
    iv. In addition, a tax is not a finance charge if it is excluded 
from the finance charge by an other provision of the regulation or 
commentary (for example, if the tax is imposed uniformly in cash and 
credit transactions).

    4(a)(1) Charges by third parties.
    1. Choosing the provider of a required service. An example of a 
third-party charge included in the finance charge is the cost of 
required mortgage insurance, even if the consumer is allowed to choose 
the insurer.
    2. Annuities associated with reverse mortgages. Some creditors offer 
annuities in connection with a reverse mortgage transaction. The amount 
of the premium is a finance charge if the creditor requires the purchase 
of the annuity incident to the credit. Examples include the following:
    i. The credit documents reflect the purchase of an annuity from a 
specific provider or providers.
    ii. The creditor assesses an additional charge on consumers who do 
not purchase an annuity from a specific provider.
    iii. The annuity is intended to replace in whole or in part the 
creditor's payments to the consumer either immediately or at some future 
date.

    4(a)(2) Special rule; closing agent charges.
    1. General. This rule applies to charges by a third party serving as 
the closing agent for the particular loan. An example of a closing agent 
charge included in the finance charge is a courier fee where the 
creditor requires the use of a courier.
    2. Required closing agent. If the creditor requires the use of a 
closing agent, fees charged by the closing agent are included in the 
finance charge only if the creditor requires the particular service, 
requires the imposition of the charge, or retains a portion of the 
charge. Fees charged by a third-party closing agent may be otherwise 
excluded from the finance charge under Sec.  226.4. For example, a fee 
that would be paid in a comparable cash transaction may be excluded 
under Sec.  226.4(a). A charge for conducting or attending a closing is 
a finance charge and may be excluded only if the charge is included in 
and is incidental to a lump-sum closing fee excluded under Sec.  
226.4(c)(7).

    4(a)(3) Special rule; mortgage broker fees.
    1. General. A fee charged by a mortgage broker is excluded from the 
finance charge if it is the type of fee that is also excluded when 
charged by the creditor. For example, to exclude an application fee from 
the finance charge under Sec.  226.4(c)(1), a mortgage broker must 
charge the fee to all applicants for credit, whether or not credit is 
extended.
    2. Coverage. This rule applies to charges paid by consumers to a 
mortgage broker in connection with a consumer credit transaction secured 
by real property or a dwelling.

[[Page 373]]

    3. Compensation by lender. The rule requires all mortgage broker 
fees to be included in the finance charge. Creditors sometimes 
compensate mortgage brokers under a separate arrangement with those 
parties. Creditors may draw on amounts paid by the consumer, such as 
points or closing costs, to fund their payment to the broker. 
Compensation paid by a creditor to a mortgage broker under an agreement 
is not included as a separate component of a consumer's total finance 
charge (although this compensation may be reflected in the finance 
charge if it comes from amounts paid by the consumer to the creditor 
that are finance charges, such as points and interest).
    4(b) Examples of finance charges.
    1. Relationship to other provisions. Charges or fees shown as 
examples of finance charges in Sec.  226.4(b) may be excludable under 
Sec.  226.4(c), (d), or (e). For example:

    [sbull] Premiums for credit life insurance, shown as an example of a 
finance charge under Sec.  226.4(b)(7), may be excluded if the 
requirements of Sec.  226.4(d)(1) are met.
    [sbull] Appraisal fees mentioned in Sec.  226.4(b)(4) are excluded 
for real property or residential mortgage transactions under Sec.  
226.4(c)(7).

    Paragraph 4(b)(2).
    1. Checking account charges. A checking or transaction account 
charge imposed in connection with a credit feature is a finance charge 
under Sec.  226.4(b)(2) to the extent the charge exceeds the charge for 
a similar account without a credit feature. If a charge for an account 
with a credit feature does not exceed the charge for an account without 
a credit feature, the charge is not a finance charge under Sec.  
226.4(b)(2). To illustrate:
    i. A $5 service charge is imposed on an account with an overdraft 
line of credit (where the institution has agreed in writing to pay an 
overdraft), while a $3 service charge is imposed on an account without a 
credit feature; the $2 difference is a finance charge. (If the 
difference is not related to account activity, however, it may be 
excludable as a participation fee. See the commentary to Sec.  
226.4(c)(4).)
    ii. A $5 service charge is imposed for each item that results in an 
overdraft on an account with an overdraft line of credit, while a $25 
service charge is imposed for paying or returning each item on a similar 
account without a credit feature; the $5 charge is not a finance charge.

    Paragraph 4(b)(3).
    1. Assumption fees. The assumption fees mentioned in Sec.  
226.4(b)(3) are finance charges only when the assumption occurs and the 
fee is imposed on the new buyer. The assumption fee is a finance charge 
in the new buyer's transaction.
    Paragraph 4(b)(5).
    1. Credit loss insurance. Common examples of the insurance against 
credit loss mentioned in Sec.  226.4(b)(5) are mortgage guaranty 
insurance, holder in due course insurance, and repossession insurance. 
Such premiums must be included in the finance charge only for the period 
that the creditor requires the insurance to be maintained.
    2. Residual value insurance. Where a creditor requires a consumer to 
maintain residual value insurance or where the creditor is a beneficiary 
of a residual value insurance policy written in connection with an 
extension of credit (as is the case in some forms of automobile balloon 
payment financing, for example), the premiums for the insurance must be 
included in the finance charge for the period that the insurance is to 
be maintained. If a creditor pays for residual value insurance and 
absorbs the payment as a cost of doing business, such costs are not 
considered finance charges. (See comment 4(a)-2.)
    Paragraphs 4(b) (7) and (8).
    1. Pre-existing insurance policy. The insurance discussed in Sec.  
226.4(b) (7) and (8) does not include an insurance policy (such as a 
life or an automobile collision insurance policy) that is already owned 
by the consumer, even if the policy is assigned to or otherwise made 
payable to the creditor to satisfy an insurance requirement. Such a 
policy is not ``written in connection with'' the transaction, as long as 
the insurance was not purchased for use in that credit extension, since 
it was previously owned by the consumer.
    2. Insurance written in connection with a transaction. Insurance 
sold after consummation in closed-end credit transactions or after the 
opening of a plan in open-end credit transactions is not ``written in 
connection with'' the credit transaction if the insurance is written 
because of the consumer's default (for example, by failing to obtain or 
maintain required property insurance) or because the consumer requests 
insurance after consummation or the opening of a plan (although credit 
sale disclosures may be required for the insurance sold after 
consummation if it is financed).
    3. Substitution of life insurance. The premium for a life insurance 
policy purchased and assigned to satisfy a credit life insurance 
requirement must be included in the finance charge, but only to the 
extent of the cost of the credit life insurance if purchased from the 
creditor or the actual cost of the policy (if that is less than the cost 
of the insurance available from the creditor). If the creditor does not 
offer the required insurance, the premium to be included in the finance 
charge is the cost of a policy of insurance of the type, amount, and 
term required by the creditor.
    4. Other insurance. Fees for required insurance not of the types 
described in Sec.  226.4(b) (7) and (8) are finance charges and are not 
excludable. For example:
    [sbull] The premium for a hospitalization insurance policy, if it is 
required to be purchased

[[Page 374]]

only in a credit transaction, is a finance charge.

    Paragraph 4(b)(9).
    1. Discounts for payment by other than credit. The discounts to 
induce payment by other than credit mentioned in Sec.  226.4(b)(9) 
include, for example, the following situation:

    [sbull] The seller of land offers individual tracts for $10,000 
each. If the purchaser pays cash, the price is $9,000, but if the 
purchaser finances the tract with the seller the price is $10,000. The 
$1,000 difference is a finance charge for those who buy the tracts on 
credit.

    2. Exception for cash discounts. Discounts offered to induce 
consumers to pay for property or services by cash, check, or other means 
not involving the use of either an open-end credit plan or a credit card 
(whether open-end or closed-end credit is extended on the card) may be 
excluded from the finance charge under section 167(b) of the Act (as 
amended by Pub. L. 97-25, July 27, 1981). The discount may be in 
whatever amount the seller desires, either as a percentage of the 
regular price (as defined in section 103(z) of the Act, as amended) or a 
dollar amount. This provision applies only to transactions involving an 
open-end credit plan or a credit card. The merchant must offer the 
discount to prospective buyers whether or not they are cardholders or 
members of the open-end credit plan. The merchant may, however, make 
other distinctions. For example:

    [sbull] The merchant may limit the discount to payment by cash, and 
not offer it for payment by check or by use of a debit card.
    [sbull] The merchant may establish a discount plan that allows a 15% 
discount for payment by cash, a 10% discount for payment by check, and a 
5% discount for payment by a particular credit card. None of these 
discounts is a finance charge.

    Section 171(c) of the Act excludes section 167(b) discounts from 
treatment as a finance charge or other charge for credit under any state 
usury or disclosure laws.
    3. Determination of the regular price. The regular price is critical 
in determining whether the difference between the price charged to cash 
customers and credit customers is a discount or a surcharge, as these 
terms are defined in amended section 103 of the Act. The regular price 
is defined in section 103 of the Act as--

    . . . the tag or posted price charged for the property or service if 
a single price is tagged or posted, or the price charged for the 
property or service when payment is made by use of an open-end credit 
account or a credit card if either (1) no price is tagged or posted, or 
(2) two prices are tagged or posted. . . .

    For example, in the sale of motor vehicle fuel, the tagged or posted 
price is the price displayed at the pump. As a result, the higher price 
(the open-end credit or credit card price) must be displayed at the 
pump, either alone or along with the cash price. Service station 
operators may designate separate pumps or separate islands as being for 
either cash or credit purchases and display only the appropriate prices 
at the various pumps. If a pump is capable of displaying on its meter 
either a cash or a credit price depending upon the consumer's means of 
payment, both the cash price and the credit price must be displayed at 
the pump. A service station operator may display the cash price of fuel 
by itself on a curb sign, as long as the sign clearly indicates that the 
price is limited to cash purchases.
    4(b)(10) Debt cancellation fees.
    1. Definition. Debt cancellation coverage provides for payment or 
satisfaction of all or part of a debt when a specified event occurs. The 
term includes guaranteed automobile protection or ``GAP'' agreements, 
which pay or satisfy the remaining debt after property insurance 
benefits are exhausted.
    4(c) Charges excluded from the finance charge.
    Paragraph 4(c)(1).
    1. Application fees. An application fee that is excluded from the 
finance charge is a charge to recover the costs associated with 
processing applications for credit. The fee may cover the costs of 
services such as credit reports, credit investigations, and appraisals. 
The creditor is free to impose the fee in only certain of its loan 
programs, such as mortgage loans, However, if the fee is to be excluded 
from the finance charge under Sec.  226.4(c)(1), it must be charged to 
all applicants, not just to applicants who are approved or who actually 
receive credit.

    Paragraph 4(c)(2).
    1. Late payment charges. Late payment charges can be excluded from 
the finance charge under Sec.  226.4(c)(2) whether or not the person 
imposing the charge continues to extend credit on the account or 
continues to provide property or services to the consumer. In 
determining whether a charge is for actual unanticipated late payment on 
a 30-day account, for example, factors to be considered include:
    [sbull] The terms of the account. For example, is the consumer 
required by the account terms to pay the account balance in full each 
month? If not, the charge may be a finance charge.
    [sbull] The practices of the creditor in handling the accounts. For 
example, regardless of the terms of the account, does the creditor allow 
consumers to pay the accounts over a period of time without demanding 
payment in full or taking other action to collect? If no effort is made 
to collect the full amount due, the charge may be a finance charge.

[[Page 375]]

    Section 226.4(c)(2) applies to late payment charges imposed for 
failure to make payments as agreed, as well as failure to pay an account 
in full when due.
    2. Other excluded charges. Charges for ``delinquency, default, or a 
similar occurrence'' include, for example, charges for reinstatement of 
credit privileges or for summitting as payment a check that is later 
returned unpaid.

    Paragraph 4(c)(3).
    1. Assessing interest on an overdraft balance. A charge on an 
overdraft balance computed by applying a rate of interest to the amount 
of the overdraft is not a finance charge, even though the consumer 
agrees to the charge in the account agreement, unless the financial 
institution agrees in writing that it will pay such items.

    Paragraph 4(c)(4).
    1. Participation fees--periodic basis. The participation fees 
mentioned in Sec.  226.4(c)(4) do not necessarily have to be formal 
membership fees, nor are they limited to credit card plans. The 
provision applies to any credit plan in which payment of a fee is a 
condition of access to the plan itself, but it does not apply to fees 
imposed separately on individual closed-end transactions. The fee may be 
charged on a monthly, annual, or other periodic basis; a one-time, non-
recurring fee imposed at the time an account is opened is not a fee that 
is charged on a periodic basis, and may not be treated as a 
participation fee.
    2. Participation fees--exclusions. Minimum monthly charges, charges 
for non-use of a credit card, and other charges based on either account 
activity or the amount of credit available under the plan are not 
excluded from the finance charge by Sec.  226.4(c)(4). Thus, for 
example, a fee that is charged and then refunded to the consumer based 
on the extent to which the consumer uses the credit available would be a 
finance charge. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.4(b)(2). Also, see 
comment 14(c)-7 for treatment of certain types of fees excluded in 
determining the annual percentage rate for the periodic statement.)

    Paragraph 4(c)(5).
    1. Seller's points. The seller's points mentioned in Sec.  
226.4(c)(5) include any charges imposed by the creditor upon the non-
creditor seller of property for providing credit to the buyer or for 
providing credit on certain terms. These charges are excluded from the 
finance charge even if they are passed on to the buyer, for example, in 
the form of a higher sales price. Seller's points are frequently 
involved in real estate transactions guaranteed or insured by 
governmental agencies. A commitment fee paid by a non-creditor seller 
(such as a real estate developer) to the creditor should be treated as 
seller's points. Buyer's points (that is, points charged to the buyer by 
the creditor), however, are finance charges.
    2. Other seller-paid amounts. Mortgage insurance premiums and other 
finance charges are sometimes paid at or before consummation or 
settlement on the borrower's behalf by a noncreditor seller. The 
creditor should treat the payment made by the seller as seller's points 
and exclude it from the finance charge if, based on the seller's 
payment, the consumer is not legally bound to the creditor for the 
charge. A creditor who gives disclosures before the payment has been 
made should base them on the best information reasonably available.

    Paragraph 4(c)(6).
    1. Lost interest. Certain federal and state laws mandate a 
percentage differential between the interest rate paid on a deposit and 
the rate charged on a loan secured by that deposit. In some situations 
because of usury limits the creditor must reduce the interest rate paid 
on the deposit and, as a result, the consumer loses some of the interest 
that would otherwise have been earned. Under Sec.  226.4(c)(6), such 
lost interest need not be included in the finance charge. This rule 
applies only to an interest reduction imposed because a rate 
differential is required by law and a usury limit precludes compliance 
by any other means. If the creditor imposes a differential that exceeds 
that required, only the lost interest attributable to the excess amount 
is a finance charge. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.4(a).)

    Paragraph 4(c)(7).
    1. Real estate or residential mortgage transaction charges. The list 
of charges in Sec.  226.4(c)(7) applies both to residential mortgage 
transactions (which may include, for example, the purchase of a mobile 
home) and to other transactions secured by real estate. The fees are 
excluded from the finance charge even if the services for which the fees 
are imposed are performed by the creditor's employees rather than by a 
third party. In addition, the cost of verifying or confirming 
information connected to the item is also excluded. For example, credit 
report fees cover not only the cost of the report, but also the cost of 
verifying information in the report. In all cases, charges excluded 
under Sec.  226.4(c)(7) must be bona fide and reasonable.
    2. Lump sum charges. If a lump sum charged for several services 
includes a charge that is not excludable, a portion of the total should 
be allocated to that service and included in the finance charge. 
However, a lump sum charged for conducting or attending a closing (for 
example, by a lawyer or a title company) is excluded from the finance 
charge if the charge is primarily for services related to items listed 
in Sec.  226.4(c)(7) (for example, reviewing or completing documents), 
even if other incidental services such as explaining various documents 
or disbursing funds for

[[Page 376]]

the parties are performed. The entire charge is excluded even if a fee 
for the incidental services would be a finance charge if it were imposed 
separately.
    3. Charges assessed during the loan term. Real estate or residential 
mortgage transaction charges excluded under Sec.  226.4(c)(7) are those 
charges imposed solely in connection with the initial decision to grant 
credit. This would include, for example, a fee to search for tax liens 
on the property or to determine if flood insurance is required. The 
exclusion does not apply to fees for services to be performed 
periodically during the loan term, regardless of when the fee is 
collected. For example, a fee for one or more determinations during the 
loan term of the current tax lien status or flood insurance requirements 
is a finance charge, regardless of whether the fee is imposed at 
closing, or when the service is performed. If a creditor is uncertain 
about what portion of a fee to be paid at consummation or loan closing 
is related to the initial decision to grant credit, the entire fee may 
be treated as a finance charge.

    4(d) Insurance and debt cancellation coverage.
    1. General. Section 226.4(d) permits insurance premiums and charges 
and debt-cancellation charges to be excluded from the finance charge. 
The required disclosures must be made in writing. The rules on location 
of insurance and debt-cancellation disclosures for closed-end 
transactions are in Sec.  226.17(a). For purposes of Sec.  226.4(d), all 
references to insurance also include debt cancellation coverage unless 
the context indicates otherwise.
    2. Timing of disclosures. If disclosures are given early, for 
example under Sec.  226.17(f) or Sec.  226.19(a), the creditor need not 
redisclose if the actual premium is different at the time of 
consummation. If insurance disclosures are not given at the time of 
early disclosure and insurance is in fact written in connection with the 
transaction, the disclosures under Sec.  226.4(d) must be made in order 
to exclude the premiums from the finance charge.
    3. Premium rate increases. The creditor should disclose the premium 
amount based on the rates currently in effect and need not designate it 
as an estimate even if the premium rates may increase. An increase in 
insurance rates after consummation of a closed-end credit transaction or 
during the life of an open-end credit plan does not require redisclosure 
in order to exclude the additional premium from treatment as a finance 
charge.
    4. Unit-cost disclosures. i. Open-end credit. The premium or fee for 
insurance or debt cancellation for the initial term of coverage may be 
disclosed on a unit-cost basis in open-end credit transactions. The cost 
per unit should be based on the initial term of coverage, unless one of 
the options under comment 4(d)-12 is available.
    ii. Closed-end credit. One of the transactions for which unit-cost 
disclosures (such as 50 cents per year for each $100 of the amount 
financed) may be used in place of the total insurance premium involves a 
particular kind of insurance plan. For example, a consumer with a 
current indebtedness of $8,000 is covered by a plan of credit life 
insurance coverage with a maximum of $10,000. The consumer requests an 
additional $4,000 loan to be covered by the same insurance plan. Since 
the $4,000 loan exceeds, in part, the maximum amount of indebtedness 
that can be covered by the plan, the creditor may properly give the 
insurance cost disclosures on the $4,000 loan on a unit-cost basis.
    5. Required credit life insurance. Credit life, accident, health, or 
loss-of-income insurance must be voluntary in order for the premium or 
charges to be excluded from the finance charge. Whether the insurance is 
in fact required or optional is a factual question. If the insurance is 
required, the premiums must be included in the finance charge, whether 
the insurance is purchased from the creditor or from a third party. If 
the consumer is required to elect one of several options--such as to 
purchase credit life insurance, or to assign an existing life insurance 
policy, or to pledge security such as a certificate of deposit--and the 
consumer purchases the credit life insurance policy, the premium must be 
included in the finance charge. (If the consumer assigns a preexisting 
policy or pledges security instead, no premium is included in the 
finance charge. The security interest would be disclosed under Sec.  
226.6(c) or Sec.  226.18(m). See the commentary to Sec.  226.4(b) (7) 
and (8).)
    6. Other types of voluntary insurance. Insurance is not credit life, 
accident, health, or loss-of-income insurance if the creditor or the 
credit account of the consumer is not the beneficiary of the insurance 
coverage. If such insurance is not required by the creditor as an 
incident to or a condition of credit, it is not covered by Sec.  226.4.
    7. Signatures. If the creditor offers a number of insurance options 
under Sec.  226.4(d), the creditor may provide a means for the consumer 
to sign or initial for each option, or it may provide for a single 
authorizing signature or initial with the options selected designated by 
some other means, such as a check mark. The insurance authorization may 
be signed or initialed by any consumer, as defined in Sec.  
226.2(a)(11), or by an authorized user on a credit card account.
    8. Property insurance. To exclude property insurance premiums or 
charges from the finance charge, the creditor must allow the consumer to 
choose the insurer and disclose that fact. This disclosure must be made 
whether or not the property insurance is available from or through the 
creditor. The requirement that an option be given does not

[[Page 377]]

require that the insurance be readily available from other sources. The 
premium or charge must be disclosed only if the consumer elects to 
purchase the insurance from the creditor; in such a case, the creditor 
must also disclose the term of the property insurance coverage if it is 
less than the term of the obligation.
    9. Single interest insurance. Blanket and specific single interest 
coverage are treated the same for purposes of the regulation. A charge 
for either type of single interest insurance may be excluded from the 
finance charge if:
    [sbull] The insurer waives any right of subrogation.
    [sbull] The other requirements of Sec.  226.4(d)(2) are met. This 
includes, of course, giving the consumer the option of obtaining the 
insurance from a person of the consumer's choice. The creditor need not 
ascertain whether the consumer is able to purchase the insurance from 
someone else.

    10. Single-interest insurance defined. The term single-interest 
insurance as used in the regulation refers only to the types of coverage 
traditionally included in the term vendor's single-interest insurance 
(or VSI), that is, protection of tangible property against normal 
property damage, concealment, confiscation, conversion, embezzlement, 
and skip. Some comprehensive insurance policies may include a variety of 
additional coverages, such as repossession insurance and holder-in-due-
course insurance. These types of coverage do not constitute single-
interest insurance for purposes of the regulation, and premiums for them 
do not qualify for exclusion from the finance charge under Sec.  
226.4(d). If a policy that is primarily VSI also provides coverages that 
are not VSI or other property insurance, a portion of the premiums must 
be allocated to the nonexcludable coverages and included in the finance 
charge. However, such allocation is not required if the total premium in 
fact attributable to all of the non-VSI coverages included in the policy 
is $1.00 or less (or $5.00 or less in the case of a multi-year policy).
    11. Initial term. i. The initial term of the insurance or debt 
cancellation coverage determines the period for which a premium amount 
or fee must be disclosed, unless one of the options discussed under 
comment 4(d)-12 is available. For purposes of Sec.  226.4(d), the 
initial term is the period for which the insurer or creditor is 
obligated to provide coverage, even though the consumer may be allowed 
to cancel the coverage or coverage may end due to nonpayment before that 
term expires.
    ii. For example:
    A. The initial term of a property insurance policy on an automobile 
that is written for one year is one year even though premiums are paid 
monthly and the term of the credit transaction is four years.
    B. The initial term of an insurance policy is the full term of the 
credit transaction if the consumer pays or finances a single premium in 
advance.
    12. Initial term; alternative. i. General. A creditor has the option 
of providing cost disclosures on the basis of an assumed initial term of 
one year of insurance or debt-cancellation coverage instead of a longer 
initial term (provided the premium or fee is clearly labeled as being 
for one year) if:
    A. The initial term is indefinite or not clear, or
    B. The consumer has agreed to pay a premium or fee that is assessed 
periodically but the consumer is under no obligation to continue the 
coverage, whether or not the consumer has made an initial payment.
    ii. Open-end plans. For open-end plans, a creditor also has the 
option of providing unit-cost disclosure on the basis of a period that 
is less than one year if the consumer has agreed to pay a premium or fee 
that is assessed periodically, for example monthly, but the consumer is 
under no obligation to continue the coverage.
    iii. Examples. To illustrate:
    A. A credit life insurance policy providing coverage for a 30-year 
mortgage loan has an initial term of 30 years, even though premiums are 
paid monthly and the consumer is not required to continue the coverage. 
Disclosures may be based on the initial term, but the creditor also has 
the option of making disclosures on the basis of coverage for an assumed 
initial term of one year.
    13. Loss-of-income insurance. The loss-of-income insurance mentioned 
in Sec.  226.4(d) includes involuntary unemployment insurance, which 
provides that some or all of the consumer's payments will be made if the 
consumer becomes unemployed involuntarily.
    4(d)(3) Voluntary debt cancellation fees.
    1. General. Fees charged for the specialized form of debt 
cancellation agreement known as guaranteed automobile protection 
(``GAP'') agreements must be disclosed according to Sec.  226.4(d)(3) 
rather than according to Sec.  226.4(d)(2) for property insurance.
    2. Disclosures. Creditors can comply with Sec.  226.4(d)(3) by 
providing a disclosure that refers to debt cancellation coverage whether 
or not the coverage is considered insurance. Creditors may use the model 
credit insurance disclosures only if the debt cancellation coverage 
constitutes insurance under state law.
    4(e) Certain security interest charges.
    1. Examples.
    i. Excludable charges. Sums must be actually paid to public 
officials to be excluded from the finance charge under Sec.  226.4(e) 
(1) and (3). Examples are charges or other fees required for filing or 
recording security agreements, mortgages, continuation statements, 
termination statements, and similar documents, as well as intangible 
property or

[[Page 378]]

other taxes even when the charges or fees are imposed by the state 
solely on the creditor and charged to the consumer (if the tax must be 
paid to record a security interest). (See comment 4(a)-5 regarding the 
treatment of taxes, generally.)
    ii. Charges not excludable. If the obligation is between the 
creditor and a third party (an assignee, for example), charges or other 
fees for filing or recording security agreements, mortgages, 
continuation statements, termination statements, and similar documents 
relating to that obligation are not excludable from the finance charge 
under this section.
    2. Itemization. The various charges described in Sec.  226.4(e) (1) 
and (3) may be totaled and disclosed as an aggregate sum, or they may be 
itemized by the specific fees and taxes imposed. If an aggregate sum is 
disclosed, a general term such as security interest fees or filing fees 
may be used.
    3. Notary fees. In order for a notary fee to be excluded under Sec.  
226.4(e)(1), all of the following conditions must be met:
    [sbull] The document to be notarized is one used to perfect, 
release, or continue a security interest.
    [sbull] The document is required by law to be notarized.
    [sbull] A notary is considered a public official under applicable 
law.
    [sbull] The amount of the fee is set or authorized by law.
    4. Non-filing insurance. The exclusion in Sec.  226.4(e)(2) is 
available only if non-filing insurance is purchased. If the creditor 
collects and simply retains a fee as a sort of self-insurance against 
non-filing it may not be excluded from the finance charge. If the non-
filing insurance premium exceeds the amount of the fees excludable from 
the finance charge under Sec.  226.4(e)(1), only the excess is a finance 
charge. For example:
    [sbull] The fee for perfecting a security interest is $5.00 and the 
fee for releasing the security interest is $3.00. The creditor charges 
$10.00 for non-filing insurance. Only $8.00 of the $10.00 is excludable 
from the finance charge.
    4(f) Prohibited offsets.
    1. Earnings on deposits or investments. The rule that the creditor 
shall not deduct any earnings by the consumer or deposits or investments 
applies whether or not the creditor has a security interest in the 
property.

                               References

    Statute: Sections 106, 167, and 171(c).
    Other sections: Sections 226.9(d) and 226.12.
    Previous regulation: Section 226.4 and Interpretations Sec. Sec.  
226.401 through 226.407.
    1981 changes: While generally continuing the rules under the 
previous regulation, Sec.  226.4 reflects amendments to section 106 of 
the act and makes certain other changes in the rules for determining the 
finance charge. For example, Sec.  226.4(a) expressly excludes from the 
finance charge amounts payable in comparable cash transactions. Section 
226.8(o) of the previous regulation, dealing with discounts for prompt 
payment of a credit sale, was deleted in the revised regulation since 
the general test for a finance charge now focuses on a comparison of 
cash and credit transactions. With respect to various exclusions from 
the finance charge: application fees imposed on all applicants are no 
longer finance charges; continuing to extend credit to a consumer is no 
longer a controlling test for determining whether a late payment charge 
is bona fide; seller's points are not to be included in the finance 
charge; and the special exclusions for real estate transactions apply to 
all residential mortgage transactions.
    The simplified rules for excluding insurance from the finance charge 
allow unit-cost disclosure in certain closed-end credit transactions; 
permit initials as well as signatures on the authorization; permit any 
consumer to authorize insurance for other consumers; and delete the 
requirement that the authorization be separately dated.

                       Subpart B--Open-End Credit

             Section 226.5--General Disclosure Requirements

    5(a) Form of disclosures.
    Paragraph 5(a)(1).
    1. Clear and conspicuous. The clear and conspicuous standard 
requires that disclosures be in a reasonably understandable form. Except 
where otherwise provided, the standard does not require that disclosures 
be segregated from other material or located in any particular place on 
the disclosure statement, or that numerical amounts or percentages be in 
any particular type size. (But see comments 5a(a)(2)-1 and -2 for 
special rules concerning Sec.  226.5a disclosures for credit card 
applications and solicitations.) The standard does not prohibit:

    [sbull] Pluralizing required terminology (finance charge and annual 
percentage rate).
    [sbull] Adding to the required disclosures such items as contractual 
provisions, explanations of contract terms, state disclosures, and 
translations.
    [sbull] Sending promotional material with the required disclosures.
    [sbull] Using commonly accepted or readily understandable 
abbreviations (such as mo. for month or TX for Texas) in making any 
required disclosures.
    [sbull] Using codes or symbols such as APR (for annual percentage 
rate), FC (for finance charge), or Cr (for credit balance), so long as a 
legend or description of the code or symbol is provided on the 
disclosure statement.

    2. Integrated document. The creditor may make both the initial 
disclosures (Sec.  226.6) and the periodic statement disclosures (Sec.  
226.7) on more than one page, and use both the front

[[Page 379]]

and the reverse sides, so long as the pages constitute an integrated 
document. An integrated document would not include disclosure pages 
provided to the consumer at different times or disclosures interspersed 
on the same page with promotional material. An integrated document would 
include, for example:

    [sbull] Multiple pages provided in the same envelope that cover 
related material and are folded together, numbered consecutively, or 
clearly labelled to show that they relate to one another.
    [sbull] A brochure that contains disclosures and explanatory 
material about a range of services the creditor offers, such as credit, 
checking account, and electronic fund transfer features.

    Paragraph 5(a)(2).
    1. When disclosures must be more conspicuous. The term finance 
charge and annual percentage rate, when required to be used with a 
number, must be disclosed more conspicuously than other required 
disclosures, except in the cases provided in footnote 9. At the 
creditor's option, finance charge and annual percentage rate may also be 
disclosed more conspicuously than the other required disclosures even 
when the regulation does not so require. The following examples 
illustrate these rules:

    [sbull] In disclosing the annual percentage rate as required by 
Sec.  226.6(a)(2), the term annual percentage rate is subject to the 
more conspicuous rule.
    [sbull] In disclosing the amount of the finance charge, required by 
Sec.  226.7(f), the term finance charge is subject to the more 
conspicuous rule.
    [sbull] Although neither finance charge nor annual percentage rate 
need be emphasized when used as part of general informational material 
or in textual descriptions of other terms, emphasis is permissible in 
such cases. For example, when the terms appear as part of the 
explanations required under Sec.  226.6(a) (3) and (4), they may be 
equally conspicuous as the disclosures required under Sec. Sec.  
226.6(a)(2) and 226.7(g).

    2. Making disclosures more conspicuous. In disclosing the terms 
finance charge and annual percentage rate more conspicuously, only the 
words finance charge and annual percentage rate should be accentuated. 
For example, if the term total finance charge is used, only finance 
charge should be emphasized. The disclosures may be made more 
conspicuous by, for example:

    [sbull] Capitalizing the words when other disclosures are printed in 
lower case.
    [sbull] Putting them in bold print or a contrasting color.
    [sbull] Underlining them.
    [sbull] Setting them off with asterisks.
    [sbull] Printing them in larger type.

    3. Disclosure of figures--exception to more conspicuous rule. The 
terms annual percentage rate and finance charge need not be more 
conspicuous than figures (including, for example, numbers, percentages, 
and dollar signs).
    5(b) Time of disclosures.
    5(b)(1) Initial disclosures.
    1. Disclosure before the first transaction. The rule that the 
initial disclosure statement must be furnished ``before the first 
transaction'' requires delivery of the initial disclosure statement 
before the consumer becomes obligated on the plan. For example, the 
initial disclosures must be given before the consumer makes the first 
purchase (such as when a consumer opens a credit plan and makes 
purchases contemporaneously at a retail store), receives the first 
advance, or pays any fees or charges under the plan other than an 
application fee or refundable membership fee (see below). The 
prohibition on the payment of fees other than application or refundable 
membership fees before initial disclosures are provided does not apply 
to home equity plans subject to Sec.  226.5b. See the commentary to 
Sec.  226.5b(h) regarding the collection of fees for home equity plans 
covered by Sec.  226.5b.

    [sbull] If the consumer pays a membership fee before receiving the 
Truth in Lending disclosures, or the consumer agrees to the imposition 
of a membership fee at the time of application and the Truth in Lending 
disclosure statement is not given at that time, disclosures are timely 
as long as the consumer, after receiving the disclosures, can reject the 
plan. The creditor must refund the membership fee if it has been paid, 
or clear the account if it has been debited to the consumer's account.
    [sbull] If the consumer receives a cash advance check at the same 
time the Truth in Lending disclosures are provided, disclosures are 
still timely if the consumer can, after receiving the disclosures, 
return the cash advance check to the creditor without obligation (for 
example, without paying finance charges).
    [sbull] Initial disclosures need not be given before the imposition 
of an application fee under Sec.  226.4(c)(1).
    [sbull] If, after receiving the disclosures, the consumer uses the 
account, pays a fee, or negotiates a cash advance check, the creditor 
may consider the account not rejected for purposes of this section.

    2. Reactivation of suspended account. If an account is temporarily 
suspended (for example, because the consumer has exceeded a credit 
limit, or because a credit card is reported lost or stolen) and then is 
reactivated, no new initial disclosures are required.
    3. Reopening closed account. If an account has been closed (for 
example, due to inactivity, cancellation, or expiration) and then

[[Page 380]]

is reopened, new initial disclosures are required. No new initial 
disclosures are required, however, when the account is closed merely to 
assign it a new number (for example, when a credit card is reported lost 
or stolen) and the new account then continues on the same terms.
    4. Converting closed-end to open-end credit. If a closed-end credit 
transaction is converted to an open-end credit account under a written 
agreement with the consumer, the initial disclosures under Sec.  226.6 
must be given before the consumer becomes obligated on the open-end 
credit plan. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.17 on converting open-end 
credit to closed-end credit.)
    5. Balance transfers. A creditor that solicits the transfer by a 
consumer of outstanding balances from an existing account to a new open-
end plan must comply with Sec.  226.6 before the balance transfer 
occurs. Card issuers that are subject to the requirements of Sec.  
226.5a may establish procedures that comply with both sections in a 
single disclosure statement.
    5(b)(2) Periodic statements.
    Paragraph 5(b)(2)(i).
    1. Periodic statements not required. Periodic statements need not be 
sent in the following cases:

    [sbull] If the creditor adjusts an account balance so that at the 
end of the cycle the balance is less than $1--so long as no finance 
charge has been imposed on the account for that cycle.
    [sbull] If a statement was returned as undeliverable. If a new 
address is provided, however, within a reasonable time before the 
creditor must send a statement, the creditor must resume sending 
statements. Receiving the address at least 20 days before the end of a 
cycle would be a reasonable amount of time to prepare the statement for 
that cycle. For example, if an address is received 22 days before the 
end of the June cycle, the creditor must send the periodic statement for 
the June cycle. (See Sec.  226.13(a)(7).)

    2. Termination of credit privileges. When an open-end account is 
terminated without being converted to closed-end credit under a written 
agreement, the creditor must continue to provide periodic statements to 
those consumers entitled to receive them under Sec.  226.5(b)(2)((i) 
(for example, when an open-end credit plan ends and consumers are paying 
off outstanding balances) and must continue to follow all of the other 
open-end credit requirements and procedures in subpart B.
    Paragraph 5(b)(2)(ii).
    1. 14-day rule. The 14-day rule for mailing or delivering periodic 
statements does not apply if charges (for example, transaction or 
activity charges) are imposed regardless of the timing of a periodic 
statement. The 14-day rule does apply, for example:

    [sbull] If current debits retroactively become subject to finance 
charges when the balance is not paid in full by a specified date.
    [sbull] If charges other than finance charges will accrue when the 
consumer does not make timely payments (for example, late payment 
charges or charges for exceeding a credit limit).
    2. Computer malfunction. Footnote 10 does not extend to the failure 
to provide a periodic statement because of computer malfunction.
    3. Calling for periodic statements. When the consumer initiates a 
request, the creditor may permit, but may not require, consumers to pick 
up their periodic statements. If the consumer wishes to pick up the 
statement and the plan has a free-ride period, the statement must be 
made available in accordance with the 14-day rule. If the consumer 
wishes to receive the statement by electronic communication, the 
creditor must comply with the consumer consent requirements as provided 
in Sec.  226.36(b).
    5(c) Basis of disclosures and use of estimates.
    1. Legal obligation. The disclosures should reflect the credit terms 
to which the parties are legally bound at the time of giving the 
disclosures.

    [sbull] The legal obligation is determined by applicable state or 
other law.
    [sbull] The fact that a term or contract may later be deemed 
unenforceable by a court on the basis of equity or other grounds does 
not, by itself, mean that disclosures based on that term or contract did 
not reflect the legal obligation.
    [sbull] The legal obligation normally is presumed to be contained in 
the contract that evidences the agreement. But this may be rebutted if 
another agreement between the parties legally modifies that contract.

    2. Estimates--obtaining information. Disclosures may be estimated 
when the exact information is unknown at the time disclosures are made. 
Information is unknown if it is not reasonably available to the creditor 
at the time disclosures are made. The reasonably available standard 
requires that the creditor, acting in good faith, exercise due diligence 
in obtaining information. In using estimates, the creditor is not 
required to disclose the basis for the estimated figures, but may 
include such explanations as additional information. The creditor 
normally may rely on the representations of other parties in obtaining 
information. For example, the creditor might look to insurance companies 
for the cost of insurance.
    3. Estimates--redisclosure. If the creditor makes estimated 
disclosures, redisclosure is not required for that consumer, even though 
more accurate information becomes available before the first 
transaction. For example, in an open-end plan to be secured by real

[[Page 381]]

estate, the creditor may estimate the appraisal fees to be charged; such 
an estimate might reasonably be based on the prevailing market rates for 
similar appraisals. If the exact appraisal fee is determinable after the 
estimate is furnished but before the consumer receives the first advance 
under the plan, no new disclosure is necessary.
    4. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(iv).

    5(d) Multiple creditors; multiple consumers.
    1. Multiple creditors. Under Sec.  226.5(d):

    [sbull] Creditors must choose which of them will make the 
disclosures.
    [sbull] A single, complete set of disclosures must be provided, 
rather than partial disclosures from several creditors.
    [sbull] All disclosures for the open-end credit plan must be given, 
even if the disclosing creditor would not otherwise have been obligated 
to make a particular disclosure.
    [sbull] In some open-end credit programs involving multiple 
creditors, the consumer has the option (for example, at the end of a 
billing cycle) to pay creditor A directly or to transfer to creditor B 
all or part of the amount owing. If the consumer elects the latter 
option, the consumer no longer is obligated to creditor A for the 
specific amount(s) transferred. In such a case, creditor A and creditor 
B may send separate periodic statements that reflect the separate 
obligations owed to each.

    2. Multiple consumers. Disclosures may be made to either obligor on 
a joint account. Disclosure responsibilities are not satisfied by giving 
disclosures to only a surety or guarantor for a principal obligor or to 
an authorized user. In rescindable transactions, however, separate 
disclosures must be given to each consumer who has the right to rescind 
under Sec.  226.15.
    5(e) Effect of subsequent events.
    1. Events causing inaccuracies. Inaccuracies in disclosures are not 
violations if attributable to events occurring after disclosures are 
made. For example, when the consumer fails to fulfill a prior commitment 
to keep the collateral insured and the creditor then provides the 
coverage and charges the consumer for it, such a change does not make 
the original disclosures inaccurate. The creditor may, however, be 
required to provide a new disclosure(s) under Sec.  226.9(c).
    2. Use of inserts. When changes in a creditor's plan affect required 
disclosures, the creditor may use inserts with outdated disclosure 
forms. Any insert:

    [sbull] Should clearly refer to the disclosure provision it 
replaces.
    [sbull] Need not be physically attached or affixed to the basic 
disclosure statement.
    [sbull] May be used only until the supply of outdated forms is 
exhausted.

                               References

    Statute: Sections 121 (a) through (c), 122 (a) and (b), 124, 127 (a) 
and (b), and 163(a).
    Other sections: Sections 226.6, 226.7, and 226.9.
    Previous regulation: Sections 226.6 (a) and (c) through (g), and 
226.7 (a) through (c).
    1981 changes: Section 226.5 implements amendments to the act and 
reflects several simplifying changes to the regulation. The use of 
required terminology, except for finance charge and annual percentage 
rate, is no longer required. Type size requirements have been deleted. 
Initial and periodic statement disclosures may be multi-page, so long as 
they constitute an integrated statement. New rules are provided for the 
basis of disclosures and for the use of estimates. The rules for credit 
plans involving multiple creditors or multiple consumers now provide 
that only one creditor need make the disclosures and that the 
disclosures need be made to only one primarily liable consumer.

  Section 226.5a Credit and Charge Card Applications and Solicitations

    1. General. Section 226.5a generally requires that credit 
disclosures be contained in application forms and preapproved 
solicitations initiated by a card issuer to open a credit or charge card 
account. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.5a(a)(3) and (e) for 
exceptions; see also Sec.  226.2(a)(15) and accompanying commentary for 
the definition of charge card.)
    2. Combining disclosures. The initial disclosures required by Sec.  
226.6 do not substitute for the disclosures required by Sec.  226.5a; 
however, a card issuer may establish procedures so that a single 
disclosure statement meets the requirements of both sections. For 
example, if a card issuer in complying with Sec.  226.5a(e)(2) provides 
all the applicable disclosures required under Sec.  226.6, in a form 
that the consumer may keep and in accordance with the other format and 
timing requirements for that section, the issuer satisfies the initial 
disclosure requirements under Sec.  226.6 as well as the disclosure 
requirements of Sec.  226.5a(e)(2). Or if, in complying with Sec.  
226.5a(c) or Sec.  226.5a(d)(2), a card issuer provides an integrated 
document that the consumer may keep, and provides the Sec.  226.5a 
disclosures (in a tabular format) along with the additional disclosures 
required under Sec.  226.6 (presented outside of the table), the card 
issuer satisfies the requirements of both Sec. Sec.  226.5a and 226.6.

                           5a(a) General Rules

                      5a(a)(2) Form of Disclosures

    1. Clear and conspicuous standard. For purposes of Sec.  226.5a 
disclosures, clear and conspicuous means in a reasonably understandable 
form and readily noticeable to the consumer. As to type size, 
disclosures in 12-

[[Page 382]]

point type are deemed to be readily noticeable for purposes of Sec.  
226.5a. Disclosures printed in less than 12-point type do not 
automatically violate the standard; however, disclosures in less than 8-
point type would likely be too small to satisfy the standard. 
Disclosures that are transmitted by electronic communication are judged 
for purposes of the clear and conspicuous standard based on the form in 
which they are provided even though they may be viewed by the consumer 
in a different form.
    2. Prominent location. i. Generally. Certain of the required 
disclosures provided on or with an application or solicitation must be 
prominently located. Disclosures are deemed to be prominently located, 
for example, if the disclosures are on the same page as an application 
or solicitation reply form. If the disclosures appear elsewhere, they 
are deemed to be prominently located if the application or solicitation 
reply form contains a clear and conspicuous reference to the location of 
the disclosures and indicates that they contain rate, fee, and other 
cost information, as applicable. Disclosures required by Sec.  226.5a(b) 
that are placed outside the table must begin on the same page as the 
table but need not end on the same page.
    ii. Electronic disclosures. Electronic disclosures are deemed to be 
prominently located if:
    A. They are posted on a web site and the application or solicitation 
reply form is linked to the disclosures in a manner that prevents the 
consumer from by-passing the disclosures before submitting the 
application or reply form; or
    B. They are located on the same page as an application or 
solicitation reply form, that contains a clear and conspicuous reference 
to the location of the disclosures and indicates that they contain rate, 
fee, and other cost information, as applicable.
    3. Multiple accounts or varying terms. If a tabular format is 
required to be used, card issuers offering several types of accounts may 
disclose the various terms for the accounts in a single table or may 
provide a separate table for each account. Similarly, if rates or other 
terms vary from state to state, card issuers may list the states and the 
various disclosures in a single table or in separate tables.
    4. Additional information. The table containing the disclosures 
required by Sec.  226.5a should contain only the information required or 
permitted by this section. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.5a(b) for 
guidance on information permitted in the table.) Other credit 
information may be presented on or with an application or solicitation, 
provided such information appears outside the required table.
    5. Location of certain disclosures. A card issuer has the option of 
disclosing any of the fees in Sec.  226.5a(b) (8) through (10) in the 
required table or outside the table.
    6. Terminology. In general, Sec.  226.5a(a)(2)(iv) requires that the 
terminology used for the disclosures specified in Sec.  226.5a(b) be 
consistent with that used in the disclosures under Sec. Sec.  226.6 and 
226.7. This standard requires that the Sec.  226.5a(b) disclosures be 
close in meaning to those under Sec. Sec.  226.6 and 226.7; however, the 
terminology used need not be identical. In addition, Sec.  
226.5a(a)(2)(i) requires that the headings, content, and format of the 
tabular disclosures be substantially similar, but need not be identical, 
to the tables in Appendix G. A special rule applies to the grace period 
disclosure, however: the term grace period must be used, either in the 
heading or in the text of the disclosure.
    7. Deletion of inapplicable disclosures. Generally, disclosures need 
only be given as applicable. Card issuers may, therefore, delete 
inapplicable headings and their corresponding boxes in the table. For 
example, if no transaction fee is imposed for purchases, the disclosure 
form may contain the heading Transaction fee for purchases and a box 
showing none, or the heading and box may be deleted from the table. 
There is an exception for the grace period disclosure, however: even if 
no grace period exists, that fact must be stated.
    8. Timing of disclosures for electronic applications or 
solicitations. In all cases, a consumer must be able to access the 
disclosures at the time the blank application or reply form is made 
available by electronic communication, such as on a card issuer's 
Internet web site. Card issuers have flexibility in satisfying this 
requirement. For example, if a link is not used, the application or 
reply form must clearly and conspicuously refer to the fact that rate, 
fee, and other cost information either precedes or follows the 
application or reply form. Alternatively, card issuers may provide a 
link to electronic disclosures on or with the application (or reply 
form) as long as consumers cannot bypass the disclosures before 
submitting the application or reply form. Or the disclosures could 
automatically appear on the screen when the application or reply form 
appears. A card issuer need not confirm that the consumer has read the 
disclosures.

                           5a(a)(3) Exceptions

    1. Coverage. Certain exceptions to the coverage of Sec.  226.5a are 
stated in Sec.  226.5a(a)(3); in addition, the requirements of Sec.  
226.5a do not apply to the following:
    [sbull] Lines of credit accessed solely by account numbers
    [sbull] Addition of a credit or charge card to an existing open-end 
plan
    2. Noncoverage of consumer initiated requests. Applications provided 
to a consumer upon request are not covered by Sec.  226.5a, even if the 
request is made in response to the card issuer's invitation to apply for 
a card account. To illustrate, if a card issuer invites

[[Page 383]]

consumers to call a toll-free number or to return a response card to 
obtain an application, the application sent in response to the 
consumer's request need not contain the disclosures required under Sec.  
226.5a. Similarly, if the card issuer invites consumers to call and make 
an oral application on the telephone, Sec.  226.5a does not apply to the 
application made by the consumer. If, however, the card issuer calls a 
consumer or initiates a telephone discussion with a consumer about 
opening a card account and contemporaneously takes an oral application, 
such applications are subject to Sec.  226.5a, specifically Sec.  
226.5a(d).
    3. General purpose applications. The requirements of this section do 
not apply to general purpose applications unless the application, or 
material accompanying it, indicates that it can be used to open a credit 
or charge card account.

                5a(a)(5) Certain Fees that Vary by State

    1. Manner of disclosing range. If the card issuer discloses a range 
of fees instead of disclosing the amount of the fee imposed in each 
state, the range may be stated as the lowest authorized fee (zero, if 
there are one or more states where no fee applies) to the highest 
authorized fee.

                       5a(b) Required Disclosures

                     5a(b)(1) Annual Percentage Rate

    1. Periodic rate. The periodic rate, expressed as such, may be 
disclosed in the table in addition to the required disclosure of the 
corresponding annual percentage rate.
    2. Variable-rate accounts--definition. For purposes of Sec.  
226.5a(b)(1), a variable-rate account exists when rate changes are part 
of the plan and are tied to an index or formula. (See the commentary to 
Sec.  226.6(a)(2) for examples of variable-rate plans.)
    3. Variable-rate accounts--rates in effect. For variable-rate 
disclosures in direct mail applications and solicitations subject to 
Sec.  226.5a(c), and in applications and solicitations made available to 
the general public subject to Sec.  226.5a(e), the rules concerning 
accuracy of the annual percentage rate are stated in Sec.  
226.5a(b)(1)(ii). For variable-rate disclosures in telephone 
applications and solicitations subject to Sec.  226.5a(d), the card 
issuer must provide an annual percentage rate currently applicable when 
oral disclosures are provided under Sec.  226.5a(d)(1). For the 
alternate disclosures under Sec.  226.5a(d)(2), the card issuer must 
provide the annual percentage rate in effect at the time the disclosures 
are mailed or delivered. A rate in effect also includes the rate as of a 
specified date (which rate is then updated from time to time, for 
example, each calendar month) or an estimated rate provided in 
accordance with Sec.  226.5(c).
    4. Variable-rate accounts--other disclosures. In describing how the 
applicable rate will be determined, the card issuer must identify the 
index or formula and disclose any margin or spread added to the index or 
formula in setting the rate. The card issuer may disclose the margin or 
spread as a range of the highest and lowest margins that may be 
applicable to the account. A disclosure of any applicable limitations on 
rate increases or decreases may also be included in the table.
    5. Introductory rates--discounted rates. If the initial rate is 
temporary and is lower than the rate that will apply after the temporary 
rate expires, the card issuer must disclose the annual percentage rate 
that would otherwise apply to the account. In a fixed-rate account, the 
card issuer must disclose the rate that will apply after the 
introductory rate expires. In a variable-rate account, the card issuer 
must disclose a rate based on the index or formula applicable to the 
account in accordance with the rules in Sec.  226.5a(b)(1)(ii) and 
comment 5a(b)(1)-3. An initial discounted rate may be provided in the 
table along with the rate required to be disclosed if the card issuer 
also discloses the time period during which the introductory rate will 
remain in effect.
    6. Introductory rates--premium rates. If the initial rate is 
temporary and is higher than the permanently applicable rate, the card 
issuer must disclose the initial rate in the table. The initial rate 
must be in at least 18-point type unless the issuer also discloses in 
the table the permanently applicable rate. The issuer may disclose in 
the table the permanently applicable rate that would otherwise apply if 
the issuer also discloses the time period during which the initial rate 
will remain in effect. In that case, the permanently applicable rate 
must be in at least 18-point type.
    7. Increased penalty rates. If the initial rate may increase upon 
the occurrence of one or more specific events, such as a late payment or 
an extension of credit that exceeds the credit limit, the card issuer 
must disclose in the table the initial rate and the increased penalty 
rate that may apply. If the penalty rate is based on an index and an 
increased margin, the issuer must also disclose in the table the index 
and the margin as well as the specific event or events that may result 
in the increased rate, such as ``applies to accounts 60 days late.'' If 
the penalty rate cannot be determined at the time disclosures are given, 
the issuer must provide an explanation of the specific event or events 
that may result in imposing an increased rate. In describing the 
specific event or events that may result in an increased rate, issuers 
need not be as detailed as for the disclosures required under Sec.  
226.6(a)(2). For issuers using a tabular format, the specific event or 
events must be placed outside the table and an asterisk or other means 
shall be used to direct

[[Page 384]]

the consumer to the additional information. At its option, the issuer 
may include in the explanation of the penalty rate the period for which 
the increased rate will remain in effect, such as ``until you make three 
timely payments.'' The issuer need not disclose an increased rate that 
is imposed when credit privileges are permanently terminated.

               5a(b)(2) Fees for Issuance or Availability

    1. Membership fees. Membership fees for opening an account must be 
disclosed under this paragraph. A membership fee to join an organization 
that provides a credit or charge card as a privilege of membership must 
be disclosed only if the card is issued automatically upon membership. 
Such a fee need not be disclosed if membership results merely in 
eligibility to apply for an account.
    2. Enhancements. Fees for optional services in addition to basic 
membership privileges in a credit or charge card account (for example, 
travel insurance or card-registration services) should not be disclosed 
in the table if the basic account may be opened without paying such 
fees.
    3. One-time fees. Disclosure of non-periodic fees is limited to fees 
related to opening the account, such as one-time membership fees. The 
following are examples of fees that should not be disclosed in the 
table:
    [sbull] Fees for reissuing a lost or stolen card
    [sbull] Statement reproduction fees
    [sbull] Application fees described in Sec.  226.4(c)(1)
    4. Waived or reduced fees. If fees required to be disclosed are 
waived or reduced for a limited time, the introductory fees or the fact 
of fee waivers may be provided in the table in addition to the required 
fees if the card issuer also discloses how long the fees or waivers will 
remain in effect.
    5. Fees stated as annual amount. Fees imposed periodically must be 
stated as an annual total. For example, if a fee is imposed quarterly, 
the disclosures would state the total amount of the fees for one year. 
(See, however, the commentary to Sec.  226.9(e) with regard to 
disclosure of such fees in renewal notices.)

                      5a(b)(4) Transaction Charges

    1. Charges imposed by person other than card issuer. Charges imposed 
by a third party, such as a seller of goods, would not be disclosed 
under this section; the third party would be responsible for disclosing 
the charge under Sec.  226.9(d)(1).

                          5a(b)(5) Grace Period

    1. How disclosure is made. The card issuer may, but need not, refer 
to the beginning or ending point of any grace period and briefly state 
any conditions on the applicability of the grace period. For example, 
the grace period disclosure might read ``30 days'' or ``30 days from the 
date of the periodic statement (provided you have paid your previous 
balance in full by the due date).''

                   5a(b)(6) Balance Computation Method

    1. Form of disclosure. In cases where the card issuer uses a balance 
calculation method that is identified by name in the regulation, the 
card issuer may only disclose the name of the method in the table. In 
cases where the card issuer uses a balance computation method that is 
not identified by name in the regulation, the disclosure in the table 
should clearly explain the method in as much detail as set forth in the 
descriptions of balance methods in section 226.5a(g). The explanation 
need not be as detailed as that required for the disclosures under Sec.  
226.6(a)(3). (See the commentary to Sec.  226.5a(g) for guidance on 
particular methods.)
    2. Determining the method. In determining the appropriate balance 
computation method for purchases for disclosure purposes, the card 
issuer must assume that a purchase balance will exist at the end of any 
grace period. Thus, for example, if the average daily balance method 
will include new purchases or cover two billing cycles only if purchase 
balances are not paid within the grace period, the card issuer would 
disclose the name of the average daily balance method that includes new 
purchases or covers two billing cycles, respectively. The card issuer 
should not assume the existence of a purchase balance, however, in 
making other disclosures under Sec.  226.5a(b).

               5a(b)(7) Statement on Charge Card Payments

    1. Applicability and content. The disclosure that charges are 
payable upon receipt of the periodic statement is applicable only to 
charge card accounts. In making this disclosure, the card issuer may 
make such modifications as are necessary to more accurately reflect the 
circumstances of repayment under the account. For example, the 
disclosure might read, ``Charges are due and payable upon receipt of the 
periodic statement and must be paid no later than 15 days after receipt 
of such statement.''

                        5a(b)(8) Cash Advance Fee

    1. Applicability. The card issuer must disclose only those fees it 
imposes for a cash advance that are finance charges under Sec.  226.4. 
For example, a charge for a cash advance at an automated teller machine 
(ATM) would be disclosed under Sec.  226.5a(b)(8) if no similar charge 
is imposed for ATM transactions not involving an extension of credit. 
(See comment 4(a)-5 for a description of such a fee.)

                        5a(b)(9) Late Payment Fee

    1. Applicability. The disclosure of the fee for a late payment 
includes only those fees that will be imposed for actual, unanticipated

[[Page 385]]

late payments. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.4(c)(2) for additional 
guidance on late payment fees.)

                      5a(b)(10) Over-the-Limit Fee

    1. Applicability. The disclosure of fees for exceeding a credit 
limit does not include fees for other types of default or for services 
related to exceeding the limit. For example, no disclosure is required 
of fees for reinstating credit privileges or fees for the dishonor of 
checks on an account that, if paid, would cause the credit limit to be 
exceeded.

            5a(c) Direct Mail Applications and Solicitations

    1. Accuracy. In general, disclosures in direct mail applications and 
solicitations must be accurate as of the time of mailing. (An accurate 
variable annual percentage rate is one in effect within 60 days before 
mailing.)
    2. Mailed publications. Applications or solicitations contained in 
generally available publications mailed to consumers (such as 
subscription magazines) are subject to the requirements applicabIe to 
take-ones in Sec.  226.5a(e), rather than the direct mail requirements 
of Sec.  226.5a(c). However, if a primary purpose of a card issuer's 
mailing is to offer credit or charge card accounts--for example, where a 
card issuer ``prescreens'' a list of potential cardholders using credit 
criteria, and then mails to the targeted group its catalog containing an 
application or a solicitation for a card account--the direct mail rules 
apply. In addition, a card issuer may use a single application form as a 
take-one (in racks in public locations, for example) and for direct 
mailings, if the card issuer complies with the requirements of Sec.  
226.5a(c) even when the form is used as a take-one--that is, by 
presenting the required Sec.  226.5a disclosures in a tabular format. 
When used in a direct mailing, the credit term disclosures must be 
accurate as of the mailing date whether or not the Sec.  226.5a(e)(1) 
(ii) and (iii) disclosures are included; when used in a take-one, the 
disclosures must be accurate for as long as the take-one forms remain 
available to the public if the Sec.  226.5a(e)(1) (ii) and (iii) 
disclosures are omitted. (If those disclosures are included in the take-
one, the credit term disclosures need only be accurate as of the 
printing date.)

             5a(d) Telephone Applications and Solicitations

    1. Coverage. This paragraph applies if:
    [sbull] A telephone conversation between a card issuer and consumer 
may result in the issuance of a card as a consequence of an issuer-
initiated offer to open an account for which the issuer does not require 
any application (that is, a preapproved telephone solicitation).
    [sbull] The card issuer initiates the contact and at the same time 
takes application information over the telephone.
    This paragraph does not apply to:
    [sbull] Telephone applications initiated by the consumer.
    [sbull] Situations where no card will be issued--because, for 
example, the consumer indicates that he or she does not want the card, 
or the card issuer decides either during the telephone conversation or 
later not to issue the card.

  5a(e) Applications and Solicitations Made Available to General Public

    1. Coverage. Applications and solicitations made available to the 
general public include what are commonly referred to as take-one 
applications typically found at counters in banks and retail 
establishments, as well as applications contained in catalogs, magazines 
and other generally available publications. In the case of credit 
unions, this paragraph applies to applications and solicitations to open 
card accounts made available to those in the general field of 
membership.
    2. Cross-selling. If a card issuer invites a consumer to apply for a 
credit or charge card (for example, where the issuer engages in cross-
selling), an application provided to the consumer at the consumer's 
request is not considered an application made available to the general 
public and therefore is not subject to Sec.  226.5a(e). For example, the 
following are not covered:
    [sbull] A consumer applies in person for a car loan at a financial 
institution and the loan officer invites the consumer to apply for a 
credit or charge card account; the consumer accepts the invitation.
    [sbull] An employee of a retail establishment, in the course of 
processing a sales transaction using a bank credit card, asks a customer 
if he or she would like to apply for the retailer's credit or charge 
card; the customer responds affirmatively.
    3. Toll-free telephone number. If a card issuer, in complying with 
any of the disclosure options of Sec.  226.5a(e), provides a telephone 
number for consumers to call to obtain credit information, the number 
must be toll-free for nonlocal calls made from an area code other than 
the one used in the card issuer's dialing area. Alternatively, a card 
issuer may provide any telephone number that allows a consumer to call 
for information and reverse the telephone charges.

           5a(e)(1) Disclosure of Required Credit Information

    1. Date of printing. Disclosure of the month and year fulfills the 
requirement to disclose the date an application was printed.
    2. Form of disclosures. The disclosures specified in Sec.  
226.5a(e)(1) (ii) and (iii) may appear

[[Page 386]]

either in or outside the table containing the required credit 
disclosures.

            5a(e)(2) Inclusion of Certain Initial Disclosures

    1. Accuracy of disclosures. The disclosures required by Sec.  
226.5a(e)(2) generally must be current as of the time they are made 
available to the public. Disclosures are considered to be made available 
at the time they are placed in public locations (in the case of take-
ones) or mailed to consumers (in the case of publications).
    2. Accuracy--exception. If a card issuer discloses all the 
information required by Sec.  226.5a(e)(1)(ii) on the application or 
solicitation, the disclosures under Sec.  226.5a(e)(2) need only be 
current as of the date of printing. (A current variable annual 
percentage rate would be one in effect within 30 days before printing.)

              5a(e)(3) No Disclosure of Credit Information

    1. When disclosure option available. A card issuer may use this 
option only if the issuer does not include on or with the application or 
solicitation any statement that refers to the credit disclosures 
required by Sec.  226.5a(b). Statements such as no annual fee, low 
interest rate, favorable rates, and low costs are deemed to refer to the 
required credit disclosures and, therefore, may not be included on or 
with the solicitation or application, if the card issuer chooses to use 
this option.

          5a(e)(4) Prompt Response to Requests for Information

    1. Prompt disclosure. Information is promptly disclosed if it is 
given within 30 days of a consumer's request for information but in no 
event later than delivery of the credit or charge card.
    2. Information disclosed. When a consumer requests credit 
information, card issuers need not provide all the required credit 
disclosures in all instances. For example, if disclosures have been 
provided in accordance with Sec.  226.5a(e) (1) or (2) and a consumer 
calls or writes a card issuer to obtain information about changes in the 
disclosures, the issuer need only provide the items of information that 
have changed from those previously disclosed on or with the application 
or solicitation. If a consumer requests information about particular 
items, the card issuer need only provide the requested information. If, 
however, the card issuer has made disclosures in accordance with the 
option in Sec.  226.5a(e)(3) and a consumer calls or writes the card 
issuer requesting information about costs, all the required disclosure 
information must be given.
    3. Manner of response. A card issuer's response to a consumer's 
request for credit information may be provided orally or in writing, 
regardless of the manner in which the consumer's request is received by 
the issuer. Furthermore, the card issuer may provide the information 
listed in either Sec.  226.5a(e) (1) or (2). Information provided in 
writing need not be in a tabular format.

5a(f) Special Charge Card Rule--Card Issuer and Person Extending Credit 
                           Not the Same Person

    1. Duties of charge card issuer. Although the charge card issuer is 
not required to disclose information about the underlying open-end 
credit plan if the card issuer meets the conditions set forth in Sec.  
226.5a(f), the card issuer must disclose the information relating to the 
charge card plan itself.
    2. Duties of creditor maintaining open-end plan. Section 226.5a does 
not impose disclosure requirements on the creditor that maintains the 
underlying open-end credit plan. This is the case even though the 
creditor offering the open-end credit plan may be considered an agent of 
the charge card issuer. (See comment 2(a)(7)-1.)
    3. Form of disclosures. The disclosures required by Sec.  226.5a(f) 
may appear either in or outside the table containing the required credit 
disclosures in circumstances where a tabular format is required.

                5a(g) Balance Computation Methods Defined

    1. Daily balance method. Card issuers using the daily balance method 
may disclose it using the name average daily balance (including new 
purchases) or average daily balance (excluding new purchases), as 
appropriate. Alternatively, such card issuers may explain the method. 
(See comment 7(e)-5 for a discussion of the daily balance method.)
    2. Two-cycle average daily balance methods. The two-cycle average 
daily balance methods described in Sec.  226.5a(g)(2) (i) and (ii) 
include those methods in which the average daily balances for two 
billing cycles may be added together to compute the finance charge. Such 
methods also include those in which a periodic rate is applied 
separately to the balance in each cycle, and the resulting finance 
charges are added together. The method is a two-cycle average daily 
balance even if the finance charge is based on both the current and 
prior cycle balances only under certain circumstances, such as when 
purchases during a prior cycle were carried over into the current cycle 
and no finance charge was assessed during the prior cycle. Furthermore, 
the method is a two-cycle average daily balance method if the balances 
for both the current and prior cycles are average daily balances, even 
if those balances are figured differently. For example, the name two-
cycle average daily balance (excluding new purchases) should be used to 
describe a method in which the finance charge for the current cycle, 
figured on an average daily balance excluding new purchases, will be 
added to the finance

[[Page 387]]

charge for the prior cycle, figured on an average daily balance of only 
new purchases during that prior cycle.

            Section 226.5b Requirements for Home Equity Plans

    1. Coverage. This section applies to all open-end credit plans 
secured by the consumer's dwelling, as defined in Sec.  226.2(a)(19), 
and is not limited to plans secured by the consumer's principal 
dwelling. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.3(a), which discusses whether 
transactions are consumer or business-purpose credit, for guidance on 
whether a home equity plan is subject to Regulation Z.)
    2. Changes to home equity plans entered into on or after November 7, 
1989. Section 226.9(c) applies if, by written agreement under Sec.  
226.5b(f)(3)(iii), a creditor changes the terms of a home equity plan--
entered into on or after November 7, 1989--at or before its scheduled 
expiration, for example, by renewing a plan on different terms. A new 
plan results, however, if the plan is renewed (with or without changes 
to the terms) after the scheduled expiration. The new plan is subject to 
all open-end credit rules, including Sec. Sec.  226.5b, 226.6, and 
226.15.
    3. Transition rules and renewals of preexistinq plans. The 
requirements of this section do not apply to home equity plans entered 
into before November 7, 1989. The requirements of this section also do 
not apply if the original consumer, on or after November 7, 1989, renews 
a plan entered into prior to that date (with or without changes to the 
terms). If, on or after November 7, 1989, a security interest in the 
consumer's dwelling is added to a line of credit entered into before 
that date, the substantive restrictions of this section apply for the 
remainder of the plan, but no new disclosures are required under this 
section.
    4. Disclosure of repayment phase--applicability of requirements. 
Some plans provide in the initial agreement for a period during which no 
further draws may be taken and repayment of the amount borrowed is made. 
All of the applicable disclosures in this section must be given for the 
repayment phase. Thus, for example, a creditor must provide payment 
information about the repayment phase as well as about the draw period, 
as required by Sec.  226.5b(d)(5). If the rate that will apply during 
the repayment phase is fixed at a known amount, the creditor must 
provide an annual percentage rate under Sec.  226.5b(d)(6) for that 
phase. If, however, a creditor uses an index to determine the rate that 
will apply at the time of conversion to the repayment phase--even if the 
rate will thereafter be fixed--the creditor must provide the information 
in Sec.  226.5b(d)(12), as applicable.
    5. Payment terms--applicability of closed-end provisions and 
substantive rules. All payment terms that are provided for in the 
initial agreement are subject to the requirements of subpart B and not 
subpart C of the regulation. Payment terms that are subsequently added 
to the agreement may be subject to subpart B or to subpart C, depending 
on the circumstances. The following examples apply these general rules 
to different situations:
    [sbull] If the initial agreement provides for a repayment phase or 
for other payment terms such as options permitting conversion of part or 
all of the balance to a fixed rate during the draw period, these terms 
must be disclosed pursuant to Sec. Sec.  226.5b and 226.6, and not under 
subpart C. Furthermore, the creditor must continue to provide periodic 
statements under Sec.  226.7 and comply with other provisions of subpart 
B (such as the substantive requirements of Sec.  226.5b(f)) throughout 
the plan, including the repayment phase.
    [sbull] If the consumer and the creditor enter into an agreement 
during the draw period to repay all or part of the principal balance on 
different terms (for example, with a fixed rate of interest) and the 
amount of available credit will be replenished as the principal balance 
is repaid, the creditor must continue to comply with subpart B. For 
example, the creditor must continue to provide periodic statements and 
comply with the substantive requirements of Sec.  226.5b(f) throughout 
the plan.
    [sbull] If the consumer and creditor enter into an agreement during 
the draw period to repay all or part of the principal balance and the 
amount of available credit will not be replenished as the principal 
balance is repaid, the creditor must give closed-end credit disclosures 
pursuant to subpart C for that new agreement. In such cases, subpart B, 
including the substantive rules, does not apply to the closed-end credit 
transaction, although it will continue to apply to any remaining open-
end credit available under the plan.
    6. Spreader clause. When a creditor holds a mortgage or deed of 
trust on the consumer's dwelling and that mortgage or deed of trust 
contains a spreader clause (also known as a dragnet or cross-
collateralization clause), subsequent occurrences such as the opening of 
an open-end plan are subject to the rules applicable to home equity 
plans to the same degree as if a security interest were taken directly 
to secure the plan, unless the creditor effectively waives its security 
interest under the spreader clause with respect to the subsequent open-
end credit extensions.

                        5b(a) Form of Disclosures

                            5b(a)(1) General

    1. Written disclosures. The disclosures required under this section 
must be clear and conspicuous and in writing, but need not be in a form 
the consumer can keep. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.6(e) for special 
rules when disclosures required under Sec.  226.5b(d) are given in a 
retainable form.)
    2. Disclosure of annual percentage rate--more conspicuous 
requirement. As provided in

[[Page 388]]

Sec.  226.5(a)(2), when the term annual percentage rate is required to 
be disclosed with a number, it must be more conspicuous than other 
required disclosures.
    3. Segregation of disclosures. While most of the disclosures must be 
grouped together and segregated from all unrelated information, the 
creditor is permitted to include information that explains or expands on 
the required disclosures, including, for example:
    [sbull] Any prepayment penalty
    [sbull] How a substitute index may be chosen
    [sbull] Actions the creditor may take short of terminating and 
accelerating an outstanding balance
    [sbull] Renewal terms
    [sbull] Rebate of fees

An example of information that does not explain or expand on the 
required disclosures and thus cannot be included is the creditor's 
underwriting criteria, although the creditor could provide such 
information separately from the required disclosures.
    4. Method of providing disclosures. A creditor may provide a single 
disclosure form for all of its home equity plans, as long as the 
disclosure describes all aspects of the plans. For example, if the 
creditor offers several payment options, all such options must be 
disclosed. (See, however, the commentary to Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)(iii) and 
(d)(12) (x) and (xi) for disclosure requirements relating to these 
provisions.) If any aspects of a plan are linked together, the creditor 
must disclose clearly the relationship of the terms to each other. For 
example, if the consumer can only obtain a particular payment option in 
conjunction with a certain variable-rate feature, this fact must be 
disclosed. A creditor has the option of providing separate disclosure 
forms for multiple options or variations in features. For example, a 
creditor that offers different payment options for the draw period may 
prepare separate disclosure forms for the two payment options. A 
creditor using this alternative, however, must include a statement on 
each disclosure form that the consumer should ask about the creditor's 
other home equity programs. (This disclosure is required only for those 
programs available generally to the public. Thus, if the only other 
programs available are employee preferred-rate plans, for example, the 
creditor would not have to provide this statement.) A creditor that 
receives a request for information about other available programs must 
provide the additional disclosures as soon as reasonably possible.

               5b(a)(2) Precedence of Certain Disclosures

    1. Precedence rule. The list of conditions provided at the 
creditor's option under Sec.  226.5b(d)(4)(iii) need not precede the 
other disclosures.

                        5b(b) Time of Disclosures

    1. Mail and telephone applications. If the creditor sends 
applications through the mail, the disclosures and a brochure must 
accompany the application. If an application is taken over the 
telephone, the disclosures and brochure may be delivered or mailed 
within three business days of taking the application. If an application 
is mailed to the consumer following a telephone request, however, the 
creditor also must send the disclosures and a brochure along with the 
application.
    2. General purpose applications. The disclosures and a brochure need 
not be provided when a general purpose application is given to a 
consumer unless (1) the application or materials accompanying it 
indicate that it can be used to apply for a home equity plan or (2) the 
application is provided in response to a consumer's specific inquiry 
about a home equity plan. On the other hand, if a general purpose 
application is provided in response to a consumer's specific inquiry 
only about credit other than a home equity plan, the disclosures and 
brochure need not be provided even if the application indicates it can 
be used for a home equity plan, unless it is accompanied by promotional 
information about home equity plans.
    3. Publicly-available applications. Some creditors make applications 
for home equity plans, such as take-ones, available without the need for 
a consumer to request them. These applications must be accompanied by 
the disclosures and a brochure, such as by attaching the disclosures and 
brochure to the application form.
    4. Response cards. A creditor may solicit consumers for its home 
equity plan by mailing a response card which the consumer returns to the 
creditor to indicate interest in the plan. If the only action taken by 
the creditor upon receipt of the response card is to send the consumer 
an application form or to telephone the consumer to discuss the plan, 
the creditor need not send the disclosures and brochure with the 
response card.
    5. Denial or withdrawal of application. In situations where footnote 
10a permits the creditor a three-day delay in providing disclosures and 
the brochure, if the creditor determines within that period that an 
application will not be approved, the creditor need not provide the 
consumer with the disclosures or brochure. Similarly, if the consumer 
withdraws the application within this three-day period, the creditor 
need not provide the disclosures or brochure.
    6. Intermediary agent or broker. In determining whether or not an 
application involves an intermediary agent or broker as discussed in 
footnote 10a, creditors should consult the provisions in comment 19(b)-
3.
    7. Applications available by electronic communication. In all cases, 
a consumer must be

[[Page 389]]

able to access the disclosures (including the brochure) at the time the 
blank application or reply form is made available by electronic 
communication, such as on a creditor's Internet web site. Creditors have 
flexibility in satisfying this requirement. For example, if a link is 
not used, the application or reply form must clearly and conspicuously 
refer the consumer to the fact that rate, fee, and other cost 
information either precedes or follows the application or reply form. 
Alternatively, creditors may provide a link to electronic disclosures as 
long as consumers cannot bypass the disclosures before submitting the 
application or reply form. Or the disclosures could automatically appear 
on the screen when the application or reply form appears. A creditor 
need not confirm that the consumer has read the disclosures or brochure.

                      5b(c) Duties of Third Parties

    1. Disclosure requirements. Although third parties who give 
applications to consumers for home equity plans must provide the 
brochure required under Sec.  226.5b(e) in all cases, such persons need 
provide the disclosures required under Sec.  226.5b(d) only in certain 
instances. A third party has no duty to obtain disclosures about a 
creditor's home equity plan or to create a set of disclosures based on 
what it knows about a creditor's plan. If, however, a creditor provides 
the third party with disclosures along with its application form, the 
third party must give the disclosures to the consumer with the 
application form. The duties under this section are those of the third 
party; the creditor is not responsible for ensuring that a third party 
complies with those obligations. If an intermediary agent or broker 
takes an application over the telephone or receives an application 
contained in a magazine or other publication, footnote 10a permits that 
person to mail the disclosures and brochure within three business days 
of receipt of the application. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.5b(h) 
about imposition of nonrefundable fees.)

                      5b(d) Content of Disclosures

    1. Disclosures given as applicable. The disclosures required under 
this section need be made only as applicable. Thus, for example, if 
negative amortization cannot occur in a home equity plan, a reference to 
it need not be made.
    2. Duty to respond to requests for information. If the consumer, 
prior to the opening of a plan, requests information as suggested in the 
disclosures (such as the current index value or margin), the creditor 
must provide this information as soon as reasonably possible after the 
request.

                    5b(d)(1) Retention of Information

    1. When disclosure not required. The creditor need not disclose that 
the consumer should make or otherwise retain a copy of the disclosures 
if they are retainable--for example, if the disclosures are not part of 
an application that must be returned to the creditor to apply for the 
plan.

                 5b(d)(2) Conditions for Disclosed Terms

                          Paragraph 5b(d)(2)(i)

    1. Guaranteed terms. The requirement that the creditor disclose the 
time by which an application must be submitted to obtain the disclosed 
terms does not require the creditor to guarantee any terms. If a 
creditor chooses not to guarantee any terms, it must disclose that all 
of the terms are subject to change prior to opening the plan. The 
creditor also is permitted to guarantee some terms and not others, but 
must indicate which terms are subject to change.
    2. Date for obtaining disclosed terms. The creditor may disclose 
either a specific date or a time period for obtaining the disclosed 
terms. If the creditor discloses a time period, the consumer must be 
able to determine from the disclosure the specific date by which an 
application must be submitted to obtain any guaranteed terms. For 
example, the disclosure might read, ``To obtain the following terms, you 
must submit your application within 60 days after the date appearing on 
this disclosure,'' provided the disclosure form also shows the date.

                         Paragraph 5b(d)(2)(ii)

    1. Relation to other provisions. Creditors should consult the rules 
in Sec.  226.5b(g) regarding refund of fees.

                  5b(d)(4) Possible Actions by Creditor

                          Paragraph 5b(d)(4)(i)

    1. Fees imposed upon termination. This disclosure applies only to 
fees (such as penalty or prepayment fees) that the creditor imposes if 
it terminates the plan prior to normal expiration. The disclosure does 
not apply to fees that are imposed either when the plan expires in 
accordance with the agreement or if the consumer terminates the plan 
prior to its scheduled maturity. In addition, the disclosure does not 
apply to fees associated with collection of the debt, such as attorneys 
fees and court costs, or to increases in the annual percentage rate 
linked to the consumer's failure to make payments. The actual amount of 
the fee need not be disclosed.
    2. Changes specified in the initial agreement. If changes may occur 
pursuant to Sec.  226.5b(f)(3)(i), a creditor must state that certain 
changes will be implemented as specified in the initial agreement.

[[Page 390]]

                         Paragraph 5b(d)(4)(iii)

    1. Disclosure of conditions. In making this disclosure, the creditor 
may provide a highlighted copy of the document that contains such 
information, such as the contract or security agreement. The relevant 
items must be distinguished from the other information contained in the 
document. For example, the creditor may provide a cover sheet that 
specifically points out which contract provisions contain the 
information, or may mark the relevant items on the document itself. As 
an alternative to disclosing the conditions in this manner, the creditor 
may simply describe the conditions using the language in Sec. Sec.  
226.5b(f)(2)(i)-(iii), 226.5b(f)(3)(i) (regarding freezing the line when 
the maximum annual percentage rate is reached), and 226.5b(f)(3)(vi) or 
language that is substantially similar. The condition contained in Sec.  
226.5b(f)(2)(iv) need not be stated. In describing specified changes 
that may be implemented during the plan, the creditor may provide a 
disclosure such as ``Our agreement permits us to make certain changes to 
the terms of the line at specified times or upon the occurrence of 
specified events.''
    2. Form of disclosure. The list of conditions under Sec.  
226.5b(d)(4)(iii) may appear with the segregated disclosures or apart 
from them. If the creditor elects to provide the list of conditions with 
the segregated disclosures, the list need not comply with the precedence 
rule in Sec.  226.5b(a)(2).

                         5b(d)(5) Payment Terms

                          Paragraph 5b(d)(5)(i)

    1. Length of the plan. The combined length of the draw period and 
any repayment period need not be stated. If the length of the repayment 
phase cannot be determined because, for example, it depends on the 
balance outstanding at the beginning of the repayment period, the 
creditor must state that the length is determined by the size of the 
balance. If the length of the plan is indefinite (for example, because 
there is no time limit on the period during which the consumer can take 
advances), the creditor must state that fact.
    2. Renewal provisions. If, under the credit agreement, a creditor 
retains the right to review a line at the end of the specified draw 
period and determine whether to renew or extend the draw period of the 
plan, the possibility of renewal or extension--regardless of its 
likelihood--should be ignored for purposes of the disclosures. For 
example, if an agreement provides that the draw period is five years and 
that the creditor may renew the draw period for an additional five 
years, the possibility of renewal should be ignored and the draw period 
should be considered five years. (See the commentary accompanying Sec.  
226.9(c)(1) dealing with change in terms requirements.)

                         Paragraph 5b(d)(5)(ii)

    1. Determination of the minimum periodic payment. This disclosure 
must reflect how the minimum periodic payment is determined, but need 
only describe the principal and interest components of the payment. 
Other charges that may be part of the payment (as well as the balance 
computation method) may, but need not, be described under this 
provision.
    2. Fixed rate and term payment options during draw period. If the 
home equity plan permits the consumer to repay all or part of the 
balance during the draw period at a fixed rate (rather than a variable 
rate) and over a specified time period, this feature must be disclosed. 
To illustrate, a variable-rate plan may permit a consumer to elect 
during a ten-year draw period to repay all or a portion of the balance 
over a three-year period at a fixed rate. The creditor must disclose the 
rules relating to this feature including the period during which the 
option can be selected, the length of time over which repayment can 
occur, any fees imposed for such a feature, and the specific rate or a 
description of the index and margin that will apply upon exercise of 
this choice. For example, the index and margin disclosure might state: 
``If you choose to convert any portion of your balance to a fixed rate, 
the rate will be the highest prime rate published in the `Wall Street 
Journal' that is in effect at the date of conversion plus a margin.'' If 
the fixed rate is to be determined according to an index, it must be one 
that is outside the creditor's control and is publicly available in 
accordance with Sec.  226.5b(f)(1). The effect of exercising the option 
should not be reflected elsewhere in the disclosures, such as in the 
historical example required in Sec.  226.5b(d)(12)(xi).
    3. Balloon payments. In programs where the occurrence of a balloon 
payment is possible, the creditor must disclose the possibility of a 
balloon payment even if such a payment is uncertain or unlikely. In such 
cases, the disclosure might read, ``Your minimum payments may not be 
sufficient to fully repay the principal that is outstanding on your 
line. If they are not, you will be required to pay the entire 
outstanding balance in a single payment.'' In programs where a balloon 
payment will occur, such as programs with interest-only payments during 
the draw period and no repayment period, the disclosures must state that 
fact. For example, the disclosure might read, ``Your minimum payments 
will not repay the principal that is outstanding on your line. You will 
be required to pay the entire outstanding balance in a single payment.'' 
In making this disclosure, the creditor is not required to use the

[[Page 391]]

term ``balloon payment.'' The creditor also is not required to disclose 
the amount of the balloon payment. (See, however, the requirement under 
Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)(iii).) The balloon payment disclosure does not apply 
in cases where repayment of the entire outstanding balance would occur 
only as a result of termination and acceleration. The creditor also need 
not make a disclosure about balloon payments if the final payment could 
not be more than twice the amount of other minimum payments under the 
plan.

                         Paragraph 5b(d)(5)(iii)

    1. Minimum periodic payment example. In disclosing the payment 
example, the creditor may assume that the credit limit as well as the 
outstanding balance is $10,000 if such an assumption is relevant to 
calculating payments. (If the creditor only offers lines of credit for 
less than $10,000, the creditor may assume an outstanding balance of 
$5,000 instead of $10,000 in making this disclosure.) The example should 
reflect the payment comprised only of principal and interest. Creditors 
may provide an additional example reflecting other charges that may be 
included in the payment, such as credit insurance premiums. Creditors 
may assume that all months have an equal number of days, that payments 
are collected in whole cents, and that payments will fall on a business 
day even though they may be due on a non-business day. For variable-rate 
plans, the example must be based on the last rate in the historical 
example required in Sec.  226.5b(d)(12)(xi), or a more recent rate. In 
cases where the last rate shown in the historical example is different 
from the index value and margin (for example, due to a rate cap), 
creditors should calculate the rate by using the index value and margin. 
A discounted rate may not be considered a more recent rate in 
calculating this payment example for either variable- or fixed-rate 
plans.
    2. Representative examples. In plans with multiple payment options 
within the draw period or within any repayment period, the creditor may 
provide representative examples as an alternative to providing examples 
for each payment option. The creditor may elect to provide 
representative payment examples based on three categories of payment 
options. The first category consists of plans that permit minimum 
payment of only accrued finance charges (interest only plans). The 
second category includes plans in which a fixed percentage or a fixed 
fraction of the outstanding balance or credit limit (for example, 2% of 
the balance or \1/180\th of the balance) is used to determine the 
minimum payment. The third category includes all other types of minimum 
payment options, such as a specified dollar amount plus any accrued 
finance charges. Creditors may classify their minimum payment 
arrangements within one of these three categories even if other features 
exist, such as varying lengths of a draw or repayment period, required 
payment of past due amounts, late charges, and minimum dollar amounts. 
The creditor may use a single example within each category to represent 
the payment options in that category. For example, if a creditor permits 
minimum payments of 1%, 2%, 3% or 4% of the outstanding balance, it may 
pick one of these four options and provide the example required under 
Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)(iii) for that option alone.
    The example used to represent a category must be an option commonly 
chosen by consumers, or a typical or representative example. (See the 
commentary to Sec.  226.5b(d)(12) (x) and (xi) for a discussion of the 
use of representative examples for making those disclosures. Creditors 
using a representative example within each category must use the same 
example for purposes of the disclosures under Sec.  226.5b (d)(5)(iii) 
and (d)(12) (x) and (xi).) Creditors may use representative examples 
under Sec.  226.5b(d)(5) only with respect to the payment example 
required under paragraph (d)(5)(iii). Creditors must provide a full 
narrative description of all payment options under Sec.  226.5b(d)(5) 
(i) and (ii).
    3. Examples for draw and repayment periods. Separate examples must 
be given for the draw and repayment periods unless the payments are 
determined the same way during both periods. In setting forth payment 
examples for any repayment period under this section (and the historical 
example under Sec.  226.5b(d)(12)(xi)), creditors should assume a 
$10,000 advance is taken at the beginning of the draw period and is 
reduced according to the terms of the plan. Creditors should not assume 
an additional advance is taken at any time, including at the beginning 
of any repayment period.
    4. Reverse mortgages. Reverse mortgages, also known as reverse 
annuity or home equity conversion mortgages, in addition to permitting 
the consumer to obtain advances, may involve the disbursement of monthly 
advances to the consumer for a fixed period or until the occurrence of 
an event such as the consumer's death. Repayment of the reverse mortgage 
(generally a single payment of principal and accrued interest) may be 
required to be made at the end of the disbursements or, for example, 
upon the death of the consumer. In disclosing these plans, creditors 
must apply the following rules, as applicable:
    [sbull] If the reverse mortgage has a specified period for advances 
and disbursements but repayment is due only upon occurrence of a future 
event such as the death of the consumer, the creditor must assume that 
disbursements will be made until they are scheduled to end. The creditor 
must assume repayment will occur when disbursements end (or within a 
period following the final

[[Page 392]]

disbursement which is not longer than the regular interval between 
disbursements). This assumption should be used even though repayment may 
occur before or after the disbursements are scheduled to end. In such 
cases, the creditor may include a statement such as ``The disclosures 
assume that you will repay the line at the time the draw period and our 
payments to you end. As provided in your agreement, your repayment may 
be rquired at a different time.'' The single payment should be 
considered the ``minimum periodic payment'' and consequently would not 
be treated as a balloon payment. The example of the minimum payment 
under Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)(iii) should assume a single $10,000 draw.
    [sbull] If the reverse mortgage has neither a specified period for 
advances or disbursements nor a specified repayment date and these terms 
will be determined solely by reference to future events, including the 
consumer's death, the creditor may assume that the draws and 
disbursements will end upon the consumer's death (estimated by using 
actuarial tables, for example) and that repayment will be required at 
the same time (or within a period following the date of the final 
disbursement which is not longer than the regular interval for 
disbursements). Alternatively, the creditor may base the disclosures 
upon another future event it estimates will be most likely to occur 
first. (If terms will be determined by reference to future events which 
do not include the consumer's death, the creditor must base the 
disclosures upon the occurrence of the event estimated to be most likely 
to occur first.)
    [sbull] In making the disclosures, the creditor must assume that all 
draws and disbursements and accrued interest will be paid by the 
consumer. For example, if the note has a non-recourse provision 
providing that the consumer is not obligated for an amount greater than 
the value of the house, the creditor must nonetheless assume that the 
full amount to be drawn or disbursed will be repaid. In this case, 
however, the creditor may include a statement such as ``The disclosures 
assume full repayment of the amount advanced plus accrued interest, 
although the amount you may be required to pay is limited by your 
agreement.''
    [sbull] Some reverse mortgages provide that some or all of the 
appreciation in the value of the property will be shared between the 
consumer and the creditor. The creditor must disclose the appreciation 
feature, including describing how the creditor's share will be 
determined, any limitations, and when the feature may be exercised.

                     5b(d)(6) Annual Percentage Rate

    1. Preferred-rate plans. If a creditor offers a preferential fixed-
rate plan in which the rate will increase a specified amount upon the 
occurrence of a specified event, the creditor must disclose the specific 
amount the rate will increase.

                    5b(d)(7) Fees Imposed by Creditor

    1. Applicability. The fees referred to in Sec.  226.5b(d)(7) include 
items such as application fees, points, annual fees, transaction fees, 
fees to obtain checks to access the plan, and fees imposed for 
converting to a repayment phase that is provided for in the original 
agreement. This disclosure includes any fees that are imposed by the 
creditor to use or maintain the plan, whether the fees are kept by the 
creditor or a third party. For example, if a creditor requires an annual 
credit report on the consumer and requires the consumer to pay this fee 
to the creditor or directly to the third party, the fee must be 
specifically stated. Third party fees to open the plan that are 
initially paid by the consumer to the creditor may be included in this 
disclosure or in the disclosure under Sec.  226.5b(d)(8).
    2. Manner of describing fees. Charges may be stated as an estimated 
dollar amount for each fee, or as a percentage of a typical or 
representative amount of credit. The creditor may provide a stepped fee 
schedule in which a fee will increase a specified amount at a specified 
date. (See the discussion contained in the commentary to Sec.  
226.5b(f)(3)(i).)
    3. Fees not required to be disclosed. Fees that are not imposed to 
open, use, or maintain a plan, such as fees for researching an account, 
photocopying, paying late, stopping payment, having a check returned, 
exceeding the credit limit, or closing out an account do not have to be 
disclosed under this section. Credit report and appraisal fees imposed 
to investigate whether a condition permitting a freeze continues to 
exist--as discussed in the commentary to Sec.  226.5b(f)(3)(vi)--are not 
required to be disclosed under this section or Sec.  226.5b(d)(8).
    4. Rebates of closing costs. If closing costs are imposed they must 
be disclosed, regardless of whether such costs may be rebated later (for 
example, rebated to the extent of any interest paid during the first 
year of the plan).
    5. Terms used in disclosure. Creditors need not use the terms 
finance charge or other charge in describing the fees imposed by the 
creditor under this section or those imposed by third parties under 
Sec.  226.5b(d)(8).

          5b(d)(8) Fees Imposed by Third Parties to Open a Plan

    1. Applicability. Section 226.5b(d)(8) applies only to fees imposed 
by third parties to open the plan. Thus, for example, this section does 
not require disclosure of a fee imposed by a government agency at the 
end of a plan to release a security interest. Fees to be disclosed 
include appraisal, credit report, government agency, and attorneys fees. 
In cases

[[Page 393]]

where property insurance is required by the creditor, the creditor 
either may disclose the amount of the premium or may state that property 
insurance is required. For example, the disclosure might state, ``You 
must carry insurance on the property that secures this plan.''
    2. Itemization of third-party fees. In all cases creditors must 
state the total of third-party fees as a single dollar amount or a range 
except that the total need not include costs for property insurance if 
the creditor discloses that such insurance is required. A creditor has 
two options with regard to providing the more detailed information about 
third party fees. Creditors may provide a statement that the consumer 
may request more specific cost information about third party fees from 
the creditor. As an alternative to including this statement, creditors 
may provide an itemization of such fees (by type and amount) with the 
early disclosures. Any itemization provided upon the consumer's request 
need not include a disclosure about property insurance.
    3. Manner of describing fees. A good faith estimate of the amount of 
fees must be provided. Creditors may provide, based on a typical or 
representative amount of credit, a range for such fees or state the 
dollar amount of such fees. Fees may be expressed on a unit cost basis, 
for example, $5 per $1,000 of credit.
    4. Rebates of third party fees. Even if fees imposed by third 
parties may be rebated, they must be disclosed. (See the commentary to 
Sec.  226.5b(d)(7).)

                     5b(d)(9) Negative Amortization

    1. Disclosure required. In transactions where the minimum payment 
will not or may not be sufficient to cover the interest that accrues on 
the outstanding balance, the creditor must disclose that negative 
amortization will or may occur. This disclosure is required whether or 
not the unpaid interest is added to the outstanding balance upon which 
interest is computed. A disclosure is not required merely because a loan 
calls for non-amortizing or partially amortizing payments.

                   5b(d)(10) Transaction Requirements

    1. Applicability. A limitation on automated teller machine usage 
need not be disclosed under this paragraph unless that is the only means 
by which the consumer can obtain funds.

              5b(d)(12) Disclosures for Variable-Rate Plans

    1. Variable-rate provisions. Sample forms in appendix G-14 provide 
illustrative guidance on the variable-rate rules.

                         Paragraph 5b(d)(12)(iv)

    1. Determination of annual percentage rate. If the creditor adjusts 
its index through the addition of a margin, the disclosure might read, 
``Your annual percentage rate is based on the index plus a margin.'' The 
creditor is not required to disclose a specific value for the margin.

                        Paragraph 5b(d)(12)(viii)

    1. Preferred-rate provisions. This paragraph requires disclosure of 
preferred-rate provisions, where the rate will increase upon the 
occurrence of some event, such as the borrower-employee leaving the 
creditor's employ or the consumer closing an existing deposit account 
with the creditor.
    2. Provisions on conversion to fixed rates. The commentary to Sec.  
226.5b(d)(5)(ii) discusses the disclosure requirements for options 
permitting the consumer to convert from a variable rate to a fixed rate.

                         Paragraph 5b(d)(12)(ix)

    1. Periodic limitations on increases in rates. The creditor must 
disclose any annual limitations on increases in the annual percentage 
rate. If the creditor bases its rate limitation on 12 monthly billing 
cycles, such a limitation should be treated as an annual cap. Rate 
limitations imposed on less than an annual basis must be stated in terms 
of a specific amount of time. For example, if the creditor imposes rate 
limitations on only a semiannual basis, this must be expressed as a rate 
limitation for a six-month time period. If the creditor does not impose 
periodic limitations (annual or shorter) on rate increases, the fact 
that there are no annual rate limitations must be stated.
    2. Maximum limitations on increases in rates. The maximum annual 
percentage rate that may be imposed under each payment option over the 
term of the plan (including the draw period and any repayment period 
provided for in the initial agreement) must be provided. The creditor 
may disclose this rate as a specific number (for example, 18%) or as a 
specific amount above the initial rate. For example, this disclosure 
might read, ``The maximum annual percentage rate that can apply to your 
line will be 5 percentage points above your initial rate.'' If the 
creditor states the maximum rate as a specific amount above the initial 
rate, the creditor must include a statement that the consumer should 
inquire about the rate limitations that are currently available. If an 
initial discount is not taken into account in applying maximum rate 
limitations, that fact must be disclosed. If separate overall 
limitations apply to rate increases resulting from events such as the 
exercise of a fixed-rate conversion option or leaving the creditor's 
employ,

[[Page 394]]

those limitations also must be stated. Limitations do not include legal 
limits in the nature of usury or rate ceilings under state or federal 
statutes or regulations.
    3. Form of disclosures. The creditor need not disclose each periodic 
or maximum rate limitation that is currently available. Instead, the 
creditor may disclose the range of the lowest and highest periodic and 
maximum rate limitations that may be applicable to the creditor's home 
equity plans. Creditors using this alternative must include a statement 
that the consumer should inquire about the rate limitations that are 
currently available.

                         Paragraph 5b(d)(12)(x)

    1. Maximum rate payment example. In calculating the payment 
creditors should assume the maximum rate is in effect. Any discounted or 
premium initial rates or periodic rate limitations should be ignored for 
purposes of this disclosure. If a range is used to disclose the maximum 
cap under Sec.  226.5b(d)(12)(ix), the highest rate in the range must be 
used for the disclosure under this paragraph. As an alternative to 
making disclosures based on each payment option, the creditor may choose 
a representative example within the three categories of payment options 
upon which to base this disclosure. (See the commentary to Sec.  
226.5b(d)(5).) However, separate examples must be provided for the draw 
period and for any repayment period unless the payment is determined the 
same way in both periods. Creditors should calculate the example for the 
repayment period based on an assumed $10,000 balance. (See the 
commentary to Sec.  226.5b(d)(5) for a discussion of the circumstances 
in which a creditor may use a lower outstanding balance.)
    2. Time the maximum rate could be reached. In stating the date or 
time when the maximum rate could be reached, creditors should assume the 
rate increases as rapidly as possible under the plan. In calculating the 
date or time, creditors should factor in any discounted or premium 
initial rates and periodic rate limitations. This disclosure must be 
provided for the draw phase and any repayment phase. Creditors should 
assume the index and margin shown in the last year of the historical 
example (or a more recent rate) is in effect at the beginning of each 
phase.

                         Paragraph 5b(d)(12)(xi)

    1. Index movement. Index values and annual percentage rates must be 
shown for the entire 15 years of the historical example and must be 
based on the most recent 15 years. The example must be updated annually 
to reflect the most recent 15 years of index values as soon as 
reasonably possible after the new index value becomes available. If the 
values for an index have not been available for 15 years, a creditor 
need only go back as far as the values have been available and may start 
the historical example at the year for which values are first available.
    2. Selection of index values. The historical example must reflect 
the method of choosing index values for the plan. For example, if an 
average of index values is used in the plan, averages must be used in 
the example, but if an index value as of a particular date is used, a 
single index value must be shown. The creditor is required to assume one 
date (or one period, if an average is used) within a year on which to 
base the history of index values. The creditor may choose to use index 
values as of any date or period as long as the index value as of this 
date or period is used for each year in the example. Only one index 
value per year need be shown, even if the plan provides for adjustments 
to the annual percentage rate or payment more than once in a year. In 
such cases, the creditor can assume that the index rate remained 
constant for the full year for the purpose of calculating the annual 
percentage rate and payment.
    3. Selection of margin. A value for the margin must be assumed in 
order to prepare the example. A creditor may select a representative 
margin that it has used with the index during the six months preceding 
preparation of the disclosures and state that the margin is one that it 
has used recently. The margin selected may be used until the creditor 
annually updates the disclosure form to reflect the most recent 15 years 
of index values.
    4. Amount of discount or premium. In reflecting any discounted or 
premium initial rate, the creditor may select a discount or premium that 
it has used during the six months preceding preparation of the 
disclosures, and should disclose that the discount or premium is one 
that the creditor has used recently. The discount or premium should be 
reflected in the example for as long as it is in effect. The creditor 
may assume that a discount or premium that would have been in effect for 
any part of a year was in effect for the full year for purposes of 
reflecting it in the historical example.
    5. Rate limitations. Limitations on both periodic and maximum rates 
must be reflected in the historical example. If ranges of rate 
limitations are provided under Sec.  226.5b(d)(12)(ix), the highest 
rates provided in those ranges must be used in the example. Rate 
limitations that may apply more often than annually should be treated as 
if they were annual limitations. For example, if a creditor imposes a 1% 
cap every six months, this should be reflected in the example as if it 
were a 2% annual cap.
    6. Assumed advances. The creditor should assume that the $10,000 
balance is an advance taken at the beginning of the first billing cycle 
and is reduced according to the terms

[[Page 395]]

of the plan, and that the consumer takes no subsequent draws. As 
discussed in the commentary to Sec.  226.5b(d)(5), creditors should not 
assume an additional advance is taken at the beginning of any repayment 
period. If applicable, the creditor may assume the $10,000 is both the 
advance and the credit limit. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.5b(d)(5) 
for a discussion of the circumstances in which a creditor may use a 
lower outstanding balance.)
    7. Representative payment options. The creditor need not provide an 
historical example for all of its various payment options, but may 
select a representative payment option within each of the three 
categories of payments upon which to base its disclosure. (See the 
commentary to Sec.  226.5b(d)(5).)
    8. Payment information. The payment figures in the historical 
example must reflect all significant program terms. For example, 
features such as rate and payment caps, a discounted initial rate, 
negative amortization, and rate carryover must be taken into account in 
calculating the payment figures if these would have applied to the plan. 
The historical example should include payments for as much of the length 
of the plan as would occur during a 15-year period. For example:
    [sbull] If the draw period is 10 years and the repayment period is 
15 years, the example should illustrate the entire 10-year draw period 
and the first 5 years of the repayment period.
    [sbull] If the length of the draw period is 15 years and there is a 
15-year repayment phase, the historical example must reflect the 
payments for the 15-year draw period and would not show any of the 
repayment period. No additional historical example would be required to 
reflect payments for the repayment period.
    [sbull] If the length of the plan is less than 15 years, payments in 
the historical example need only be shown for the number of years in the 
term. In such cases, however, the creditor must show the index values, 
margin and annual percentage rates and continue to reflect all 
significant plan terms such as rate limitations for the entire 15 years.

A creditor need show only a single payment per year in the example, even 
though payments may vary during a year. The calculations should be based 
on the actual payment computation formula, although the creditor may 
assume that all months have an equal number of days. The creditor may 
assume that payments are made on the last day of the billing cycle, the 
billing date or the payment due date, but must be consistent in the 
manner in which the period used to illustrate payment information is 
selected. Information about balloon payments and remaining balance may, 
but need not, be reflected in the example.
    9. Disclosures for repayment period. The historical example must 
reflect all features of the repayment period, including the appropriate 
index values, margin, rate limitations, length of the repayment period, 
and payments. For example, if different indices are used during the draw 
and repayment periods, the index values for that portion of the 15 years 
that reflect the repayment period must be the values for the appropriate 
index.
    10. Reverse mortgages. The historical example for reverse mortgages 
should reflect 15 years of index values and annual percentage rates, but 
the payment column should be blank until the year that the single 
payment will be made, assuming that payment is estimated to occur within 
15 years. (See the commentary to Sec.  226.5b(d)(5) for a discussion of 
reverse mortgages.)

                             5b(e) Brochure

    1. Substitutes. A brochure is a suitable substitute for the Board's 
home equity brochure if it is, at a minimum, comparable to the Board's 
brochure in substance and comprehensiveness. Creditors are permitted to 
provide more detailed information than is contained in the Board's 
brochure.
    2. Effect of third party delivery of brochure. If a creditor 
determines that a third party has provided a consumer with the required 
brochure pursuant to Sec.  226.5b(c), the creditor need not give the 
consumer a second brochure.

                 5b(f) Limitations on Home Equity Plans

    1. Coverage. Section 226.5b(f) limits both actions that may be taken 
and language that may be included in contracts, and applies to any 
assignee or holder as well as to the original creditor. The limitations 
apply to the draw period and any repayment period, and to any renewal or 
modification of the original agreement.

                           Paragraph 5b(f)(1)

    1. External index. A creditor may change the annual percentage rate 
for a plan only if the change is based on an index outside the 
creditor's control. Thus, a creditor may not make rate changes based on 
its own prime rate or cost of funds and may not reserve a contractual 
right to change rates at its discretion. A creditor is permitted, 
however, to use a published prime rate, such as that in the Wall Street 
Journal, even if the bank's own prime rate is one of several rates used 
to establish the published rate.
    2. Publicly available. The index must be available to the public. A 
publicly available index need not be published in a newspaper, but it 
must be one the consumer can independently obtain (by telephone, for 
example) and use to verify rates imposed under the plan.

[[Page 396]]

    3. Provisions not prohibited. This paragraph does not prohibit rate 
changes that are specifically set forth in the agreement. For example, 
stepped-rate plans, in which specified rates are imposed for specified 
periods, are permissible. In addition, preferred-rate provisions, in 
which the rate increases by a specified amount upon the occurrence of a 
specified event, also are permissible.

                           Paragraph 5b(f)(2)

    1. Limitations on termination and acceleration. In general, 
creditors are prohibited from terminating and accelerating payment of 
the outstanding balance before the scheduled expiration of a plan. 
However, creditors may take these actions in the four circumstances 
specified in Sec.  226.5b(f)(2). Creditors are not permitted to specify 
in their contracts any other events that allow termination and 
acceleration beyond those permitted by the regulation. Thus, for 
example, an agreement may not provide that the balance is payable on 
demand nor may it provide that the account will be terminated and the 
balance accelerated if the rate cap is reached.
    2. Other actions permitted. If an event permitting termination and 
acceleration occurs, a creditor may instead take actions short of 
terminating and accelerating. For example, a creditor could temporarily 
or permanently suspend further advances, reduce the credit limit, change 
the payment terms, or require the consumer to pay a fee. A creditor also 
may provide in its agreement that a higher rate or higher fees will 
apply in circumstances under which it would otherwise be permitted to 
terminate the plan and accelerate the balance. A creditor that does not 
immediately terminate an account and accelerate payment or take another 
permitted action may take such action at a later time, provided one of 
the conditions permitting termination and acceleration exists at that 
time.

                          Paragraph 5b(f)(2)(i)

    1. Fraud or material misrepresentation. A creditor may terminate a 
plan and accelerate the balance if there has been fraud or material 
misrepresentation by the consumer in connection with the plan. This 
exception includes fraud or misrepresentation at any time, either during 
the application process or during the draw period and any repayment 
period. What constitutes fraud or misrepresentation is determined by 
applicable state law and may include acts of omission as well as overt 
acts, as long as any necessary intent on the part of the consumer 
exists.

                         Paragraph 5b(f)(2)(ii)

    1. Failure to meet repayment terms. A creditor may terminate a plan 
and accelerate the balance when the consumer fails to meet the repayment 
terms provided for in the agreement. However, a creditor may terminate 
and accelerate under this provision only if the consumer actually fails 
to make payments. For example, a creditor may not terminate and 
accelerate if the consumer, in error, sends a payment to the wrong 
location, such as a branch rather than the main office of the creditor. 
If a consumer files for or is placed in bankruptcy, the creditor may 
terminate and accelerate under this provision if the consumer fails to 
meet the repayment terms of the agreement. This section does not 
override any state or other law that requires a right-to-cure notice, or 
otherwise places a duty on the creditor before it can terminate a plan 
and accelerate the balance.

                         Paragraph 5b(f)(2)(iii)

    1. Impairment of security. A creditor may terminate a plan and 
accelerate the balance if the consumer's action or inaction adversely 
affects the creditor's security for the plan, or any right of the 
creditor in that security. Action or inaction by third parties does not, 
in itself, permit the creditor to terminate and accelerate.
    2. Examples. A creditor may terminate and accelerate, for example, 
if:
    [sbull] The consumer transfers title to the property or sells the 
property without the permission of the creditor
    [sbull] The consumer fails to maintain required insurance on the 
dwelling
    [sbull] The consumer fails to pay taxes on the property
    [sbull] The consumer permits the filing of a lien senior to that 
held by the creditor
    [sbull] The sole consumer obligated on the plan dies
    [sbull] The property is taken through eminent domain
    [sbull] A prior lienholder forecloses

By contrast, the filing of a judgment against the consumer would permit 
termination and acceleration only if the amount of the judgment and 
collateral subject to the judgment is such that the creditor's security 
is adversely affected. If the consumer commits waste or otherwise 
destructively uses or fails to maintain the property such that the 
action adversely affects the security, the plan may be terminated and 
the balance accelerated. Illegal use of the property by the consumer 
would permit termination and acceleration if it subjects the property to 
seizure. If one of two consumers obligated on a plan dies the creditor 
may terminate the plan and accelerate the balance if the security is 
adversely affected. If the consumer moves out of the dwelling that 
secures the plan and that action adversely affects the security, the 
creditor may terminate a plan and accelerate the balance.

[[Page 397]]

                           Paragraph 5b(f)(3)

    1. Scope of provision. In general, a creditor may not change the 
terms of a plan after it is opened. For example, a creditor may not 
increase any fee or impose a new fee once the plan has been opened, even 
if the fee is charged by a third party, such as a credit reporting 
agency, for a service. The change of terms prohibition applies to all 
features of a plan, not only those required to be disclosed under this 
section. For example, this provision applies to charges imposed for late 
payment, although this fee is not required to be disclosed under Sec.  
226.5b(d)(7).
    2. Charges not covered. There are three charges not covered by this 
provision. A creditor may pass on increases in taxes since such charges 
are imposed by a governmental body and are beyond the control of the 
creditor. In addition, a creditor may pass on increases in premiums for 
property insurance that are excluded from the finance charge under Sec.  
226.4(d)(2), since such insurance provides a benefit to the consumer 
independent of the use of the line and is often maintained 
notwithstanding the line. A creditor also may pass on increases in 
premiums for credit insurance that are excluded from the finance charge 
under Sec.  226.4(d)(1), since the insurance is voluntary and provides a 
benefit to the consumer.

                          Paragraph 5b(f)(3)(i)

    1. Changes provided for in agreement. A creditor may provide in the 
initial agreement that further advances will be prohibited or the credit 
line reduced during any period in which the maximum annual percentage 
rate is reached. A creditor also may provide for other specific changes 
to take place upon the occurrence of specific events. Both the 
triggering event and the resulting modification must be stated with 
specificity. For example, in home equity plans for employees, the 
agreement could provide that a specified higher rate or margin will 
apply if the borrower's employment with the creditor ends. A contract 
could contain a stepped-rate or stepped-fee schedule providing for 
specified changes in the rate or the fees on certain dates or after a 
specified period of time. A creditor also may provide in the initial 
agreement that it will be entitled to a share of the appreciation in the 
value of the property as long as the specific appreciation share and the 
specific circumstances which require the payment of it are set forth. A 
contract may permit a consumer to switch among minimum payment options 
during the plan.
    2. Prohibited provisions. A creditor may not include a general 
provision in its agreement permitting changes to any or all of the terms 
of the plan. For example, creditors may not include ``boilerplate'' 
language in the agreement stating that they reserve the right to change 
the fees imposed under the plan. In addition, a creditor may not include 
any ``triggering events'' or responses that the regulation expressly 
addresses in a manner different from that provided in the regulation. 
For example, an agreement may not provide that the margin in a variable-
rate plan will increase if there is a material change in the consumer's 
financial circumstances, because the regulation specifies that 
temporarily freezing the line or lowering the credit limit is the 
permissible response to a material change in the consumer's financial 
circumstances. Similarly a contract cannot contain a provision allowing 
the creditor to freeze a line due to an insignificant decline in 
property value since the regulation allows that response only for a 
significant decline.

                         Paragraph 5b(f)(3)(ii)

    1. Substitution of index. A creditor may change the index and margin 
used under the plan if the original index becomes unavailable, as long 
as historical fluctuations in the original and replacement indices were 
substantially similar, and as long as the replacement index and margin 
will produce a rate similar to the rate that was in effect at the time 
the original index became unavailable. If the replacement index is newly 
established and therefore does not have any rate history, it may be used 
if it produces a rate substantially similar to the rate in effect when 
the original index became unavailable.

                         Paragraph 5b(f)(3)(iii)

    1. Changes by written agreement. A creditor may change the terms of 
a plan if the consumer expressly agrees in writing to the change at the 
time it is made. For example, a consumer and a creditor could agree in 
writing to change the repayment terms from interest-only payments to 
payments that reduce the principal balance. The provisions of any such 
agreement are governed by the limitations in Sec.  226.5b(f). For 
example, a mutual agreement could not provide for future annual 
percentage rate changes based on the movement of an index controlled by 
the creditor or for termination and acceleration under circumstances 
other than those specified in the regulation. By contrast, a consumer 
could agree to a new credit limit for the plan, although the agreement 
could not permit the creditor to later change the credit limit except by 
a subsequent written agreement or in the circumstances described in 
Sec.  226.5b(f)(3)(vi).
    2. Written agreement. The change must be agreed to in writing by the 
consumer. Creditors are not permitted to assume consent because the 
consumer uses an account, even if use of an account would otherwise 
constitute

[[Page 398]]

acceptance of a proposed change under state law.

                         Paragraph 5b(f)(3)(iv)

    1. Beneficial changes. After a plan is opened, a creditor may make 
changes that unequivocally benefit the consumer. Under this provision, a 
creditor may offer more options to consumers, as long as existing 
options remain. For example, a creditor may offer the consumer the 
option of making lower monthly payments or could increase the credit 
limit. Similarly, a creditor wishing to extend the length of the plan on 
the same terms may do so. Creditors are permitted to temporarily reduce 
the rate or fees charged during the plan (though a change in terms 
notice may be required under Sec.  226.9(c) when the rate or fees are 
returned to their original level). Creditors also may offer an 
additional means of access to the line, even if fees are associated with 
using the device, provided the consumer retains the ability to use prior 
access devices on the original terms.

                          Paragraph 5b(f)(3)(v)

    1. Insignificant changes. A creditor is permitted to make 
insignificant changes after a plan is opened. This rule accommodates 
operational and similar problems, such as changing the address of the 
creditor for purposes of sending payments. It does not permit a creditor 
to change a term such as a fee charged for late payments.
    2. Examples of insignificant changes. Creditors may make minor 
changes to features such as the billing cycle date, the payment due date 
(as long as the consumer does not have a diminished grace period if one 
is provided), and the day of the month on which index values are 
measured to determine changes to the rate for variable-rate plans. A 
creditor also may change its rounding practice in accordance with the 
tolerance rules set forth in Sec.  226.14 (for example, stating an exact 
APR of 14.3333 percent as 14.3 percent, even if it had previously been 
stated as 14.33 percent). A creditor may change the balance computation 
method it uses only if the change produces an insignificant difference 
in the finance charge paid by the consumer. For example, a creditor may 
switch from using the average daily balance method (including new 
transactions) to the daily balance method (including new transactions).

                         Paragraph 5b(f)(3)(vi)

    1. Suspension of credit privileges or reduction of credit limit. A 
creditor may prohibit additional extensions of credit or reduce the 
credit limit in the circumstances specified in this section of the 
regulation. In addition, as discussed under Sec.  226.5b(f)(3)(i), a 
creditor may contractually reserve the right to take such actions when 
the maximum annual percentage rate is reached. A creditor may not take 
these actions under other circumstances, unless the creditor would be 
permitted to terminate the line and accelerate the balance as described 
in Sec.  226.5b(f)(2). The creditor's right to reduce the credit limit 
does not permit reducing the limit below the amount of the outstanding 
balance if this would require the consumer to make a higher payment.
    2. Temporary nature of suspension or reduction. Creditors are 
permitted to prohibit additional extensions of credit or reduce the 
credit limit only while one of the designated circumstances exists. When 
the circumstance justifying the creditor's action ceases to exist, 
credit privileges must be reinstated, assuming that no other 
circumstance permitting such action exists at that time.
    3. Imposition of fees. If not prohibited by state law, a creditor 
may collect only bona fide and reasonable appraisal and credit report 
fees if such fees are actually incurred in investigating whether the 
condition permitting the freeze continues to exist. A creditor may not, 
in any circumstances, impose a fee to reinstate a credit line once the 
condition has been determined not to exist.
    4. Reinstatement of credit privileges. Creditors are responsible for 
ensuring that credit privileges are restored as soon as reasonably 
possible after the condition that permitted the creditor's action ceases 
to exist. One way a creditor can meet this responsibility is to monitor 
the line on an ongoing basis to determine when the condition ceases to 
exist. The creditor must investigate the condition frequently enough to 
assure itself that the condition permitting the freeze continues to 
exist. The frequency with which the creditor must investigate to 
determine whether a condition continues to exist depends upon the 
specific condition permitting the freeze. As an alternative to such 
monitoring, the creditor may shift the duty to the consumer to request 
reinstatement of credit privileges by providing a notice in accordance 
with Sec.  226.9(c)(3). A creditor may require a reinstatement request 
to be in writing if it notifies the consumer of this requirement on the 
notice provided under Sec.  226.9(c)(3). Once the consumer requests 
reinstatement, the creditor must promptly investigate to determine 
whether the condition allowing the freeze continues to exist. Under this 
alternative, the creditor has a duty to investigate only upon the 
consumer's request.
    5. Suspension of credit privileges following request by consumer. A 
creditor may honor a specific request by a consumer to suspend credit 
privileges. If the consumer later requests that the creditor reinstate 
credit privileges, the creditor must do so provided no other 
circumstance justifying a suspension exists at that time. If two or more 
consumers are obligated under a plan and each

[[Page 399]]

has the ability to take advances, the agreement may permit any of the 
consumers to direct the creditor not to make further advances. A 
creditor may require that all persons obligated under a plan request 
reinstatement.
    6. Significant decline defined. What constitutes a significant 
decline for purposes of Sec.  226.5b(f)(3)(vi)(A) will vary according to 
individual circumstances. In any event, if the value of the dwelling 
declines such that the initial difference between the credit limit and 
the available equity (based on the property's appraised value for 
purposes of the plan) is reduced by fifty percent, this constitutes a 
significant decline in the value of the dwelling for purposes of Sec.  
226.5b(f)(3)(vi)(A). For example, assume that a house with a first 
mortgage of $50,000 is appraised at $100,000 and the credit limit is 
$30,000. The difference between the credit limit and the available 
equity is $20,000, half of which is $10,000. The creditor could prohibit 
further advances or reduce the credit limit if the value of the property 
declines from $100,000 to $90,000. This provision does not require a 
creditor to obtain an appraisal before suspending credit privileges 
although a significant decline must occur before suspension can occur.
    7. Material change in financial circumstances. Two conditions must 
be met for Sec.  226.5b(f)(3)(vi)(B) to apply. First, there must be a 
``material change'' in the consumer's financial circumstances, such as a 
significant decrease in the consumer's income. Second, as a result of 
this change, the creditor must have a reasonable belief that the 
consumer will be unable to fulfill the payment obligations of the plan. 
A creditor may, but does not have to, rely on specific evidence (such as 
the failure to pay other debts) in concluding that the second part of 
the test has been met. A creditor may prohibit further advances or 
reduce the credit limit under this section if a consumer files for or is 
placed in bankruptcy.
    8. Default of a material obligation. Creditors may specify events 
that would qualify as a default of a material obligation under Sec.  
226.5b(f)(3)(vi)(C). For example, a creditor may provide that default of 
a material obligation will exist if the consumer moves out of the 
dwelling or permits an intervening lien to be filed that would take 
priority over future advances made by the creditor.
    9. Government limits on the annual percentage rate. Under Sec.  
226.5b(f)(3)(vi)(D), a creditor may prohibit further advances or reduce 
the credit limit if, for example, a state usury law is enacted which 
prohibits a creditor from imposing the agreed-upon annual percentage 
rate.

                          5b(g) Refund of Fees

    1. Refund of fees required. If any disclosed term, including any 
term provided upon request pursuant to Sec.  226.5b(d), changes between 
the time the early disclosures are provided to the consumer and the time 
the plan is opened, and the consumer as a result decides to not enter 
into the plan, a creditor must refund all fees paid by the consumer in 
connection with the application. All fees, including credit report fees 
and appraisal fees, must be refunded whether such fees are paid to the 
creditor or directly to third parties. A consumer is entitled to a 
refund of fees under these circumstances whether or not terms are 
guaranteed by the creditor under Sec.  226.5b(d)(2)(i).
    2. Variable-rate plans. The right to a refund of fees does not apply 
to changes in the annual percentage rate resulting from fluctuations in 
the index value in a variable-rate plan. Also, if the maximum annual 
percentage rate is expressed as an amount over the initial rate, the 
right to refund of fees would not apply to changes in the cap resulting 
from fluctuations in the index value.
    3. Changes in terms. If a term, such as the maximum rate, is stated 
as a range in the early disclosures, and the term ultimately applicable 
to the plan falls within that range, a change does not occur for 
purposes of this section. If, however, no range is used and the term is 
changed (for example, a rate cap of 6 rather than 5 percentage points 
over the initial rate), the change would permit the consumer to obtain a 
refund of fees. If a fee imposed by the creditor is stated in the early 
disclosures as an estimate and the fee changes, the consumer could elect 
to not enter into the agreement and would be entitled to a refund of 
fees. On the other hand, if fees imposed by third parties are disclosed 
as estimates and those fees change, the consumer is not entitled to a 
refund of fees paid in connection with the application. Creditors must, 
however, use the best information reasonably available in providing 
disclosures about such fees.
    4. Timing of refunds and relation to other provisions. The refund of 
fees must be made as soon as reasonably possible after the creditor is 
notified that the consumer is not entering into the plan because of the 
changed term, or that the consumer wants a refund of fees. The fact that 
an application fee may be refunded to some applicants under this 
provision does not render such fees finance charges under Sec.  
226.4(c)(1) of the regulation.

                 5b(h) Imposition of Nonrefundable Fees

    1. Collection of fees after consumer receives disclosures. A fee may 
be collected after the consumer receives the disclosures and brochure 
and before the expiration of three days, although the fee must be 
refunded if, within three days of receiving the required information, 
the consumer decides to not enter into the agreement. In such a case, 
the consumer must be notified that the fee is refundable for three days. 
The notice must be

[[Page 400]]

clear and conspicuous and in writing, and may be included with the 
disclosures required under Sec.  226.5b(d) or as an attachment to them. 
If disclosures and brochure are mailed to the consumer, footnote 10d of 
the regulation provides that a nonrefundable fee may not be imposed 
until six business days after the mailing.
    2. Collection of fees before consumer receives disclosures. An 
application fee may be collected before the consumer receives the 
disclosures and brochure (for example, when an application contained in 
a magazine is mailed in with an application fee) provided that it 
remains refundable until three business days after the consumer receives 
the Sec.  226.5b disclosures. No other fees except a refundable 
membership fee may be collected until after the consumer receives the 
disclosures required under Sec.  226.5b.
    3. Relation to other provisions. A fee collected before disclosures 
are provided may become nonrefundable except that, under Sec.  
226.5b(g), it must be refunded if the consumer elects to not enter into 
the plan because of a change in terms. (Of course, all fees must be 
refunded if the consumer later rescinds under Sec.  226.15.)

               Section 226.6 Initial Disclosure Statement

    1. Consistent terminology. Language on the initial and periodic 
disclosure statements must be close enough in meaning to enable the 
consumer to relate the 2 sets of disclosures; however, the language need 
not be identical. For example, in making the disclosure under Sec.  
226.6(a)(3), the creditor may refer to the ``outstanding balance at the 
end of the billing cycle,'' while the disclosure for Sec.  226.7(i) 
refers to the ``ending balance'' or ``new balance.''
    2. Separate initial disclosures permitted. In a certain open-end 
credit program involving more than one creditor--a card issuer of 
travel-and-entertainment cards and a financial institution--the consumer 
has the option to pay the card issuer directly or to transfer to the 
financial institution all or part of the amount owing. In this case, the 
creditors may send separate initial disclosure statements.
    6(a) Finance charge.
    Paragraph 6(a)(1)
    1. When finance charges accrue. Creditors may provide a general 
explanation about finance charges beginning to run and need not disclose 
a specific date. For example, a disclosure that the consumer has 30 days 
from the closing date to pay the new balance before finance charges will 
accrue on the account would describe when finance charges begin to run.
    2. Free-ride periods. In disclosing whether or not a free-ride 
period exists, the creditor need not use ``free period,'' ``free-ride 
period,'' or any other particular descriptive phrase or term. For 
example, a statement that ``the finance charge begins on the date the 
transaction is posted to your account'' adequately discloses that no 
free-ride period exists. In the same fashion, a statement that ``finance 
charges will be imposed on any new purchases only if they are not paid 
in full within 25 days after the close of the billing cycle'' indicates 
that a free-ride period exists in the interim.
    Paragraph 6(a)(2).
    1. Range of balances. The range of balances disclosure is 
inapplicable:
    [sbull] If only one periodic rate may be applied to the entire 
account balance.
    [sbull] If only one periodic rate may be applied to the entire 
balance for a feature (for example, cash advances), even though the 
balance for another feature (purchases) may be subject to 2 rates (a 
1.5% periodic rate on purchase balances of $0-$500, while balances above 
$500 are subject to a 1% periodic rate). Of course, the creditor must 
give a range of balances disclosure for the purchase feature.
    2. Variable-rate disclosures--coverage. This section covers open-end 
credit plans under which rate changes are part of the plan and are tied 
to an index or formula. A creditor would use variable-rate disclosures 
(and thus be excused from the requirement of giving a change-in-terms 
notice when rate increases occur as disclosed) for plans involving rate 
changes such as the following:

    [sbull] Rate changes that are tied to the rate the creditor pays on 
its 6-month money market certificates.
    [sbull] Rate changes that are tied to Treasury bill rates.
    [sbull] Rate changes that are tied to changes in the creditor's 
commercial lending rate.

In contrast, the creditor's contract reservation to increase the rate 
without reference to such an index or formula (for example, a plan that 
simply provides that the creditor reserves the right to raise its rates) 
would not be considered a variable-rate plan for Truth in Lending 
disclosure purposes. (See the rule in Sec.  226.5b(f)(1) applicable to 
home equity plans, however, which prohibits ``rate reservation'' 
clauses.) Moreover, an open-end credit plan in which the employee 
receives a lower rate contingent upon employment (that is, with the rate 
to be increased upon termination of employment) is not a variable-rate 
plan. (With regard to such employee preferential-rate plans, however, 
see comment 9(c)-1, which provides that if the specific change that 
would occur is disclosed on the initial disclosure statement, no notice 
of a change in terms need be given when the term later changes as 
disclosed.)
    3. Variable rate plan--rate(s) in effect. In disclosing the rate(s) 
in effect at the time of the initial disclosures (as is required by 
Sec.  226.6(a)(2)), the creditor may use an insert showing the current 
rate; may give the rate as of a specified date and then update the

[[Page 401]]

disclosure from time to time, for example, each calendar month; or may 
disclose an estimated rate under Sec.  226.5(c).
    4. Variable rate plan--additional disclosures required. In addition 
to disclosing the rates in effect at the time of the initial 
disclosures, the disclosures under footnote 12 also must be made.
    5. Variable rate plan--index. The index to be used must be clearly 
identified; the creditor need not give, however, an explanation of how 
the index is determined or provide instructions for obtaining it.
    6. Variable rate plan--circumstances for increase. Circumstances 
under which the rate(s) may increase include, for example:
    [sbull] An increase in the Treasury bill rate.
    [sbull] An increase in the Federal Reserve discount rate.
    The creditor must disclose when the increase will take effect; for 
example,
    [sbull] ``An increase will take effect on the day that the Treasury 
bill rate increases,'' or
    [sbull] ``An increase in the Federal Reserve discount rate will take 
effect on the first day of the creditor's billing cycle.''
    7. Variable-rate plan--limitations on increase. In disclosing any 
limitations on rate increases, limitations such as the maximum increase 
per year or the maximum increase over the duration of the plan must be 
disclosed. When there are no limitations, the creditor may, but need 
not, disclose that fact. (A maximum interest rate must be included in 
dwelling-secured open-end credit plans under which the interest rate may 
be changed. See Sec.  226.30 and the commentary to that section.) Legal 
limits such as usury or rate ceilings under State or Federal statutes or 
regulations need not be disclosed. Examples of limitations that must be 
disclosed include:
    [sbull] ``The rate on the plan will not exceed 25% annual percentage 
rate.''
    [sbull] ``Not more than \1/2\% increase in the annual percentage 
rate per year will occur.''
    8. Variable rate plan--effects of increase. Examples of effects that 
must be disclosed include:
    [sbull] Any requirement for additional collateral if the annual 
percentage rate increases beyond a specified rate.
    [sbull] Any increase in the scheduled minimum periodic payment 
amount.

    9. Variable rate plan--change-in-terms notice not required. No 
notice of a change in terms is required for a rate increase under a 
variable rate plan as defined in Comment 6(a)(2)-2.
    10. Discounted variable-rate plans. In some variable-rate plans, 
creditors may set an initial interest rate that is not determined by the 
index or formula used to make later interest rate adjustments. 
Typically, this initial rate is lower than the rate would be if it were 
calculated using the index or formula.
    [sbull] For example, a creditor may calculate interest rates 
according to a formula using the six-month Treasury bill rate plus a 2 
percent margin. If the current Treasury bill rate is 10 percent, the 
creditor may forego the 2 percent spread and charge only 10 percent for 
a limited time, instead of setting an initial rate of 12 percent, or the 
creditor may disregard the index or formula and set the initial rate at 
9 percent.
    [sbull] When creditors use an initial rate that is not calculated 
using the index or formula for later rate adjustments, the initial 
disclosure statement should reflect: (1) The initial rate (expressed as 
a periodic rate and a corresponding annual percentage rate), together 
with a statement of how long it will remain in effect; (2) the current 
rate that would have been applied using the index or formula (also 
expressed as a periodic rate and a corresponding annual percentage 
rate); and (3) the other variable-rate information required by footnote 
12 to Sec.  226.6(a)(2).
    [sbull] In disclosing the current periodic and annual percentage 
rates that would be applied using the index or formula, the creditor may 
use any of the disclosure options described in comment 6(a)(2)-3.
    11. Increased penalty rates. If the initial rate may increase upon 
the occurrence of one or more specific events, such as a late payment or 
an extension of credit that exceeds the credit limit, the creditor must 
disclose the initial rate and the increased penalty rate that may apply. 
If the penalty rate is based on an index and an increased margin, the 
issuer must disclose the index and the margin. The creditor must also 
disclose the specific event or events that may result in the increased 
rate, such as ``22% APR, if 60 days late.'' If the penalty rate cannot 
be determined at the time disclosures are given, the creditor must 
provide an explanation of the specific event or events that may result 
in the increased rate. At the creditor's option, the creditor may 
disclose the period for which the increased rate will remain in effect, 
such as ``until you make three timely payments.'' The creditor need not 
disclose an increased rate that is imposed when credit privileges are 
permanently terminated.
    Paragraph 6(a)(3).
    1. Explanation of balance computation method. A shorthand phrase 
such as ``previous balance method'' does not suffice in explaining the 
balance computation method. (See appendix G-1 for model clauses.)
    2. Allocation of payments. Disclosure about the allocation of 
payments and other credits is not required. For example, the creditor 
need not disclose that payments are applied to late charges, overdue 
balances, and finance charges before being applied to the principal 
balance; or in a multifeatured plan, that payments are applied first to 
finance charges, then to purchases, and then to cash

[[Page 402]]

advances. (See Comment 7-1 for definition of multifeatured plan.)
    Paragraph 6(a)(4).
    1. Finance charges. In addition to disclosing the periodic rate(s) 
under Sec.  226.6(a)(2), disclosure is required of any other type of 
finance charge that may be imposed, such as minimum, fixed, transaction, 
and activity charges; required insurance; or appraisal or credit report 
fees (unless excluded from the finance charge under Sec.  226.4(c)(7)).
    6(b) Other charges.
    1. General; examples of other charges. Under Sec.  226.6(b), 
significant charges related to the plan (that are not finance charges) 
must also be disclosed. For example:
    i. Late payment and over-the-credit-limit charges.
    ii. Fees for providing documentary evidence of transactions 
requested under Sec.  226.13 (billing error resolution).
    iii. Charges imposed in connection with real estate transactions 
such as title, appraisal, and credit report fees (see Sec.  
226.4(c)(7)).
    iv. A tax imposed on the credit transaction by a state or other 
governmental body, such as a documentary stamp tax on cash advances (see 
the commentary to Sec.  226.4(a)).
    v. A membership or participation fee for a package of services that 
includes an open-end credit feature, unless the fee is required whether 
or not the open-end credit feature is included. For example, a 
membership fee to join a credit union is not an ``other charge,'' even 
if membership is required to apply for credit. For the fee to be 
excluded from disclosure as an ``other charge,'' however, the package of 
services must have some substantive purpose other than access to the 
credit feature. For example, if the primary benefit of membership in an 
organization is the opportunity to apply for a credit card, and the 
other benefits offered (such as a newsletter or a member information 
hotline) are merely incidental to the credit feature, the membership fee 
would have to be disclosed as an ``other charge.''
    vi. Automated teller machine (ATM) charges described in comment 
4(a)-4 that are not finance charges.
    vii. Charges imposed for the termination of an open-end credit plan.

    2. Exclusions. The following are examples of charges that are not 
``other charges'':
    i. Fees charged for documentary evidence of transactions for income 
tax purposes.
    ii. Amounts payable by a consumer for collection activity after 
default; attorney's fees, whether or not automatically imposed; 
foreclosure costs; post-judgment interest rates imposed by law; and 
reinstatement or reissuance fees.
    iii. Premiums for voluntary credit life or disability insurance, or 
for property insurance, that are not part of the finance charge.
    iv. Application fees under Sec.  226.4(c)(1).
    v. A monthly service charge for a checking account with overdraft 
protection that is applied to all checking accounts, whether or not a 
credit feature is attached.
    vi. Charges for submitting as payment a check that is later returned 
unpaid (see commentary to Sec.  226.4(c)(2)).
    vii. Charges imposed on a cardholder by an institution other than 
the card issuer for the use of the other institution's ATM in a shared 
or interchange system. (See also comment 7(b)-2.)
    viii. Taxes and filing or notary fees excluded from the finance 
charge under Sec.  226.4(e).
    ix. A fee to expedite delivery of a credit card, either at account 
opening or during the life of the account, provided delivery of the card 
is also available by standard mail service (or other means at least as 
fast) without paying a fee for delivery.
    x. A fee charged for arranging a single payment on the credit 
account, upon the consumer's request (regardless of how frequently the 
consumer requests the service), if the credit plan provides that the 
consumer may make payments on the account by another reasonable means, 
such as by standard mail service, without paying a fee to the creditor.
    6(c) Security interests.
    1. General. Disclosure is not required about the type of security 
interest, or about the creditor's rights with respect to that 
collateral. In other words, the creditor need not expand on the term 
security interest. Also, since no specified terminology is required, the 
creditor may designate its interest by using, for example, pledge, lien, 
or mortgage (instead of security interest).
    2. Identification of property. Identification of the collateral by 
type is satisfied by stating, for example, motor vehicle or household 
appliances. (Creditors should be aware, however, that the federal credit 
practices rules, as well as some state laws, prohibit certain security 
interests in household goods.) The creditor may, at its option, provide 
a more specific identification (for example, a model and serial number).
    3. Spreader clause. The fact that collateral for pre-existing credit 
extensions with the institution is being used to secure the present 
obligation constitutes a security interest and must be disclosed. (Such 
security interests may be known as spreader or dragnet clauses, or as 
cross-collateralization clauses.) A specific identification of that 
collateral is unnecessary, but a reminder of the interest arising from 
the prior indebtedness is required. This may be accomplished by using 
language such as ``collateral securing other loans with us may also 
secure this loan.'' At the creditor's option, a more specific 
description of the property involved may be given.

[[Page 403]]

    4. Additional collateral. If collateral is required when advances 
reach a certain amount, the creditor should disclose the information 
available at the time of the initial disclosures. For example, if the 
creditor knows that a security interest will be taken in household goods 
if the consumer's balance exceeds $1,000, the creditor should disclose 
accordingly. If the creditor knows that security will be required if the 
consumer's balance exceeds $1,000, but the creditor does not know what 
security will be required, the creditor must disclose on the initial 
disclosure statement that security will be required if the balance 
exceeds $1,000, and the creditor must provide a change-in-terms notice 
under Sec.  226.9(c) at the time the security is taken. (See comment 
6(c)-2.)
    5. Collateral from third party. In certain situations, the 
consumer's obligation may be secured by collateral belonging to a third 
party. For example, an open-end credit plan may be secured by an 
interest in property owned by the consumer's parents. In such cases, the 
security interest is taken in connection with the plan and must be 
disclosed, even though the property encumbered is owned by someone other 
than the consumer.
    6(d) Statement of billing rights.
    See the commentary to appendix [chyph]G-3.

                    6(e) Home Equity Plan Information

    1. Additional disclosures required. For home equity plans, creditors 
must provide several of the disclosures set forth in Sec.  226.5b(d) 
along with the disclosures required under Sec.  226.6. Creditors also 
must disclose a list of the conditions that permit the creditor to 
terminate the plan, freeze or reduce the credit limit, and implement 
specified modifications to the original terms. (See comment 
5b(d)(4)(iii)-1.)
    2. Form of disclosures. The home equity disclosures provided under 
this section must be in a form the consumer can keep, and are governed 
by Sec.  226.5(a)(1). The segregation standard set forth in Sec.  
226.5b(a) does not apply to home equity disclosures provided under Sec.  
226.6.
    3. Disclosure of payment and variable-rate examples. The payment 
example disclosure in Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)(iii) and the variable-rate 
information in Sec.  226.5b(d)(12) (viii), (x), (xi), and (xii) need not 
be provided with the disclosures under Sec.  226.6 if:
    [sbull] The disclosures under Sec.  226.5b(d) were provided in a 
form the consumer could keep; and
    [sbull] The disclosures of the payment example under Sec.  
226.5b(d)(5)(iii), the maximum payment example under Sec.  
226.5b(d)(12)(x) and the historical table under Sec.  226.5b(d)(12)(xi) 
included a representative payment example for the category of payment 
options the consumer has chosen.

For example, if a creditor offers three payment options (one for each of 
the categories described in the commentary to Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)), 
describes all three options in its early disclosures, and provides all 
of the disclosures in a retainable form, that creditor need not provide 
the Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)(iii) or (d)(12) disclosures again when the 
account is opened. If the creditor showed only one of the three options 
in the early disclosures (which would be the case with a separate 
disclosure form rather than a combined form, as discussed under Sec.  
226.5b(a)), the disclosures under Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)(iii) and (d)(12) 
(viii), (x), (xi) and (xii) must be given to any consumer who chooses 
one of the other two options. If the Sec.  226.5b(d)(5)(iii) and (d)(12) 
disclosures are provided with the second set of disclosures, they need 
not be transaction-specific, but may be based on a representative 
example of the category of payment option chosen.
    4. Disclosures for the repayment period. The creditor must provide 
disclosures about both the draw and repayment phases when giving the 
disclosures under Sec.  226.6. Specifically, the creditor must make the 
disclosures in Sec.  226.6(e), state the corresponding annual percentage 
rate (as required in Sec.  226.6(a)(2)) and provide the variable-rate 
information required in footnote 12 for the repayment phase. To the 
extent the corresponding annual percentage rate, the information in 
footnote 12, and any other required disclosures are the same for the 
draw and repayment phase, the creditor need not repeat such information, 
as long as it is clear that the information applies to both phases.

                               References

    Statute: Section 127(a).
    Other sections: Sections 226.4, 226.5, 226.7, 226.9, 226.14, and 
appendix G.
    Previous regulation: Section 226.7(a) and Interpretation Sec.  
226.706.
    1981 changes: Section 226.6 implements the amended statute which 
requires disclosure of the fact that no free period exists. Disclosures 
about the minimum periodic payment and the Comparative Index of Credit 
Cost have been eliminated. The security interest disclosures have been 
simplified. Other charges no longer include voluntary credit life or 
disability insurance, required property insurance premiums, default 
charges, or fees for collection activity. Disclosures for variable rate 
plans are now required by the regulation, replacing Interpretation Sec.  
226.707. The regulation no longer specifies the exact language to be 
used for the billing rights notice; creditors may use any version 
substantially similar to the one in appendix G.

                    Section 226.7--Periodic Statement

    1. Multifeatured plans. Some plans involve a number of different 
features, such as purchases, cash advances, or overdraft checking. 
Groups of transactions subject to different

[[Page 404]]

finance charge terms because of the dates on which the transactions took 
place are treated like different features for purposes of disclosures on 
the periodic statements. The commentary includes some special rules for 
multifeatured plans.
    2. Separate periodic statements permitted. In a certain open-end 
credit program involving more than one creditor--a card issuer of 
travel-and-entertainment cards and a financial institution--the consumer 
has the option to pay the card issuer directly or to transfer to the 
financial institution all or part of the amount owing. In this case, the 
creditors may send separate periodic statements that reflect the 
separate obligations owed to each.
    3. Deferred payment transactions. Creditors offer a variety of 
payment plans for purchases that permit consumers to avoid finance 
charges if the purchase balance is paid in full by a certain date. The 
following provides guidance for one type of deferred payment plan where, 
for example, no finance charge is imposed on a $500 purchase made in 
January if the $500 balance is paid by March 31.
    i. Periodic rates. Under Sec.  226.7(d), creditors must disclose 
each periodic rate that may be used to compute the finance charge. Under 
some plans with a deferred payment feature, if the deferred payment 
balance is not paid by the payment due date, finance charges 
attributable to periodic rates applicable to the billing cycles between 
the date of purchase and the payment due date (January through March in 
this example) may be imposed. Periodic rates that may apply to the 
deferred payment balance ($500 in this example) if the balance is not 
paid in full by the payment due date must appear on periodic statements 
for the billing cycles between the date of purchase and the payment due 
date. However, if the consumer does not pay the deferred payment balance 
by the due date, the creditor is not required to identify, on the 
periodic statement disclosing the finance charge for the deferred 
payment balance, periodic rates that have been disclosed in previous 
billing cycles between the date of purchase and the payment due date.
    ii. Balances subject to periodic rates. Under Sec.  226.7(e), 
creditors must disclose the balances subject to periodic rates during a 
billing cycle. The deferred payment balance ($500 in this example) is 
not subject to a periodic rate for billing cycles between the date of 
purchase and the payment due date. Periodic statements sent for those 
billing cycles should not include the deferred payment balance in the 
balance disclosed under Sec.  226.7(e). At the creditor's option, this 
amount may be disclosed on periodic statements provided it is identified 
by a term other than the term used to identify the balance disclosed 
under Sec.  226.7(e) (such as ``deferred payment balance''). During any 
billing cycle in which a periodic rate finance charge on the deferred 
payment balance is debited to the account, the balance disclosed under 
Sec.  226.7(e) should include the deferred payment balance for that 
billing cycle.
    iii. Amount of finance charge. Under Sec.  226.7(f), creditors must 
disclose finance charges imposed during a billing cycle. For some 
deferred payment purchases, the creditor may impose a finance charge 
from the date of purchase if the deferred payment balance ($500 in this 
example) is not paid in full by the due date, but otherwise will not 
impose finance charges for billing cycles between the date of purchase 
and the payment due date. Periodic statements for billing cycles 
preceding the payment due date should not include in the finance charge 
disclosed under Sec.  226.7(f) the amounts a consumer may owe if the 
deferred payment balance is not paid in full by the payment due date. In 
this example, the February periodic statement should not identify as 
finance charges interest attributable to the $500 January purchase. At 
the creditor's option, this amount may be disclosed on periodic 
statements provided it is identified by a term other than ``finance 
charge'' (such as ``contingent finance charge'' or ``deferred finance 
charge''). The finance charge on a deferred payment balance should be 
reflected on the periodic statement under Sec.  226.7(f) for the billing 
cycle in which the finance charge is debited to the account.
    iv. Free-ride period. Assuming monthly billing cycles ending at 
month-end and a free-ride period ending on the 25th of the following 
month, here are four examples illustrating how a creditor may comply 
with the requirement to disclose the free-ride period applicable to a 
deferred payment balance ($500 in this example) and with the 14-day rule 
for mailing or delivering periodic statements before imposing finance 
charges (see Sec.  226.5):
    A. The creditor could include the $500 purchase on the periodic 
statement reflecting account activity for February and sent on March 1 
and identify March 31 as the payment due date for the $500 purchase. 
(The creditor could also identify March 31 as the payment due date for 
any other amounts that would normally be due on March 25.)
    B. The creditor could include the $500 purchase on the periodic 
statement reflecting activity for March and sent on April 1 and identify 
April 25 as the payment due date for the $500 purchase, permitting the 
consumer to avoid finance charges if the $500 is paid in full by April 
25.
    C. The creditor could include the $500 purchase and its due date on 
each periodic statement sent during the deferred payment period 
(January, February, and March in this example).
    D. If the due date for the deferred payment balance is March 7 
(instead of March 31), the

[[Page 405]]

creditor could include the $500 purchase and its due date on the 
periodic statement reflecting activity for January and sent on February 
1, the most recent statement sent at least 14 days prior to the due 
date.
    7(a) Previous balance.
    1. Credit balances. If the previous balance is a credit balance, it 
must be disclosed in such a way so as to inform the consumer that it is 
a credit balance, rather than a debit balance.
    2. Multifeatured plans. In a multifeatured plan, the previous 
balance may be disclosed either as an aggregate balance for the account 
or as separate balances for each feature (for example, a previous 
balance for purchases and a previous balance for cash advances). If 
separate balances are disclosed, a total previous balance is optional.
    3. Accrued finance charges allocated from payments. Some open-end 
credit plans provide that the amount of the finance charge that has 
accrued since the consumer's last payment is directly deducted from each 
new payment, rather than being separately added to each statement and 
reflected as an increase in the obligation. In such a plan, the previous 
balance need not reflect finance charges accrued since the last payment.
    7(b) Identification of transactions.
    1. Multifeatured plans. In identifying transactions under Sec.  
226.7(b) for multifeatured plans, creditors may, for example, choose to 
arrange transactions by feature (such as disclosing sale transactions 
separately from cash advance transactions) or in some other clear 
manner, such as by arranging the transactions in general chronological 
order.
    2. Automated teller machine (ATM) charges imposed by other 
institutions in shared or interchange systems. A charge imposed on the 
cardholder by an institution other than the card issuer for the use of 
the other institution's ATM in a shared or interchange system and 
included by the terminal-operating institution in the amount of the 
transaction need not be separately disclosed on the periodic statement.
    7(c) Credits.
    1. Identification--sufficiency. The creditor need not describe each 
credit by type (returned merchandise, rebate of finance charge, etc.)--
credit would suffice--except if the creditor is using the periodic 
statement to satisfy the billing error correction notice requirement. 
(See the commentary to Sec.  226.13 (e) and (f).)
    2. Format. A creditor may list credits relating to credit extensions 
(payments, rebates, etc.) together with other types of credits (such as 
deposits to a checking account), as long as the entries are identified 
so as to inform the consumer which type of credit each entry represents.
    3. Date. If only one date is disclosed (that is, the crediting date 
as required by the regulation), no further identification of that date 
is necessary. More than one date may be disclosed for a single entry, as 
long as it is clear which date represents the date on which credit was 
given.
    4. Totals. Where the creditor lists the credits made to the account 
during the billing cycle, the creditor need not disclose total figures 
for the amounts credited.
    7(d) Periodic rates.
    1. Disclosure of periodic rates--whether or not actually applied. 
Any periodic rate that may be used to compute finance charges (and its 
corresponding annual percentage rate) must be disclosed whether or not 
it is applied during the billing cycle. For example:

    [sbull] If the consumer's account has both a purchase feature and a 
cash advance feature, the creditor must disclose the rate for each, even 
if the consumer only makes purchases on the account during the billing 
cycle.
    [sbull] If the rate varies (such as when it is tied to a particular 
index), the creditor must disclose each rate in effect during the cycle 
for which the statement was issued.

    2. Disclosure of periodic rates required only if imposition 
possible. With regard to the periodic rate disclosure (and its 
corresponding annual percentage rate), only rates that could have been 
imposed during the billing cycle reflected on the periodic statement 
need to be disclosed. For example:

    [sbull] If the creditor is changing rates effective during the next 
billing cycle (either because it is changing terms or because of a 
variable rate plan), the rates required to be disclosed under Sec.  
226.7(d) are only those in effect during the billing cycle reflected on 
the periodic statement. For example, if the monthly rate applied during 
May was 1.5 percent, but the creditor will increase the rate to 1.8 
percent effective June 1, 1.5 percent (and its corresponding annual 
percentage rate) is the only required disclosure under Sec.  226.7(d) 
for the periodic statement reflecting the May account activity.
    [sbull] If the consumer has an overdraft line that might later be 
expanded upon the consumer's request to include secured advances, the 
rates for the secured advance feature need not be given until such time 
as the consumer has requested and received access to the additional 
feature.
    [sbull] If rates applicable to a particular type of transaction 
changed after a certain date, and the old rate is only being applied to 
transactions that took place prior to that date, the creditor need not 
continue to disclose the old rate for those consumers that have no 
outstanding balances to which that rate could be applied.
    3. Multiple rates--same transaction. If two or more periodic rates 
are applied to the same balance for the same type of transaction (for 
example, if the finance charge consists of a monthly periodic rate of 
1.5% applied to the outstanding balance and a required credit

[[Page 406]]

life insurance component calculated at .1% per month on the same 
outstanding balance), the creditor may do either of the following:

    [sbull] Disclose each periodic rate, the range of balances to which 
it is applicable, and the corresponding annual percentage rate for each. 
(For example, 1.5% monthly, 18% annual percentage rate; .1% monthly, 
1.2% annual percentage rate.)
    [sbull] Disclose one composite periodic rate (that is, 1.6% per 
month) along with the applicable range of balances and corresponding 
annual percentage rate.

    4. Corresponding annual percentage rate. In disclosing the annual 
percentage rate that corresponds to each periodic rate, the creditor may 
use ``corresponding annual percentage rate,'' ``nominal annual 
percentage rate,'' ``corresponding nominal annual percentage rate,'' or 
similar phrases.
    5. Rate same as actual annual percentage rate. When the 
corresponding rate is the same as the actual annual percentage rate 
(historical rate) required to be disclosed (Sec.  226.7(g)), the 
creditor need disclose only one annual percentage rate, but must use the 
phrase ``annual percentage rate.''
    6. Ranges of balances. See Comment 6(a)(2)-1.
    7. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(i).
    7(e) Balance on which finance charge computed.
    1. Limitation to periodic rates. Section 226.7(e) only requires 
disclosure of the balance(s) to which a periodic rate was applied and 
does not apply to balances on which other kinds of finance charges (such 
as transaction charges) were imposed. For example, if a consumer obtains 
a $1,500 cash advance subject to both a 1% transaction fee and a 1% 
monthly periodic rate, the creditor need only disclose the balance 
subject to the monthly rate (which might include portions of earlier 
cash advances not paid off in previous cycles).
    2. Split rates applied to balance ranges. If split rates were 
applied to a balance because different portions of the balance fall 
within two or more balance ranges, the creditor need not separately 
disclose the portions of the balance subject to such different rates 
since the range of balances to which the rates apply has been separately 
disclosed. For example, a creditor could disclose a balance of $700 for 
purchases even though a monthly periodic rate of 1.5 percent applied to 
the first $500, and a monthly periodic rate of 1 percent to the 
remainder. This option to disclose a combined balance does not apply 
when the finance charge is computed by applying the split rates to each 
day's balance (in contrast, for example, to applying the rates to the 
average daily balance). In that case, the balances must be disclosed 
using any of the options that are available if two or more daily rates 
are imposed. (See comment 7(e)-5.)
    3. Monthly rate on average daily balance. If a creditor computes a 
finance charge on the average daily balance by application of a monthly 
periodic rate or rates, the balance is adequately disclosed if the 
statement gives the amount of the average daily balance on which the 
finance charge was computed, and also states how the balance is 
determined.
    4. Multifeatured plans. In a multifeatured plan, the creditor must 
disclose a separate balance (or balances, as applicable) to which a 
periodic rate was applied for each feature or group of features subject 
to different periodic rates or different balance computation methods. 
Separate balances are not required, however, merely because a ``free-
ride'' period is available for some features but not others. A total 
balance for the entire plan is optional. This does not affect how many 
balances the creditor must disclose--or may disclose--within each 
feature. (See, for example, comment 7(e)-5.)
    5. Daily rate on daily balance. If the finance charge is computed on 
the balance each day by application of one or more daily periodic rates, 
the balance on which the finance charge was computed may be disclosed in 
any of the following ways for each feature:

    [sbull] If a single daily periodic rate is imposed, the balance to 
which it is applicable may be stated as:

    --A balance for each day in the billing cycle
    --A balance for each day in the billing cycle on which the balance 
in the account changes
    --The sum of the daily balances during the billing cycle
    --The average daily balance during the billing cycle, in which case 
the creditor shall explain that the average daily balance is or can be 
multiplied by the number of days in the billing cycle and the periodic 
rate applied to the product to determine the amount of the finance 
charge.

    [sbull] If two or more daily periodic rates may be imposed, the 
balances to which the rates are applicable may be stated as:

    --A balance for each day in the billing cycle
    --A balance for each day in the billing cycle on which the balance 
in the account changes
    --Two or more average daily balances, each applicable to the daily 
periodic rates imposed for the time that those rates were in effect, as 
long as the creditor explains that the finance charge is or may be 
determined by (1) multiplying each of the average balances by the number 
of days in the billing cycle (or if the daily rate varied during the 
cycle, by multiplying by the number of days

[[Page 407]]

the applicable rate was in effect), (2) multiplying each of the results 
by the applicable daily periodic rate, and (3) adding these products 
together.

    6. Explanation of balance computation method. See the commentary to 
Sec.  226.6(a)(3).
    7. Information to compute balance. In connection with disclosing the 
finance charge balance, the creditor need not give the consumer all of 
the information necessary to compute the balance if that information is 
not otherwise required to be disclosed. For example, if current 
purchases are included from the date they are posted to the account, the 
posting date need not be disclosed.
    8. Non-deduction of credits. The creditor need not specifically 
identify the total dollar amount of credits not deducted in computing 
the finance charge balance. Disclosure of the amount of credits not 
deducted is accomplished by listing the credits (Sec.  226.7(c)) and 
indicating which credits will not be deducted in determining the balance 
(for example, ``credits after the 15th of the month are not deducted in 
computing the finance charge.'')
    9. Use of one balance computation method explanation when multiple 
balances disclosed. Sometimes the creditor will disclose more than one 
balance to which a periodic rate was applied even though each balance 
was computed using the same balance computation method. For example, if 
a plan involves purchases and cash advances that are subject to 
different rates, more than one balance must be disclosed even though the 
same computation method is used for determining the balance for each 
feature. In these cases, one explanation of the balance computation 
method is sufficient. Sometimes the creditor separately discloses the 
portions of the balance that are subject to different rates because 
different portions of the balance fall within two or more balance 
ranges, even when a combined balance disclosure would be permitted under 
comment 7(e)-2. In these cases, one explanation of the balance 
computation method is also sufficient (assuming, of course, that all 
portions of the balance were computed using the same method).
    10. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(ii).
    7(f) Amount of finance charge.
    1. Total. A total finance charge amount for the plan is not 
required.
    2. Itemization--types of finance charges. Each type of finance 
charge (such as periodic rates, transaction charges, and minimum 
charges) imposed during the cycle must be separately itemized; for 
example, disclosure of only a combined finance charge attributable to 
both a minimum charge and transaction charges would not be permissible. 
Finance charges of the same type may be disclosed, however, individually 
or as a total. For example, 5 transaction charges of $1 may be listed 
separately or as $5.
    3. Itemization--different periodic rates. Whether different periodic 
rates are applicable to different types of transactions or to different 
balance ranges, the creditor may give the finance charge attributable to 
each rate or may give a total finance charge amount. For example, if a 
creditor charges 1.5% per month on the first $500 of a balance and 1% 
per month on amounts over $500, the creditor may itemize the two 
components ($7.50 and $1.00) of the $8.50 charge, or may disclose $8.50.
    4. Multifeatured plans. In a multifeatured plan, in disclosing the 
amount of the finance charge attributable to the application of periodic 
rates no total periodic rate disclosure for the entire plan need be 
given.
    5. Finance charges not added to account. A finance charge that is 
not included in the new balance because it is payable to a third party 
(such as required life insurance) must still be shown on the periodic 
statement as a finance charge.
    6. Finance charges other than periodic rates. See Comment 6(a)(4)-1 
for examples.
    7. Accrued finance charges allocated from payments. Some plans 
provide that the amount of the finance charge that has accrued since the 
consumer's last payment is directly deducted from each new payment, 
rather than being separately added to each statement and therefore 
reflected as an increase in the obligation. In such a plan, no 
disclosure is required of finance charges that have accrued since the 
last payment.
    8. Start-up fees. Points, loan fees, and similar finance charges 
relating to the opening of the account that are paid prior to the 
issuance of the first periodic statement need not be disclosed on the 
periodic statement. If, however, these charges are financed as part of 
the plan, including charges that are paid out of the first advance, the 
charges must be disclosed as part of the finance charge on the first 
periodic statement. However, they need not be factored into the annual 
percentage rate. (See footnote 33 in the regulation.)
    9. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(iii).
    7(g) Annual percentage rate.
    1. Rate same as corresponding annual percentage rate. See Comment 
7(d)-5.
    2. Multifeatured plans. In a multifeatured plan, the actual annual 
percentage rate that reflects the finance charge imposed during the 
cycle may be separately stated for each feature, or may be described as 
a composite for the whole plan. If separate rates are given, a composite 
annual percentage rate for the entire plan is optional.
    7(h) Other charges.
    1. Identification. In identifying any ``other charges'' actually 
imposed during the billing cycle, the type is adequately described as 
late charge or membership fee, for example. Similarly, closing costs or 
settlement costs, for

[[Page 408]]

example, may be used to describe charges imposed in connection with real 
estate transactions that are excluded from the finance charge under 
Sec.  226.4(c)(7), if the same term (such as closing costs) was used in 
the initial disclosures and if the creditor chose to itemize and 
individually disclose the costs included in that term. Even though the 
taxes and filing or notary fees excluded from the finance charge under 
Sec.  226.4(e) are not required to be disclosed as other charges under 
Sec.  226.6(b), these charges may be included in the amount shown as 
closing costs or settlement costs on the periodic statement, if the 
charges were itemized and disclosed as part of the closing costs or 
settlement costs on the initial disclosure statement. (See comment 6(b)-
1 for examples of other charges.)
    2. Date. The date of imposing or debiting other charges need not be 
disclosed.
    3. Total. Disclosure of the total amount of other charges is 
optional.
    4. Itemization--types of other charges. Each type of other charge 
(such as late payment charges, over-the-credit-limit charges, ATM fees 
that are not finance charges, and membership fees) imposed during the 
cycle must be separately itemized; for example, disclosure of only a 
total of other charges attributable to both an over-the-credit-limit 
charge and a late payment charge would not be permissible. Other charges 
of the same type may be disclosed, however, individually or as a total. 
For example, three ATM fees of $1 may be listed separately or as $3.
    7(i) Closing date of billing cycle; new balance.
    1. Credit balances. See Comment 7(a)-1.
    2. Multifeatured plans. In a multifeatured plan, the new balance may 
be disclosed for each feature or for the plan as a whole. If separate 
new balances are disclosed, a total new balance is optional.
    3. Accrued finance charges allocated from payments. Some plans 
provide that the amount of the finance charge that has accrued since the 
consumer's last payment is directly deducted from each new payment, 
rather than being separately added to each statement and therefore 
reflected as an increase in the obligation. In such a plan, the new 
balance need not reflect finance charges accrued since the last payment.
    7(j) Free-ride period.
    1. Wording. Although the creditor is required to indicate any time 
period the consumer may have to pay the balance outstanding without 
incurring additional finance charges, no specific wording is required, 
so long as the language used is consistent with that used on the initial 
disclosure statement. For example, ``To avoid additional finance 
charges, pay the new balance before ------'' would suffice.
    2. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(iv).

    7(k) Address for notice of billing errors.
    1. Wording. The periodic statement must contain the address for 
consumers to use in asserting billing errors under Sec.  226.13. Since 
all disclosures must be ``clear,'' the statement should indicate the 
general purpose for the address, although no elaborate explanation or 
particular wording is required.
    2. Telephone number. A telephone number may be included, but the 
address for billing error inquiries, which is the required disclosure, 
must be clear and conspicuous. One way to ensure that the address is 
clear and conspicuous is to include a precautionary instruction that 
telephoning will not preserve the consumer's billing error rights. Both 
of the billing rights statements in appendix G contain such a 
precautionary instruction, so that a creditor could, by including either 
of these statements with each periodic statement, ensure that the 
required address is provided in a clear and conspicuous manner.

                               References

    Statute: Section 127(b).
    Previous regulation: Section 226.7(b)(1) and Interpretation 
Sec. Sec.  226.701, 226.703, 226.706, and 226.707.
    Other sections: Sections 226.4 through 226.6, 226.8, 226.14, and 
appendix G.
    1981 changes: Under Sec.  226.7, required terminology is no longer 
mandated except for the terms finance charge and annual percentage rate. 
The requirement in the previous regulation about the location of 
disclosures has been deleted.
    Under the revised Sec.  226.7, disclosure of credits to the account 
no longer have to indicate the type of credit. A short disclosure for 
variable rate plans must be included on the periodic statement. 
Disclosures relating to multifeatured accounts have been clarified.
    Section 226.7 now specifically requires a periodic statement 
disclosure of other charges (non-finance charges related to the plan) 
that are actually imposed during the billing cycle.
    Disclosures about minimum charges that might be imposed on the 
account and about the Comparative Index of Credit Cost have been 
deleted.

              Section 226.8--Identification of Transactions

    1. Application of identification rules. Section 226.8 deals with the 
requirement (imposed by Sec.  226.7(b)) for identification of each 
credit transaction made during the billing cycle. The rules for 
identifying transactions on periodic statements vary, depending on 
whether:

    [sbull] The transaction involves sale credit (purchases) or nonsale 
credit (cash advances, for example).
    [sbull] An actual copy of the credit document reflecting the 
transaction accompanies the statement (this is the distinction between 
so-called country club and descriptive billing).

[[Page 409]]

    [sbull] The creditor and seller are the same or related persons.

    2. Sale credit. The term sale credit refers to a purchase in which 
the consumer uses a credit card or otherwise directly accesses an open-
end line of credit (see Comment 8-3 if access is by means of a check) to 
obtain goods or services from a merchant, whether or not the merchant is 
the card issuer. Sale credit even includes:

    [sbull] Premiums for voluntary credit life insurance whether sold by 
the card issuer or another person.
    [sbull] The purchase of funds-transfer services (such as telegrams) 
from an intermediary.

    3. Nonsale credit. The term nonsale credit refers to any form of 
loan credit including, for example:

    [sbull] Cash advances.
    [sbull] Overdraft checking.
    [sbull] The use of a supplemental credit device in the form of a 
check or draft or the use of the overdraft feature of a debit card, even 
if such use is in connection with a purchase of goods or services.
    [sbull] Miscellaneous debits to remedy mispostings, returned checks, 
and similar entries.

    4. Actual copy. An actual copy does not include a recreated 
document. It includes, for example, a duplicate, carbon, or photographic 
copy, but does not include a so-called ``facsimile draft'' in which the 
required information is typed, printed, or otherwise recreated. If a 
facsimile draft is used, the creditor must follow the rules that apply 
when a copy of the credit document is not furnished.
    5. Same or related persons. For purposes of identifying 
transactions, the term same or related persons refers to, for example:

    [sbull] Franchised or licensed sellers of a creditor's product or 
service.
    [sbull] Sellers who assign or sell open-end sales accounts to a 
creditor or arrange for such credit under a plan that allows the 
consumer to use the credit only in transactions with that seller.

    A seller is not related to the creditor merely because the seller 
and the creditor have an agreement authorizing the seller to honor the 
creditor's credit card.

    6. Transactions resulting from promotional material. In describing 
transactions with third-party sellers resulting from promotional 
material mailed by the creditor, creditors may use the rules either for 
related or for non-related sellers and creditors.
    7. Credit insurance offered through the creditor. When credit 
insurance that is not part of the finance charge (for example, voluntary 
credit life insurance) is offered to the consumer through the creditor, 
but is actually provided by another company, the creditor has the option 
of identifying the premiums in one of two ways on the periodic 
statement. The creditor may describe the premiums using either the rule 
in Sec.  226.8(a)(2) for related sellers and creditors, or the rule in 
Sec.  226.8(a)(3) for non-related sellers and creditors. This means, 
therefore, that the creditor may identify the insurance either by 
providing, under Sec.  226.8(a)(2), a brief identification of the 
services provided (for example, credit life insurance), or by 
disclosing, under Sec.  226.8(a)(3), the name and address of the company 
providing the insurance (for example, ABC Insurance Company, New York, 
New York). In either event, the creditor would, of course, also provide 
the amount and the date of the transaction.
    8. Transactions involving creditors and sellers with corporate 
connections. In a credit card plan established for use primarily with 
sellers that have no corporate connection with the creditor, the 
creditor may describe all transactions under the plan by using the rules 
in Sec.  226.8(a)(3)--creditor and seller not same or related persons--
including transactions involving a seller that has a corporate 
connection with the creditor. In other credit card plans, the creditor 
may describe transactions involving a seller that has a corporate 
connection with the creditor, such as subsidiary-parent, using the rules 
in Sec.  226.8(a)(3) where it is unlikely that the consumer would know 
of the corporate connection between the creditor and the seller--for 
example, where the names of the creditor and the seller are not similar, 
and the periodic statement is issued in the name of the creditor only.
    8(a) Sale credit.
    1. Date--disclosure of only one date. If only the required date is 
disclosed for a transaction, the creditor need not identify it as the 
``transaction date.'' If the creditor discloses more than one date (for 
example, the transaction date and the posting date), the creditor must 
identify each.
    2. Date--disclosure of month and day only. The month and day are 
sufficient disclosure of the date on which the transaction took place, 
unless the posting of the transaction is delayed so long that the year 
is needed for a clear disclosure to the consumer.
    3. When transaction takes place. If the consumer conducts the 
transaction in person, the date of the transaction is the calendar date 
on which the consumer made the purchase or order, or secured the 
advance. For transactions billed to the account on an ongoing basis 
(other than installments to pay a precomputed amount), the date of the 
transaction is the date on which the amount is debited to the account. 
This might include, for example, monthly insurance premiums. For mail or 
telephone orders, a creditor may disclose as the transaction date either 
the invoice date, the debiting date, or the date the order was placed by 
telephone.

[[Page 410]]

    4. Transactions not billed in full. If sale transactions are not 
billed in full on any single statement, but are billed periodically in 
precomputed installments, the first periodic statement reflecting the 
transaction must show either the full amount of the transaction together 
with the date the transaction actually took place; or the amount of the 
first installment that was debited to the account together with the date 
of the transaction or the date on which the first installment was 
debited to the account. In any event, subsequent periodic statements 
should reflect each installment due, together with either any other 
identifying information required by Sec.  226.8(a) (such as the seller's 
name and address in a three-party situation) or other appropriate 
identifying information relating the transaction to the first billing. 
The debiting date for the particular installment, or the date the 
transaction took place, may be used as the date of the transaction on 
these subsequent statements.
    8(a)(1) Copy of credit document provided.
    1. Format. The information required by Sec.  226.8(a)(1) may appear 
either on the copy of the credit document reflecting the transaction or 
on the periodic statement.
    8(a)(2) Copy of credit document not provided--creditor and seller 
same or related person(s).
    1. Property identification--sufficiency of description. The ``brief 
identification'' provision in Sec.  226.8(a)(2) requires a designation 
that will enable the consumer to reconcile the periodic statement with 
the consumer's own records. In determining the sufficiency of the 
description, the following rules apply:

    [sbull] While item-by-item descriptions are not necessary, 
reasonable precision is required. For example, merchandise, 
miscellaneous, second-hand goods, or promotional items would not 
suffice.
    [sbull] A reference to a department in a sales establishment that 
accurately conveys the identification of the types of property or 
services available in the department is sufficient--for example, 
jewelry, sporting goods.

    2. Property identification--number or symbol. The ``brief 
identification'' may be made by disclosing on the periodic statement a 
number or symbol that is related to an identification list printed 
elsewhere on the statement.
    3. Property identification--additional document. In making the 
``brief identification'' required by Sec.  226.8(a)(2), the creditor may 
identify the property by describing the transaction on a document 
accompanying the periodic statement (for example, on a facsimile draft). 
(See also footnote 17.)
    4. Small creditors. Under footnote 18, which provides a further 
identification alternative to a creditor with fewer than 15,000 
accounts, the creditor need count only its own accounts and not others 
serviced by the same data processor or other shared-service provider.
    5. Date of transaction--foreign transactions. In a foreign 
transaction, the debiting date may be considered the transaction date.
    8(a)(3) Copy of credit document not provided--creditor and seller 
not same or related person(s).
    1. Seller's name. The requirement contemplates that the seller's 
name will appear on the periodic statement in essentially the same form 
as it appears on transaction documents provided to the consumer at the 
time of the sale. The seller's name may also be disclosed as, for 
example:

    [sbull] A more complete spelling of the name that was alphabetically 
abbreviated on the receipt or other credit document.
    [sbull] An alphabetical abbreviation of the name on the periodic 
statement even if the name appears in a more complete spelling on the 
receipt or other credit document. Terms that merely indicate the form of 
a business entity, such as Inc., Co., or Ltd., may always be omitted.

    2. Location of transaction. The disclosure of the location where the 
transaction took place generally requires an indication of both the 
city, and the state or foreign country. If the seller has multiple 
stores or branches within that city, the creditor need not identify the 
specific branch at which the sale occurred.
    3. No fixed location. When no meaningful address is available 
because the consumer did not make the purchase at any fixed location of 
the seller, the creditor:
    [sbull] May omit the address.
    [sbull] May provide some other identifying designation, such as 
aboard plane, ABC Airways Flight, customer's home, telephone order, or 
mail order.

    4. Date of transaction--foreign transactions. See Comment 8(a)(2)-5.
    8(b) Nonsale credit.
    1. Date of transaction. If only one of the required dates is 
disclosed for a transaction, the creditor need not identify it. If the 
creditor discloses more than one date (for example, transaction date and 
debiting date), the creditor must identify each.
    2. Amount of transaction. If credit is extended under an overdraft 
checking account plan or by means of a debit card with an overdraft 
feature, the amount to be disclosed is that of the credit extension, not 
the face amount of the check or the total amount of the debit/credit 
transaction.
    3. Amount--disclosure on cumulative basis. If credit is extended 
under an overdraft checking account plan or by means of a debit card 
with an overdraft feature, the creditor may disclose the amount of the 
credit extensions on a cumulative daily basis, rather than the amount 
attributable to each check or each use of the debit/credit card.

[[Page 411]]

    4. Identification of transaction type. The creditor may identify a 
transaction by describing the type of advance it represents, such as 
cash advance, loan, overdraft loan, or any readily understandable trade 
name for the credit program.

                               References

    Statute: Section 127(b)(2).
    Previous regulation: Section 226.7(k).
    Other sections: Section 226.7.
    1981 changes: Section 226.8 has been streamlined and reorganized to 
facilitate its use. Technical detail has been deleted from the 
Regulation for inclusion in the commentary. The Regulation implements 
the amended section 127(b)(2) of the Act by providing for protection 
from civil liability under certain circumstances when required 
information is not provided and by reducing disclosure responsibilities 
for certain small creditors. For descriptive billing of nonsale 
transactions, the regulation now permits the use of the debiting date in 
all cases.

            Section 226.9--Subsequent Disclosure Requirements

              9(a) Furnishing Statement of Billing Rights.

                        9(a)(1) Annual Statement

    1. General. The creditor may provide the annual billing rights 
statement:

    [sbull] By sending it in one billing period per year to each 
consumer that gets a periodic statement for that period; or
    [sbull] By sending a copy to all of its account holders sometime 
during the calendar year but not necessarily all in one billing period 
(for example, sending the annual notice in connection with renewal cards 
or when imposing annual membership fees).

    2. Substantially similar. See the commentary to appendix G-3.

                  9(a)(2) Alternative Summary Statement

    1. Changing from long-form to short-form statement and vice versa. 
If the creditor has been sending the long-form annual statement, and 
subsequently decides to use the alternative summary statement, the first 
summary statement must be sent no later than 12 months after the last 
long-form statement was sent. Conversely, if the creditor wants to 
switch to the long-form, the first long-form statement must be sent no 
later than 12 months after the last summary statement.
    2. Substantially similar. See the commentary to appendix G-4.

9(b) Disclosures for Supplemental Credit Devices and Additional Features

    1. Credit device--examples. Credit device includes, for example, a 
blank check, payee-designated check, blank draft or order, or 
authorization form for issuance of a check; it does not include a check 
issued payable to a consumer representing loan proceeds or the 
disbursement of a cash advance.
    2. Credit feature--examples. A new credit feature would include, for 
example:

    [sbull] The addition of overdraft checking to an existing account 
(although the regular checks that could trigger the overdraft feature 
are not themselves devices).
    [sbull] The option to use an existing credit card to secure cash 
advances, when previously the card could only be used for purchases.

                            Paragraph 9(b)(1)

    1. Same finance charge terms. If the new means of accessing the 
account is subject to the same finance charge terms as those previously 
disclosed, the creditor:
    [sbull] Need only provide a reminder that the new device or feature 
is covered by the earlier disclosures. (For example, in mailing special 
checks that directly access the credit line, the creditor might give a 
disclosure such as ``Use this as you would your XYZ card to obtain a 
cash advance from our bank''); or
    [sbull] May remake the Sec.  226.6(a) finance charge disclosures.

                            Paragraph 9(b)(2)

    1. Different finance charge terms. If the finance charge terms are 
different from those previously disclosed, the creditor may satisfy the 
requirement to give the finance charge terms either by giving a complete 
set of new initial disclosures reflecting the terms of the added device 
or feature or by giving only the finance charge disclosures for the 
added device or feature.

                          9(c) Change in Terms

    1. Changes initially disclosed. No notice of a change in terms need 
be given if the specific change is set forth initially, such as: Rate 
increases under a properly disclosed variable-rate plan, a rate increase 
that occurs when an employee has been under a preferential rate 
agreement and terminates employment, or an increase that occurs when the 
consumer has been under an agreement to maintain a certain balance in a 
savings account in order to keep a particular rate and the account 
balance falls below the specified minimum. In contrast, notice must be 
given if the contract allows the creditor to increase the rate at its 
discretion but does not include specific terms for an increase (for 
example, when an increase may occur under the creditor's contract 
reservation right to increase the periodic rate). The rules in Sec.  
226.5b(f) relating to home equity plans, however, limit the ability of a 
creditor to change the terms of such plans.

[[Page 412]]

    2. State law issues. Examples of issues not addressed by Sec.  
226.9(c) because they are controlled by State or other applicable law 
include:

    [sbull] The types of changes a creditor may make.
    [sbull] How changed terms affect existing balances, such as when a 
periodic rate is changed and the consumer does not pay off the entire 
existing balance before the new rate takes effect.

    3. Change in billing cycle. Whenever the creditor changes the 
consumer's billing cycle, it must give a change-in-terms notice if the 
change either affects any of the terms required to be disclosed under 
Sec.  226.6 or increases the minimum payment, unless an exception under 
Sec.  226.9(c)(2) applies; for example, the creditor must give advance 
notice if the creditor initially disclosed a 25-day free-ride period on 
purchases and the consumer will have fewer days during the billing cycle 
change.

                     9(c)(1) Written Notice Required

    1. Affected consumers. Change-in-terms notices need only go to those 
consumers who may be affected by the change. For example, a change in 
the periodic rate for check overdraft credit need not be disclosed to 
consumers who do not have that feature on their accounts.
    2. Timing--effective date of change. The rule that the notice of the 
change in terms be provided at least 15 days before the change takes 
effect permits mid-cycle changes when there is clearly no retroactive 
effect, such as the imposition of a transaction fee. Any change in the 
balance computation method, in contrast, would need to be disclosed at 
least 15 days prior to the billing cycle in which the change is to be 
implemented.
    3. Timing--advance notice not required. Advance notice of 15 days is 
not necessary--that is, a notice of change in terms is required, but it 
may be mailed or delivered as late as the effective date of the change--
in two circumstances:

[sbull] If there is an increased periodic rate or any other finance 
charge attributable to the consumer's delinquency or default.
[sbull] If the consumer agrees to the particular change. This provision 
is intended for use in the unusual instance when a consumer substitutes 
collateral or when the creditor can advance additional credit only if a 
change relatively unique to that consumer is made, such as the 
consumer's providing additional security or paying an increased minimum 
payment amount. Therefore, the following are not ``agreements'' between 
the consumer and the creditor for purposes of Sec.  226.9(c)(1): The 
consumer's general acceptance of the creditor's contract reservation of 
the right to change terms; the consumer's use of the account (which 
might imply acceptance of its terms under State law); and the consumer's 
acceptance of a unilateral term change that is not particular to that 
consumer, but rather is of general applicability to consumers with that 
type of account.

    4. Form of change-in-terms notice. A complete new set of the initial 
disclosures containing the changed term complies with Sec.  226.9(c) if 
the change is highlighted in some way on the disclosure statement, or if 
the disclosure statement is accompanied by a letter or some other insert 
that indicates or draws attention to the term change.
    5. Security interest change--form of notice. A copy of the security 
agreement that describes the collateral securing the consumer's account 
may be used as the notice, when the term change is the addition of a 
security interest or the addition or substitution of collateral.
    6. Changes to home equity plans entered into on or after November 7, 
1989. Section 226.9(c) applies when, by written agreement under Sec.  
226.5b(f)(3)(iii), a creditor changes the terms of a home equity plan--
entered into on or after November 7, 1989--at or before its scheduled 
expiration, for example, by renewing a plan on terms different from 
those of the original plan. In disclosing the change:
    [sbull] If the index is changed, the maximum annual percentage rate 
is increased (to the limited extent permitted by Sec.  226.30), or a 
variable-rate feature is added to a fixed-rate plan, the creditor must 
include the disclosures required by Sec.  226.5b (d)(12)(x) and 
(d)(12)(xi), unless these disclosures are unchanged from those given 
earlier.
    [sbull] If the minimum payment requirement is changed, the creditor 
must include the disclosures required by Sec.  226.5(d)(5)(iii) (and, in 
variable-rate plans, the disclosures required by Sec.  226.5b (d)(12)(x) 
and (d)(12)(xi)) unless the disclosures given earlier contained 
representative examples covering the new minimim payment requirement. 
(See the commentary to Sec.  226.5b (d)(5)(iii), (d)(12)(x) and 
(d)(12)(xi) for a discussion of representative examples.)

When the terms are changed pursuant to a written agreement as described 
in Sec.  226.5b(f)(3)(iii), the advance-notice requirement does not 
apply.

                       9(c)(2) Notice Not Required

    1. Changes not requiring notice. The following are examples of 
changes that do not require a change-in-terms notice:

    [sbull] A change in the consumer's credit limit.
    [sbull] A change in the name of the credit card or credit card plan.
    [sbull] The substitution of one insurer for another.
    [sbull] A termination or suspension of credit privileges.

[[Page 413]]

    [sbull] Changes arising merely by operation of law; for example, if 
the creditor's security interest in a consumer's car automatically 
extends to the proceeds when the consumer sells the car.

    2. Skip features. If a credit program allows consumers to skip or 
reduce one or more payments during the year, or involves temporary 
reductions in finance charges, no notice of the change in terms is 
required either prior to the reduction or upon resumption of the higher 
rates or payments if these features are explained on the initial 
disclosure statement (including an explanation of the terms upon 
resumption). For example, a merchant may allow consumers to skip the 
December payment to encourage holiday shopping, or a teachers' credit 
union may not require payments during summer vacation. Otherwise, the 
creditor must give notice prior to resuming the original schedule or 
rate, even though no notice is required prior to the reduction. The 
change-in-terms notice may be combined with the notice offering the 
reduction. For example, the periodic statement reflecting the reduction 
or skip feature may also be used to notify the consumer of the 
resumption of the original schedule or rate, either by stating 
explicitly when the higher payment or charges resume, or by indicating 
the duration of the skip option. Language such as ``You may skip your 
October payment,'' or ``We will waive your finance charges for 
January,'' may serve as the change-in-terms notice.

                  9(c)(3) Notice for Home Equity Plans

    1. Written request for reinstatement. If a creditor requires the 
request for reinstatement of credit privileges to be in writing, the 
notice under Sec.  226.9(c)(3) must state that fact.
    2. Notice not required. A creditor need not provide a notice under 
this paragraph if, pursuant to the commentary to Sec.  226.5b(f)(2), a 
creditor freezes a line or reduces a credit line rather than terminating 
a plan and accelerating the balance.

           9(d) Finance Charge Imposed at Time of Transaction

    1. Disclosure prior to imposition. A person imposing a finance 
charge at the time of honoring a consumer's credit card must disclose 
the amount of the charge, or an explanation of how the charge will be 
determined, prior to its imposition. This must be disclosed before the 
consumer becomes obligated for property or services that may be paid for 
by use of a credit card. For example, disclosure must be given before 
the consumer has dinner at a restaurant, stays overnight at a hotel, or 
makes a deposit guaranteeing the purchase of property or services.

         9(e) Disclosures Upon Renewal of Credit or Charge Card

    1. Coverage. This paragraph applies to credit and charge card 
accounts of the type subject to 226.5a. (See Sec.  226.5a(a)(3) and the 
accompanying commentary for discussion of the types of accounts subject 
to Sec.  226.5a.) The disclosure requirements are triggered when a card 
issuer imposes any annual or other periodic fee on such an account, 
whether or not the card issuer originally was required to provide the 
application and solicitation disclosures described in Sec.  226.5a.
    2. Form. The disclosures under this paragraph must be clear and 
conspicuous, but need not appear in a tabular format or in a prominent 
location. The disclosures need not be in a form the cardholder can 
retain.
    3. Terms at renewal. Renewal notices must reflect the terms actually 
in effect at the time of renewal. For example, a card issuer that offers 
a preferential annual percentage rate to employees during their 
employment must send a renewal notice to employees disclosing the lower 
rate actually charged to employees (although the card issuer also may 
show the rate charged to the general public).
    4. Variable rate. If the card issuer cannot determine the rate that 
will be in effect if the cardholder chooses to renew a variable-rate 
account, the card issuer may disclose the rate in effect at the time of 
mailing or delivery of the renewal notice. Alternatively, the card 
issuer may use the rate as of a specified date (and then update the rate 
from time to time, for example, each calendar month) or use an estimated 
rate under Sec.  226.5(c).
    5. Renewals more frequent than annual. If a renewal fee is billed 
more often than annually, the renewal notice should be provided each 
time the fee is billed. In this instance, the fee need not be disclosed 
as an annualized amount. Alternatively, the card issuer may provide the 
notice no less than once every twelve months if the notice explains the 
amount and frequency of the fee that will be billed during the time 
period covered by the disclosure, and also discloses the fee as an 
annualized amount. The notice under this alternative also must state the 
consequences of a cardholder's decision to terminate the account after 
the renewal notice period has expired. For example, if a $2 fee is 
billed monthly but the notice is given annually, the notice must inform 
the cardholder that the monthly charge is $2, the annualized fee is $24, 
and $2 will be billed to the account each month for the coming year 
unless the cardholder notifies the card issuer. If the cardholder is 
obligated to pay an amount equal to the remaining unpaid monthly charges 
if the cardholder terminates the account during the coming year

[[Page 414]]

but after the first month, the notice must disclose that fact.
    6. Terminating credit availability. Card issuers have some 
flexibility in determining the procedures for how and when an account 
may be terminated. However, the card issuer must clearly disclose the 
time by which the cardholder must act to terminate the account to avoid 
paying a renewal fee. State and other applicable law govern whether the 
card issuer may impose requirements such as specifying that the 
cardholder's response be in writing or that the outstanding balance be 
repaid in full upon termination.
    7. Timing of termination by cardholder. When a card issuer provides 
notice under Sec.  226.9(e)(1), a cardholder must be given at least 30 
days or one billing cycle, whichever is less, from the date the notice 
is mailed or delivered to make a decision whether to terminate an 
account. When notice is given under Sec.  226.9(e)(2), a cardholder has 
30 days from mailing or delivery to decide to terminate an account.
    8. Timing of notices. A renewal notice is deemed to be provided when 
mailed or delivered. Similarly, notice of termination is deemed to be 
given when mailed or delivered.
    9. Prompt reversal of renewal fee upon termination. In a situation 
where a cardholder has provided timely notice of termination and a 
renewal fee has been billed to a cardholder's account, the card issuer 
must reverse or otherwise withdraw the fee promptly. Once a cardholder 
has terminated an account, no additional action by the cardholder may be 
required.

               9(e)(3) Notification on Periodic Statements

    1. Combined disclosures. If a single disclosure is used to comply 
with both Sec. Sec.  226.9(e) and 226.7, the periodic statement must 
comply with the rules in Sec. Sec.  226.5a and 226.7. For example, the 
words grace period must be used and the name of the balance calculation 
method must be identified (if listed in Sec.  226.5a(g)) to comply with 
the requirements of Sec.  226.5a, even though the use of those terms 
would not otherwise be required for periodic statements under Sec.  
226.7. A card issuer may include some of the renewal disclosures on a 
periodic statement and others on a separate document so long as there is 
some reference indicating that they relate to one another. All renewal 
disclosures must be provided to a cardholder at the same time.
    2. Preprinted notices on periodic statements. A card issuer may 
preprint the required information on its periodic statements. A card 
issuer that does so, however, using the advance notice option under 
Sec.  226.9(e)(1), must make clear on the periodic statement when the 
preprinted renewal disclosures are applicable. For example, the card 
issuer could include a special notice (not preprinted) at the 
appropriate time that the renewal fee will be billed in the following 
billing cycle, or could show the renewal date as a regular (preprinted) 
entry on all periodic statements.

          9(f) Change in Credit Card Account Insurance Provider

    1. Coverage. This paragraph applies to credit card accounts of the 
type subject to Sec.  226.5a if credit insurance (typically life, 
disability, and unemployment insurance) is offered on the outstanding 
balance of such an account. (Credit card accounts subject to Sec.  
226.9(f) are the same as those subject to Sec.  226.9(e); see comment 
9(e)-1.) Charge card accounts are not covered by this paragraph. In 
addition, the disclosure requirements of this paragraph apply only where 
the card issuer initiates the change in insurance providers. For 
example, if the card issuer's current insurance provider is merged into 
or acquired by another company, these disclosures would not be required. 
Disclosures also need not be given in cases where card issuers pay for 
credit insurance themselves and do not separately charge the cardholder.
    2. No increase in rate or decrease in coverage. The requirement to 
provide the disclosure arises when the card issuer changes the provider 
of insurance, even if there will be no increase in the premium rate 
charged the consumer and no decrease in coverage under the insurance 
policy.
    3. Form of notice. If a substantial decrease in coverage will result 
from the change in providers, the card issuer either must explain the 
decrease or refer to an accompanying copy of the policy or group 
certificate for details of the new terms of coverage. (See the 
commentary to appendix G-13.)
    4. Discontinuation of insurance. In addition to stating that the 
cardholder may cancel the insurance, the card issuer may explain the 
effect the cancellation would have on the consumer's credit card plan.
    5. Mailing by third party. Although the card issuer is responsible 
for the disclosures, the insurance provider or another third party may 
furnish the disclosures on the card issuer's behalf.

                9(f)(3) Substantial Decrease in Coverage

    1. Determination. Whether a substantial decrease in coverage will 
result from the change in providers is determined by the two-part test 
in Sec.  226.9(f)(3): First, whether the decrease is in a significant 
term of coverage; and second, whether the decrease might reasonably be 
expected to affect a cardholder's decision to continue the insurance. If 
both conditions are met, the decrease must be disclosed in the notice.

                               References

    Statute: Section 127(a)(7).
    Other sections: Sections 226.4 through 226.7 and appendix G.

[[Page 415]]

    Previous regulation: Section 226.7 (d) through (f) and (j) and 
Interpretation Sec. Sec.  226.705 and 226.708.
    1981 changes: Section 226.9(a) implements the statutory change that 
the long-form statement of billing rights be provided only once a year. 
The provision now permits two rather than one means of providing the 
long-form statement to consumers. The verbatim text of the annual 
statement is no longer required; creditors may use any version 
``substantially similar'' to the one in appendix G. If the creditor 
elects to use the alternative summary statement, the new regulation no 
longer requires that the long-form statement be sent upon receiving a 
billing error notice and at the consumer's request. The rules in Sec.  
226.708 on switching the type of billing rights statement used have been 
modified.
    Under Sec.  226.9(b) disclosure requirements have been streamlined 
when supplemental credit devices or new credit features are added to an 
existing open-end plan.
    Section 226.9(c) substantially changes the change-in-terms rules. 
Change-in-terms disclosures must now be made 15 days before the 
effective date of the change, rather than 15 days before the billing 
cycle in which the change will take effect. The kinds of changes that 
will trigger disclosures have been reduced: change-in-terms notices are 
no longer required for the types of changes described in Sec.  
226.9(c)(2). But the provision reverses Interpretation Sec.  226.705, 
which indicated that certain changes in the balance computation method 
did not require disclosure because they could result in lowered finance 
charges; now, any change in the balance computation method requires 
disclosure.
    When a finance charge is imposed at the time of a transaction, Sec.  
226.9(d) only requires disclosure of the finance charge at point of 
sale; the amount financed and annual percentage rate figured in 
accordance with the closed-end credit provisions need no longer be 
disclosed. Furthermore, the finance charge disclosure now may be made 
orally by the person honoring the card.

              Section 226.10--Prompt Crediting of Payments

    10(a) General rule.
    1. Crediting date. Section 226.10(a) does not require the creditor 
to post the payment to the consumer's account on a particular date; the 
creditor is only required to credit the payment as of the date of 
receipt.
    2. Date of receipt. The ``date of receipt'' is the date that the 
payment instrument or other means of completing the payment reaches the 
creditor. For example:

    [sbull] Payment by check is received when the creditor gets it, not 
when the funds are collected.
    [sbull] In a payroll deduction plan in which funds are deposited to 
an asset account held by the creditor, and from which payments are made 
periodically to an open-end credit account, payment is received on the 
date when it is debited to the asset account (rather than on the date of 
the deposit), provided the payroll deduction method is voluntary and the 
consumer retains use of the funds until the contractual payment date.
    [sbull] If the consumer elects to have payment made by a third-party 
payor such as a financial institution, through a preauthorized payment 
or telephone bill-payment arrangement, payment is received when the 
creditor gets the third-party payor's check or other transfer medium, 
such as an electronic fund transfer, as long as the payment meets the 
creditor's requirements as specified under Sec.  226.10(b).

    10(b) Specific requirements for payments.
    1. Payment requirements. The creditor may specify requirements for 
making payments, such as:

    [sbull] Requiring that payments be accompanied by the account number 
or the payment stub.
    [sbull] Setting a cut-off hour for payment to be received, or set 
different hours for payment by mail and payments made in person.
    [sbull] Specifying that only checks or money orders should be sent 
by mail.
    [sbull] Specifying that payment is to be made in U.S. dollars.
    [sbull] Specifying one particular address for receiving payments, 
such as a post office box.

The creditor may be prohibited, however, from specifying payment by 
preauthorized electronic fund transfer. (See section 913 of the 
Electronic Fund Transfer Act.)
    2. Payment requirements--limitations. Requirements for making 
payments must be reasonable; it should not be difficult for most 
consumers to make conforming payments. For example, it would not be 
reasonable to require that all payments be made in person between 10 
a.m. and 11 a.m., since this would require consumers to take time off 
from their jobs to deliver payments.
    3. Acceptance of non-conforming payments. If the creditor accepts a 
non-conforming payment (for example, payment at a branch office, when it 
had specified that payment be sent to headquarters), finance charges may 
accrue for the period between receipt and crediting of payments.
    4. Implied guidelines for payments. In the absence of specified 
requirements for making payments (see Sec.  226.10(b)):

    [sbull] Payments may be made at any location where the creditor 
conducts business.
    [sbull] Payments may be made any time during the creditor's normal 
business hours.
    [sbull] Payments may be made by cash, money order, draft, or other 
similar instrument in properly negotiable form, or by electronic fund 
transfer if the creditor and consumer have so agreed.

[[Page 416]]

                               References

    Statute: Section 164.
    Other sections: Section 226.7.
    Previous regulation: Section 226.7(g).
    1981 changes: Much of the explanatory detail of the previous 
regulation is now in the commentary. The revised regulation gives the 
creditor 5 days in which to credit non-conforming payments, whereas the 
previous regulation required the crediting of such payments promptly, 
with an outside limit of 5 days. The 5 days in which to credit are 
available whenever the creditor accepts payment that does not conform to 
the creditor's disclosed specifications, in contrast to the previous 
regulation, which only allowed deferred crediting for payments made at 
the wrong location.

              Section 226.11--Treatment of Credit Balances

    1. Timing of refund. The creditor may also fulfill its obligations 
under Sec.  226.11 by:

    [sbull] Refunding any credit balance to the consumer immediately.
    [sbull] Refunding any credit balance prior to receiving a written 
request (under Sec.  226.11(b)) from the consumer.
    [sbull] Making a good faith effort to refund any credit balance 
before 6 months have passed. If that attempt is unsuccessful, the 
creditor need not try again to refund the credit balance at the end of 
the 6-month period.

    2. Amount of refund. The phrase any part of the credit balance 
remaining in the account in Sec.  226.11(b) and (c) means the amount of 
the credit balance at the time the creditor is required to make the 
refund. The creditor may take into consideration intervening purchases 
or other debits to the consumer's account (including those that have not 
yet been reflected on a periodic statement) that decrease or eliminate 
the credit balance.
    Paragraph 11(b).
    1. Written requests--standing orders. The creditor is not required 
to honor standing orders requesting refunds of any credit balance that 
may be created on the consumer's account.
    Paragraph 11(c).
    1. Good faith effort to refund. The creditor must take positive 
steps to return any credit balance that has remained in the account for 
over 6 months. This includes, if necessary, attempts to trace the 
consumer through the consumer's last known address or telephone number, 
or both.
    2. Good faith effort unsuccessful. Section 226.11 imposes no further 
duties on the creditor if a good faith effort to return the balance is 
unsuccessful. The ultimate disposition of the credit balance (or any 
credit balance of $1 or less) is to be determined under other applicable 
law.

                               References

    Statute: Section 165.
    Previous regulation: Section 226.7(h).
    1981 changes: Under the previous regulation, the creditor's duty to 
refund credit balances applied only to ``excess payments''; Sec.  226.11 
of the revised regulation implements the amendments to section 165 of 
the statute which impose refunding duties on the creditor whatever the 
source of the credit balance. The revised regulation permits the 
creditor, in computing the refund, to take account of intervening 
debits, not just the difference between the previous balance and the 
overpayment as is provided in the previous regulation. The revised 
regulation gives the creditor 7 business days in which to make the 
refund after receiving the consumer's written request, whereas the 
previous regulation required the creditor to make the refund promptly, 
with an outside limit of 5 business days. This provision also implements 
the amended statute by requiring a good faith effort to refund the 
credit balance after 6 months.

             Section 226.12--Special Credit Card Provisions

    1. Scope. Sections 226.12(a) and (b) deal with the issuance and 
liability rules for credit cards, whether the card is intended for 
consumer, business, or any other purposes. Sections 226.12(a) and (b) 
are exceptions to the general rule that the regulation applies only to 
consumer credit. (See Sec. Sec.  226.1 and 226.3.)
    12(a) Issuance of credit cards.

                           Paragraph 12(a)(1)

    1. Explicit request. A request or application for a card must be 
explicit. For example, a request for overdraft privileges on a checking 
account does not constitute an application for a credit card with 
overdraft checking features.
    2. Addition of credit features. If the consumer has a non-credit 
card, the addition of credit features to the card (for example, the 
granting of overdraft privileges on a checking account when the consumer 
already has a check guarantee card) constitutes issuance of a credit 
card.
    3. Variance of card from request. The request or application need 
not correspond exactly to the card that is issued. For example:

    [sbull] The name of the card requested may be different when issued.
    [sbull] The card may have features in addition to those reflected in 
the request or application.

    4. Permissible form of request. The request or application may be 
oral (in response to a telephone solicitation by a card issuer, for 
example) or written.
    5. Time of issuance. A credit card may be issued in response to a 
request made before

[[Page 417]]

any cards are ready for issuance (for example, if a new program is 
established), even if there is some delay in issuance.
    6. Persons to whom cards may be issued. A card issuer may issue a 
credit card to the person who requests it, and to anyone else for whom 
that person requests a card and who will be an authorized user on the 
requester's account. In other words, cards may be sent to consumer A on 
A's request, and also (on A's request) to consumers B and C, who will be 
authorized users on A's account. In these circumstances, the following 
rules apply:

    [sbull] The additional cards may be imprinted in either A's name or 
in the names of B and C.
    [sbull] No liability for unauthorized use (by persons other than B 
and C), not even the $50, may be imposed on B or C since they are merely 
users and not cardholders as that term is defined in Sec.  226.2 and 
used in Sec.  226.12(b); of course, liability of up to $50 for 
unauthorized use of B's and C's cards may be imposed on A.
    [sbull] Whether B and C may be held liable for their own use, or on 
the account generally, is a matter of state or other applicable law.

    7. Issuance of non-credit cards. i. General. Under Sec.  
226.12(a)(1), a credit card cannot be issued except in response to a 
request or an application. (See comment 2(a)(15)-2 for examples of cards 
or devices that are and are not credit cards.) A non-credit card may be 
sent on an unsolicited basis by an issuer that does not propose to 
connect the card to any credit plan; a credit feature may be added to a 
previously issued non-credit card only upon the consumer's specific 
request.
    ii. Examples. A purchase-price discount card may be sent on an 
unsolicited basis by an issuer that does not propose to connect the card 
to any credit plan. An issuer demonstrates that it proposes to connect 
the card to a credit plan by, for example, including promotional 
materials about credit features or account agreements and disclosures 
required by Sec.  226.6. The issuer will violate the rule against 
unsolicited issuance if, for example, at the time the card is sent a 
credit plan can be accessed by the card or the recipient of the 
unsolicited card has been preapproved for credit that the recipient can 
access by contacting the issuer and activating the card.
    8. Unsolicited issuance of PINs. A card issuer may issue personal 
identification numbers (PINs) to existing credit cardholders without a 
specific request from the cardholders, provided the PINs cannot be used 
alone to obtain credit. For example, the PINs may be necessary if 
consumers wish to use their existing credit cards at automated teller 
machines or at merchant locations with point-of-sale terminals that 
require PINs.

                           Paragraph 12(a)(2)

    1. Renewal. Renewal generally contemplates the regular replacement 
of existing cards because of, for example, security reasons or new 
technology or systems. It also includes the re-issuance of cards that 
have been suspended temporarily, but does not include the opening of a 
new account after a previous account was closed.
    2. Substitution--examples. Substitution encompasses the replacement 
of one card with another because the underlying account relationship has 
changed in some way--such as when the card issuer has:

    [sbull] Changed its name.
    [sbull] Changed the name of the card.
    [sbull] Changed the credit or other features available on the 
account. For example, the original card could be used to make purchases 
and obtain cash advances at teller windows. The substitute card might be 
usable, in addition, for obtaining cash advances through automated 
teller machines. (If the substitute card constitutes an access device, 
as defined in Regulation E, then the Regulation E issuance rules would 
have to be followed.) The substitution of one card with another on an 
unsolicited basis is not permissible, however, where in conjunction with 
the substitution an additional credit card account is opened and the 
consumer is able to make new purchases or advances under both the 
original and the new account with the new card. For example, if a retail 
card issuer replaces its credit card with a combined retailer/bank card, 
each of the creditors maintains a separate account, and both accounts 
can be accessed for new transactions by use of the new credit card, the 
card cannot be provided to a consumer without solicitation.
    [sbull] Substituted a card user's name on the substitute card for 
the cardholder's name appearing on the original card.
    [sbull] Changed the merchant base. However, the new card must be 
honored by at least one of the persons that honored the original card.
    3. Substitution--successor card issuer. Substitution also occurs 
when a successor card issuer replaces the original card issuer (for 
example, when a new card issuer purchases the accounts of the original 
issuer and issues its own card to replace the original one). A 
permissible substitution exists even if the original issuer retains the 
existing receivables and the new card issuer acquires the right only to 
future receivables, provided use of the original card is cut off when 
use of the new card becomes possible.
    4. Substitution--non-credit-card plan. A credit card that replaces a 
retailer's open-end credit plan not involving a credit card is not 
considered a substitute for the retailer's plan--even if the consumer 
used the retailer's plan. A credit card cannot be issued in

[[Page 418]]

these circumstances without a request or application.
    5. One-for-one rule. An accepted card may be replaced by no more 
than one renewal or substitute card. For example, the card issuer may 
not replace a credit card permitting purchases and cash advances with 
two cards, one for the purchases and another for the cash advances.
    6. One-for-one rule--exceptions. The regulation does not prohibit 
the card issuer from:
    i. Replacing a debit/credit card with a credit card and another card 
with only debit functions (or debit functions plus an associated 
overdraft capability), since the latter card could be issued on an 
unsolicited basis under Regulation E.
    ii. Replacing an accepted card with more than one renewal or 
substitute card, provided that:
    A. No replacement card accesses any account not accessed by the 
accepted card;
    B. For terms and conditions required to be disclosed under Sec.  
226.6, all replacement cards are issued subject to the same terms and 
conditions, except that a creditor may vary terms for which no change in 
terms notice is required under Sec.  226.9(c); and
    C. Under the account's terms the consumer's total liability for 
unauthorized use with respect to the account does not increase.
    7. Methods of terminating replaced card. The card issuer need not 
physically retrieve the original card, provided the old card is voided 
in some way; for example:

    [sbull] The issuer includes with the new card a notification that 
the existing card is no longer valid and should be destroyed 
immediately.
    [sbull] The original card contained an expiration date.
    [sbull] The card issuer, in order to preclude use of the card, 
reprograms computers or issues instructions to authorization centers.

    8. Incomplete replacement. If a consumer has duplicate credit cards 
on the same account (Card A--one type of bank credit card, for example), 
the card issuer may not replace the duplicate cards with one Card A and 
one Card B (Card B--another type of bank credit card) unless the 
consumer requests Card B.
    9. Multiple entities. Where multiple entities share responsibilities 
with respect to a credit card issued by one of them, the entity that 
issued the card may replace it on an unsolicited basis, if that entity 
terminates the original card by voiding it in some way, as described in 
comment 12(a)(2)-7. The other entity or entities may not issue a card on 
an unsolicited basis in these circumstances.
    12(b) Liability of cardholder for unauthorized use.
    1. Meaning of cardholder. For purposes of this provision, cardholder 
includes any person (including organizations) to whom a credit card is 
issued for any purpose, including business. When a corporation is the 
cardholder, required disclosures should be provided to the corporation 
(as opposed to an employee user).
    2. Imposing liability. A card issuer is not required to impose 
liability on a cardholder for the unauthorized use of a credit card; if 
the card issuer does not seek to impose liability, the issuer need not 
conduct any investigation of the cardholder's claim.
    3. Reasonable investigation. If a card issuer seeks to impose 
liability when a claim of unauthorized use is made by a cardholder, the 
card issuer must conduct a reasonable investigation of the claim. In 
conducting its investigation, the card issuer may reasonably request the 
cardholder's cooperation. The card issuer may not automatically deny a 
claim based solely on the cardholder's failure or refusal to comply with 
a particular request; however, if the card issuer otherwise has no 
knowledge of facts confirming the unauthorized use, the lack of 
information resulting from the cardholder's failure or refusal to comply 
with a particular request may lead the card issuer reasonably to 
terminate the investigation. The procedures involved in investigating 
claims may differ, but actions such as the following represent steps 
that a card issuer may take, as appropriate, in conducting a reasonable 
investigation:
    i. Reviewing the types or amounts of purchases made in relation to 
the cardholder's previous purchasing pattern.
    ii. Reviewing where the purchases were delivered in relation to the 
cardholder's residence or place of business.
    iii. Reviewing where the purchases were made in relation to where 
the cardholder resides or has normally shopped.
    iv. Comparing any signature on credit slips for the purchases to the 
signature of the cardholder or an authorized user in the card issuer's 
records, including other credit slips.
    v. Requesting documentation to assist in the verification of the 
claim.
    vi. Requesting a written, signed statement from the cardholder or 
authorized user.
    vii. Requesting a copy of a police report, if one was filed.
    viii. Requesting information regarding the cardholder's knowledge of 
the person who allegedly used the card or of that person's authority to 
do so.
    12(b)(1) Limitation on amount.
    1. Meaning of authority. Footnote 22 defines unauthorized use in 
terms of whether the user has actual, implied, or apparent authority. 
Whether such authority exists must be determined under state or other 
applicable law.
    2. Liability limits--dollar amounts. As a general rule, the 
cardholder's liability for a series of unauthorized uses cannot exceed 
either $50 or the value obtained through the

[[Page 419]]

unauthorized use before the care issuer is notified, whichever is less.
    12(b)(2) Conditions of liability.
    1. Issuer's option not to comply. A card issuer that chooses not to 
impose any liability on cardholders for unauthorized use need not comply 
with the disclosure and identification requirements discussed below.
    Paragraph 12(b)(2)(ii).
    1. Disclosure of liability and means of notifying issuer. The 
disclosures referred to in Sec.  226.12(b)(2)(ii) may be given, for 
example, with the initial disclosures under Sec.  226.6, on the credit 
card itself, or on periodic statements. They may be given at any time 
preceding the unauthorized use of the card.
    Paragraph 12(b)(2)(iii).
    1. Means of identifying cardholder or user. To fulfill the condition 
set forth in Sec.  226.12(b)(2)(iii), the issuer must provide some 
method whereby the cardholder or the authorized user can be identified. 
This could include, for example, signature, photograph, or fingerprint 
on the card, or electronic or mechanical confirmation.
    2. Identification by magnetic strip. Unless a magnetic strip (or 
similar device not readable without physical aids) must be used in 
conjunction with a secret code or the like, it would not constitute 
sufficient means of identification. Sufficient identification also does 
not exist if a pool or group card, issued to a corporation and signed by 
a corporate agent who will not be a user of the card, is intended to be 
used by another employee for whom no means of identification is 
provided.
    3. Transactions not involving card. The cardholder may not be held 
liable under Sec.  226.12(b) when the card itself (or some other 
sufficient means of identification of the cardholder) is not presented. 
Since the issuer has not provided a means to identify the user under 
these circumstances, the issuer has not fulfilled one of the conditions 
for imposing liability. For example, when merchandise is ordered by 
telephone by a person without authority to do so, using a credit card 
account number or other number only (which may be widely available), no 
liability may be imposed on the cardholder.
    12(b)(3) Notification to card issuer.
    1. How notice must be provided. Notice given in a normal business 
manner--for example, by mail, telephone, or personal visit--is effective 
even though it is not given to, or does not reach, some particular 
person within the issuer's organization. Notice also may be effective 
even though it is not given at the address or phone number disclosed by 
the card issuer under Sec.  226.12(b)(2)(ii).
    2. Who must provide notice. Notice of loss, theft, or possible 
unauthorized use need not be initiated by the cardholder. Notice is 
sufficient so long as it gives the pertinent information which would 
include the name or card number of the cardholder and an indication that 
unauthorized use has or may have occurred.
    3. Relationship to Sec.  226.13. The liability protections afforded 
to cardholders in Sec.  226.12 do not depend upon the cardholder's 
following the error resolution procedures in Sec.  226.13. For example, 
the written notification and time limit requirements of Sec.  226.13 do 
not affect the section 226.12 protections.
    12(b)(5) Business use of credit cards.
    1. Agreement for higher liability for business use cards. The card 
issuer may not rely on Sec.  226.12(b)(5) if the business is clearly not 
in a position to provide 10 or more cards to employees (for example, if 
the business has only 3 employees). On the other hand, the issuer need 
not monitor the personnel practices of the business to make sure that it 
has at least 10 employees at all times.
    2. Unauthorized use by employee. The protection afforded to an 
employee against liability for unauthorized use in excess of the limits 
set in Sec.  226.12(b) applies only to unauthorized use by someone other 
then the employee. If the employee uses the card in an unauthorized 
manner, the regulation sets no restriction on the employee's potential 
liability for such use.
    12(c) Right of cardholder to assert claims or defenses against card 
issuer.
    1. Relationship to Sec.  226.13. The Sec.  226.12(c) credit card 
``holder in due course'' provision deals with the consumer's right to 
assert against the card issuer a claim or defense concerning property or 
services purchased with a credit card, if the merchant has been 
unwilling to resolve the dispute. Even though certain merchandise 
disputes, such as non-delivery of goods, may also constitute ``billing 
errors'' under Sec.  226.13, that section operates independently of 
Sec.  226.12(c). The cardholder whose asserted billing error involves 
undelivered goods may institute the error resolution procedures of Sec.  
226.13; but whether or not the cardholder has done so, the cardholder 
may assert claims or defenses under Sec.  226.12(c). Conversely, the 
consumer may pay a disputed balance and thus have no further right to 
assert claims and defenses, but still may assert a billing error if 
notice of that billing error is given in the proper time and manner. An 
assertion that a particular transaction resulted from unauthorized use 
of the card could also be both a ``defense'' and a billing error.
    2. Claims and defenses assertible. Section 226.12(c) merely 
preserves the consumer's right to assert against the card issuer any 
claims or defenses that can be asserted against the merchant. It does 
not determine what claims or defenses are valid as to the merchant; this 
determination must be made under state or other applicable law.
    12(c)(1) General rule.
    1. Situations excluded and included. The consumer may assert claims 
or defenses only

[[Page 420]]

when the goods or services are ``purchased with the credit card.'' This 
could include:

    [sbull] Mail or telephone orders, if the purchase is charged to the 
credit card account.

    But it would exclude:

    [sbull] Use of a credit card to obtain a cash advance, even if the 
consumer then uses the money to purchase goods or services. Such a 
transaction would not involve ``property or services purchased with the 
credit card.''
    [sbull] The purchase of goods or services by use of a check 
accessing an overdraft account and a credit card used solely for 
identification of the consumer. (On the other hand, if the credit card 
is used to make partial payment for the purchase and not merely for 
identification, the right to assert claims or defenses would apply to 
credit extended via the credit card, although not to the credit extended 
on the overdraft line.)
    [sbull] Purchases made by use of a check guarantee card in 
conjunction with a cash advance check (or by cash advance checks alone). 
See footnote 24. A cash advance check is a check that, when written, 
does not draw on an asset account; instead, it is charged entirely to an 
open-end credit account.
    [sbull] Purchases effected by use of either a check guarantee card 
or a debit card when used to draw on overdraft credit lines (see 
footnote 24). The debit card exemption applies whether the card accesses 
an asset account via point-of-sale terminals, automated teller machines, 
or in any other way, and whether the card qualifies as an ``access 
device'' under Regulation E or is only a paper-based debit card. If a 
card serves both as an ordinary credit card and also as check guarantee 
or debit card, a transaction will be subject to this rule on asserting 
claims and defenses when used as an ordinary credit card, but not when 
used as a check guarantee or debit card.

    12(c)(2) Adverse credit reports prohibited.
    1. Scope of prohibition. Although an amount in dispute may not be 
reported as delinquent until the matter is resolved:
    i. That amount may be reported as disputed.
    ii. Nothing in this provision prohibits the card issuer from 
undertaking its normal collection activities for the delinquent and 
undisputed portion of the account.
    2. Settlement of dispute. A card issuer may not consider a dispute 
settled and report an amount disputed as delinquent or begin collection 
of the disputed amount until it has completed a reasonable investigation 
of the cardholder's claim. A reasonable investigation requires an 
independent assessment of the cardholder's claim based on information 
obtained from both the cardholder and the merchant, if possible. In 
conducting an investigation, the card issuer may request the 
cardholder's reasonable cooperation. The card issuer may not 
automatically consider a dispute settled if the cardholder fails or 
refuses to comply with a particular request. However, if the card issuer 
otherwise has no means of obtaining information necessary to resolve the 
dispute, the lack of information resulting from the cardholder's failure 
or refusal to comply with a particular request may lead the card issuer 
reasonably to terminate the investigation.

    12(c)(3) Limitations.
    Paragraph 12(c)(3)(i).
    1. Resolution with merchant. The consumer must have tried to resolve 
the dispute with the merchant. This does not require any special 
procedures or correspondence between them, and is a matter for factual 
determination in each case. The consumer is not required to seek 
satisfaction from the manufacturer of the goods involved. When the 
merchant is in bankruptcy proceedings, the consumer is not required to 
file a claim in those proceedings.
    Paragraph 12(c)(3)(ii).
    1. Geographic limitation. The question of where as transaction 
occurs (as in the case of mail or telephone orders, for example) is to 
be determined under state or other applicable law.
    2. Merchant honoring card. The exceptions (stated in footnote 26) to 
the amount and geographic limitations do not apply if the merchant 
merely honors, or indicates through signs or advertising that it honors, 
a particular credit card.
    12(d) Offsets by card issuer prohibited.
    Paragraph 12(d)(1).
    1. Holds on accounts. ``Freezing'' or placing a hold on funds in the 
cardholder's deposit account is the functional equivalent of an offset 
and would contravene the prohibition in Sec.  226.12(d)(1), unless done 
in the context of one of the exceptions specified in Sec.  226.12(d)(2). 
For example, if the terms of a security agreement permitted the card 
issuer to place a hold on the funds, the hold would not violate the 
offset prohibition. Similarly, if an order of a bankruptcy court 
required the card issuer to turn over deposit account funds to the 
trustee in bankruptcy, the issuer would not violate the regulation by 
placing a hold on the funds in order to comply with the court order.
    2. Funds intended as deposits. If the consumer tenders funds as a 
deposit (to a checking account, for example), the card issuer may not 
apply the funds to repay indebtedness on the consumer's credit card 
account.
    3. Types of indebtedness; overdraft accounts. The offset prohibition 
applies to any indebtedness arising from transactions under a credit 
card plan, including accrued finance charges and other charges on the 
account. The prohibition also applies to balances arising from 
transactions not using the credit card itself but taking place under 
plans that

[[Page 421]]

involve credit cards. For example, if the consumer writes a check that 
accesses an overdraft line of credit, the resulting indebtedness is 
subject to the offset prohibition since it is incurred through a credit 
card plan, even though the consumer did not use an associated check 
guarantee or debit card.
    4. When prohibition applies in case of termination of account. The 
offset prohibition applies even after the card issuer terminates the 
cardholder's credit card privileges, if the indebtedness was incurred 
prior to termination. If the indebtedness was incurred after 
termination, the prohibition does not apply.
    Paragraph 12(d)(2).
    1. Security interest--limitations. In order to qualify for the 
exception stated in Sec.  226.12(d)(2), a security interest must be 
affirmatively agreed to by the consumer and must be disclosed in the 
issuer's initial disclosures under Sec.  226.6. The security interest 
must not be the functional equivalent of a right of offset; as a result, 
routinely including in agreements contract language indicating that 
consumers are giving a security interest in any deposit accounts 
maintained with the issuer does not result in a security interest that 
falls within the exception in Sec.  226.12(d)(2). For a security 
interest to qualify for the exception under Sec.  226.12(d)(2) the 
following conditions must be met:
    [sbull] The consumer must be aware that granting a security interest 
is a condition for the credit card account (or for more favorable 
account terms) and must specifically intend to grant a security interest 
in a deposit account. Indicia of the consumer's awareness and intent 
could include, for example:

--Separate signature or initials on the agreement indicating that a 
security interest is being given
--Placement of the security agreement on a separate page, or otherwise 
separating the security interest provisions from other contract and 
disclosure provisions
--Reference to a specific amount of deposited funds or to a specific 
deposit account number

    [sbull] The security interest must be obtainable and enforceable by 
creditors generally. If other creditors could not obtain a security 
interest in the consumer's deposit accounts to the same extent as the 
card issuer, the security interest is prohibited by Sec.  226.12(d)(2).
    2. Security interest--after-acquired property. As used in Sec.  
226.12(d), the term security interest does not exclude (as it does for 
other Regulation Z purposes) interests in after-acquired property. Thus, 
a consensual security interest in deposit-account funds, including funds 
deposited after the granting of the security interest, would constitute 
a permissible exception to the prohibition on offsets.
    3. Court order. If the card issuer obtains a judgment against the 
cardholder, and if State and other applicable law and the terms of the 
judgment do not so prohibit, the card issuer may offset the indebtedness 
against the cardholder's deposit account.
    Paragraph 12(d)(3).
    1. Automatic payment plans--scope of exception. With regard to 
automatic debit plans under Sec.  226.12(d)(3), the following rules 
apply:

    [sbull] The cardholder's authorization must be in writing and signed 
or initialed by the cardholder.
    [sbull] The authorizing language need not appear directly above or 
next to the cardholder's signature or initials, provided it appears on 
the same document and that it clearly spells out the terms of the 
automatic debit plan.
    [sbull] If the cardholder has the option to accept or reject the 
automatic debit feature (such option may be required under section 913 
of the Electronic Fund Transfer Act), the fact that the option exists 
should be clearly indicated.

    2. Automatic payment plans--additional exceptions. The following 
practices are not prohibited by Sec.  226.12(d)(1):

    [sbull] Automatically deducting charges for participation in a 
program of banking services (one aspect of which may be a credit card 
plan).
    [sbull] Debiting the cardholder's deposit account on the 
cardholder's specific request rather than on an automatic periodic basis 
(for example, a cardholder might check a box on the credit card bill 
stub, requesting the issuer to debit the cardholder's account to pay 
that bill).

    12(e) Prompt notification of returns and crediting of refunds.
    Paragraph 12(e)(1).
    1. Normal channels. The term normal channels refers to any network 
or interchange system used for the processing of the original charge 
slips (or equivalent information concerning the transaction).
    Paragraph 12(e)(2).
    1. Crediting account. The card issuer need not actually post the 
refund to the consumer's account within 3 business days after receiving 
the credit statement, provided that it credits the account as of a date 
within that time period.

                               References

    Statute: Sections 103(1), 132, 133, 135, 162, 166, 167, 169, and 
170.
    Other sections: Section 226.13.
    Other regulations: Regulation E (12 CFR 205).
    Previous regulation: Section 226.13.
    1981 changes: The issuance rules in Sec.  226.12(a) make clear that 
cards may be sent to the person making the request and also to

[[Page 422]]

any other person for whom a card is requested, except that no liability 
for unauthorized use may be imposed on persons who are only authorized 
users.
    The principal differences in Sec.  226.12(b) about conditions of 
liability are as follows: the requirement that the cardholder be given a 
postage-paid, preaddressed card or envelope for notification of loss or 
theft has been deleted (corresponding to an amendment to the act); the 
required disclosures of maximum liability and of means of notification 
have been simplified; and the required provision of a means of 
identification has been changed in that the issuer now may provide a 
means to identify either the cardholder or the authorized user. Finally, 
anyone may provide the notification to the card issuer, not just the 
cardholder.
    Section 226.12(d) on offsets clarifies that the offset prohibition 
does not apply to consensual security interests. The separate promptness 
standard which used to apply in addition to the 7-business-day and 3-
business-day standards has been deleted from Sec.  226.12(e) on prompt 
notification of returns. Section 226.12(f) now clarifies rules on 
clearing accounts.
    Section 226.12(g), dealing with the relationship of the regulation 
to Regulation E (Electronic Fund Transfers), has been added.

                Section 226.13--Billing Error Resolution

    1. General prohibitions. Footnote 27 prohibits a creditor from 
responding to a consumer's billing error allegation by accelerating the 
debt or closing the account, and reflects protections authorized by 
section 161(d) of the Truth in Lending Act and section 701 of the Equal 
Credit Opportunity Act. The footnote also alerts creditors that failure 
to comply with the error resolution procedures may result in the 
forfeiture of disputed amounts as prescribed in section 161(e) of the 
Act. (Any failure to comply may also be a violation subject to the 
liability provisions of section 130 of the Act.)
    2. Charges for error resolution. If a billing error occurred, 
whether as alleged or in a different amount or manner, the creditor may 
not impose a charge related to any aspect of the error resolution 
process (including charges for documentation or investigation) and must 
credit the consumer's account if such a charge was assessed pending 
resolution. Since the Act grants the consumer error resolution rights, 
the creditor should avoid any chilling effect on the good faith 
assertion of errors that might result if charges are assessed when no 
billing error has occurred.
    13(a) Definition of billing error.
    1. Actual, implied, or apparent authority. Whether use of a credit 
card or open-end credit plan is authorized is determined by state or 
other applicable law.
    Paragraph 13(a)(3).
    1. Coverage. Section 226.13(a)(3) covers disputes about goods or 
services that are ``not accepted'' or ``not delivered . . . as agreed''; 
for example:

    [sbull] The appearance on a periodic statement of a purchase, when 
the consumer refused to take delivery of goods because they did not 
comply with the contract.
    [sbull] Delivery of property or services different from that agreed 
upon.
    [sbull] Delivery of the wrong quantity.
    [sbull] Late delivery.
    [sbull] Delivery to the wrong location.

    Section 226.13(a)(3) does not apply to a dispute relating to the 
quality of property or services that the consumer accepts. Whether 
acceptance occurred is determined by state or other applicable law.
    Paragraph 13(a)(5).
    1. Computational errors. In periodic statements that are combined 
with other information, the error resolution procedures are triggered 
only if the consumer asserts a computational billing error in the 
credit-related portion of the periodic statement. For example:

    [sbull] If a bank combines a periodic statement reflecting the 
consumer's credit card transactions with the consumer's monthly checking 
statement, a computational error in the checking account portion of the 
combined statement is not a billing error.

    Paragraph 13(a)(6).
    1. Documentation requests. A request for documentation such as 
receipts or sales slips, unaccompanied by an allegation of an error 
under Sec.  226.13(a) or a request for additional clarification under 
Sec.  226.13(a)(6), does not trigger the error resolution procedures. 
For example, a request for documentation merely for purposes such as tax 
preparation or recordkeeping does not trigger the error resolution 
procedures.
    13(b) Billing error notice.
    1. Withdrawal. The consumer's withdrawal of a billing error notice 
may be oral or written.
    Paragraph 13(b)(1).
    1. Failure to send periodic statement--timing. If the creditor has 
failed to send a periodic statement, the 60-day period runs from the 
time the statement should have been sent. Once the statement is 
provided, the consumer has another 60 days to assert any billing errors 
reflected on it.
    2. Failure to reflect credit--timing. If the periodic statement 
fails to reflect a credit to the account, the 60-day period runs from 
transmittal of the statement on which the credit should have appeared.
    3. Transmittal. If a consumer has arranged for periodic statements 
to be held at the financial institution until called for, the statement 
is ``transmitted'' when it is first made available to the consumer.
    Paragraph 13(b)(2).

[[Page 423]]

    1. Identity of the consumer. The billing error notice need not 
specify both the name and the account number if the information supplied 
enables the creditor to identify the consumer's name and account.
    13(c) Time for resolution; general procedures.
    1. Temporary or provisional corrections. A creditor may temporarily 
correct the consumer's account in response to a billing error notice, 
but is not excused from complying with the remaining error resolution 
procedures within the time limits for resolution.
    2. Correction without investigation. A creditor may correct a 
billing error in the manner and amount asserted by the consumer without 
the investigation or the determination normally required. The creditor 
must comply, however, with all other applicable provisions. If a 
creditor follows this procedure, no presumption is created that a 
billing error occurred.
    Paragraph 13(c)(2).
    1. Time for resolution. The phrase two complete billing cycles means 
2 actual billing cycles occurring after receipt of the billing error 
notice, not a measure of time equal to 2 billing cycles. For example, if 
a creditor on a monthly billing cycle receives a billing error notice 
mid-cycle, it has the remainder of that cycle plus the next 2 full 
billing cycles to resolve the error.
    13(d) Rules pending resolution.
    1. Disputed amount. Disputed amount is the dollar amount alleged by 
the consumer to be in error. When the allegation concerns the 
description or identification of the transaction (such as the date or 
the seller's name) rather than a dollar amount, the disputed amount is 
the amount of the transaction or charge that corresponds to the disputed 
transaction identification. If the consumer alleges a failure to send a 
periodic statement under Sec.  226.13(a)(7),the disputed amount is the 
entire balance owing.
    13(d)(1) Consumer's right to withhold disputed amount; collection 
action prohibited.
    1. Prohibited collection actions. During the error resolution 
period, the creditor is prohibited from trying to collect the disputed 
amount from the consumer. Prohibited collection actions include, for 
example, instituting court action, taking a lien, or instituting 
attachment proceedings.
    2. Right to withhold payment. If the creditor reflects any disputed 
amount or related finance or other charges on the periodic statement, 
and is therefore required to make the disclosure under footnote 30, the 
creditor may comply with that disclosure requirement by indicating that 
payment of any disputed amount is not required pending resolution. 
Making a disclosure that only refers to the disputed amount would, of 
course, in no way affect the consumer's right under Sec.  226.13(d)(1) 
to withhold related finance and other charges. The disclosure under 
footnote 30 need not appear in any specific place on the periodic 
statement, need not state the specific amount that the consumer may 
withhold, and may be preprinted on the periodic statement.
    3. Imposition of additional charges on undisputed amounts. The 
consumer's withholding of a disputed amount from the total bill cannot 
subject undisputed balances (including new purchases or cash advances 
made during the present or subsequent cycles) to the imposition of 
finance or other charges. For example, if on an account with a free-ride 
period (that is, an account in which paying the new balance in full 
allows the consumer to avoid the imposition of additional finance 
charges), a consumer disputes a $2 item out of a total bill of $300 and 
pays $298 within the free-ride period, the consumer would not lose the 
free-ride as to any undisputed amounts, even if the creditor determines 
later that no billing error occurred. Furthermore, finance or other 
charges may not be imposed on any new purchases or advances that, absent 
the unpaid disputed balance, would not have finance or other charges 
imposed on them. Finance or other charges that would have been incurred 
even if the consumer had paid the disputed amount would not be affected.
    4. Automatic payment plans--coverage. The coverage of this provision 
is limited to the card issuer's intra-institutional payment plans. It 
does not apply to:

    [sbull] Inter-institutional payment plans that permit a cardholder 
to pay automatically any credit card indebtedness from an asset account 
not held by the card issuer receiving payment.
    [sbull] Intra-institutional automatic payment plans offered by 
financial institutions that are not credit card issuers.

    5. Automatic payment plans--time of notice. While the card issuer 
does not have to restore or prevent the debiting of a disputed amount if 
the billing error notice arrives after the 3-business-day cut-off, the 
card issuer must, however, prevent the automatic debit of any part of 
the disputed amount that is still outstanding and unresolved at the time 
of the next scheduled debit date.
    13(d)(2) Adverse credit reports prohibited.
    1. Report of dispute. Although the creditor must not issue an 
adverse credit report because the consumer fails to pay the disputed 
amount or any related charges, the creditor may report that the amount 
or the account is in dispute. Also, the creditor may report the account 
as delinquent if undisputed amounts remain unpaid.
    2. Person. During the error resolution period, the creditor is 
prohibited from making an adverse credit report about the disputed 
amount to any person--including employers, insurance companies, other 
creditors, and credit bureaus.

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    3. Creditor's agent. Whether an agency relationship exists between a 
creditor and an issuer of an adverse credit report is determined by 
State or other applicable law.
    13(e) Procedures if billing error occurred as asserted.
    1. Correction of error. The phrase as applicable means that the 
necessary corrections vary with the type of billing error that occurred. 
For example, a misidentified transaction (or a transaction that is 
identified by one of the alternative methods in Sec.  226.8) is cured by 
properly identifying the transaction and crediting related finance and 
any other charges imposed. The creditor is not required to cancel the 
amount of the underlying obligation incurred by the consumer.
    2. Form of correction notice. The written correction notice may take 
a variety of forms. It may be sent separately, or it may be included on 
or with a periodic statement that is mailed within the time for 
resolution. If the periodic statement is used, the amount of the billing 
error must be specifically identified.
    If a separate billing error correction notice is provided, the 
accompanying or subsequent periodic statement reflecting the corrected 
amount may simply identify it as credit.
    13(f) Procedures if different billing error or no billing error 
occurred.
    1. Different billing error. Examples of a different billing error 
include:

    [sbull] Differences in the amount of an error (for example, the 
customer asserts a $55.00 error but the error was only $53.00).
    [sbull] Differences in other particulars asserted by the consumer 
(such as when a consumer asserts that a particular transaction never 
occurred, but the creditor determines that only the seller's name was 
disclosed incorrectly).

    2. Form of creditor's explanation. The written explanation (which 
also may notify the consumer of corrections to the account) may take a 
variety of forms. It may be sent separately, or it may be included on or 
with a periodic statement that is mailed within the time for resolution. 
If the creditor uses the periodic statement for the explanation and 
correction(s), the corrections must be specifically identified. If a 
separate explanation, including the correction notice, is provided, the 
enclosed or subsequent periodic statement reflecting the corrected 
amount may simply identify it as a credit. The explanation may be 
combined with the creditor's notice to the consumer of amounts still 
owing, which is required under Sec.  226.13(g)(1), provided it is sent 
within the time limit for resolution. (See Commentary to Sec.  
226.13(e).)
    13(g) Creditor's rights and duties after resolution.
    Paragraph 13(g)(1).
    1. Amounts owed by consumer. Amounts the consumer still owes may 
include both minimum periodic payments and related finance and other 
charges that accrued during the resolution period. As explained in the 
commentary to Sec.  226.13(d)(1), even if the creditor later determines 
that no billing error occurred, the creditor may not include finance or 
other charges that are imposed on undisputed balances solely as a result 
of a consumer's withholding payment of a disputed amount.
    2. Time of notice. The creditor need not send the notice of amount 
owed within the time period for resolution, although it is under a duty 
to send the notice promptly after resolution of the alleged error. If 
the creditor combines the notice of the amount owed with the explanation 
required under Sec.  226.13(f)(1), the combined notice must be provided 
within the time limit for resolution.
    Paragraph 13(g)(2).
    1. The creditor need not allow any free-ride period disclosed under 
Sec. Sec.  226.6(a)(1) and 226.7(j) to pay the amount due under Sec.  
226.13(g)(1) if no error occurred and the consumer was not entitled to a 
free-ride period at the time the consumer asserted the error.
    Paragraph 13(g)(3).
    1. Time for payment. The consumer has a minimum of 10 days to pay 
(measured from the time the consumer could reasonably be expected to 
have received notice of the amount owed) before the creditor may issue 
an adverse credit report; if an initially disclosed free-ride period 
allows the consumer a longer time in which to pay, the consumer has the 
benefit of that longer period.
    Paragraph 13(g)(4).
    1. Credit reporting. Under Sec.  226.13(g)(4)(i) and (iii) the 
creditor's additional credit reporting responsibilities must be 
accomplished promptly. The creditor need not establish costly procedures 
to fulfill this requirement. For example, a creditor that reports to a 
credit bureau on scheduled updates need not transmit corrective 
information by an unscheduled computer or magnetic tape; it may provide 
the credit bureau with the correct information by letter or other 
commercially reasonable means when using the scheduled update would not 
be ``prompt.'' The creditor is not responsible for ensuring that the 
credit bureau corrects its information immediately.
    2. Adverse report to credit bureau. If a creditor made an adverse 
report to a credit bureau that disseminated the information to other 
creditors, the creditor fulfills its Sec.  226.13(g)(4)(ii) obligations 
by providing the consumer with the name and address of the credit 
bureau.
    13(i) Relation to Electronic Fund Transfer Act and Regulation E.
    1. Coverage. Credit extended directly from a non-overdraft credit 
line is governed solely by Regulation Z, even though a combined

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credit card/access device is used to obtain the extension.
    2. Incidental credit under agreement. Credit extended incident to an 
electronic fund transfer under an agreement between the consumer and the 
financial institution is governed by Sec.  226.13(i), which provides 
that certain error resolution procedures in both this regulation and 
Regulation E apply. Incidental credit that is not extended under an 
agreement between the consumer and the financial institution is governed 
solely by the error resolution procedures in Regulation E. For example:

    [sbull] Credit inadvertently extended incident to an electronic fund 
transfer is governed solely by the Regulation E error resolution 
procedures, if the bank and the consumer do not have an agreement to 
extend credit when the consumer's account is overdrawn.

    3. Application to debit/credit transactions-examples. If a consumer 
withdraws money at an automated teller machine and activates an 
overdraft credit feature on the checking account:
    i. An error asserted with respect to the transaction is subject, for 
error resolution purposes, to the applicable Regulation E provisions 
(such as timing and notice) for the entire transaction.
    ii. The creditor need not provisionally credit the consumer's 
account, under Sec.  205.11(c)(2)(i) of Regulation E, for any portion of 
the unpaid extension of credit.
    iii. The creditor must credit the consumer's account under Sec.  
205.11(c) with any finance or other charges incurred as a result of the 
alleged error.
    iv. The provisions of Sec.  226.13(d) and (g) apply only to the 
credit portion of the transaction.

                               References

    Statute: Sections 161 and 162.
    Other sections: Sections 226.6 through 226.8.
    Other regulations: Regulation E (12 CFR 205).
    Previous regulation: Sections 226.2(j) and (cc), and 226.14.
    1981 changes: Section 226.13 reflects several substantive changes 
from the previous regulation and a complete restructuring of the error 
resolution provisions. The new organization, for example, arranges the 
creditor's responsibilities in chronological sequence.
    Section 226.13(a)(7) implements amended Sec.  161(b) of the act, and 
provides that the creditor's failure to send a periodic statement to the 
consumer's current address is a billing error, unless the creditor 
received written notice of the address change fewer than 20 days 
(instead of 10 days) before the end of the billing cycle.
    Several provisions regarding the creditor's duties after a billing 
error is alleged have been revised. The previous regulation immunized a 
creditor from liability for inadvertently taking collection action or 
making an adverse credit report within 2 days after receiving a billing 
error notice; these provisions are deleted from the revised regulation. 
The revised regulation no longer requires placement ``on the face'' of 
the periodic statment of the disclosure about payment of disputed 
amounts.
    The revised regulation changes the rule in the previous regulation 
that a card issuer must prevent or restore an automatic debit of a 
disputed amount if it receives a billing error notice within 16 days 
after transmitting the periodic statement that reflects the alleged 
error. Under the revised regulation, the card issuer must prevent an 
automatic debit if it receives a billing error notice up to 3 days 
before the scheduled payment date (provided that the notice is received 
within the 60 days for the consumer to assert the error).

         Section 226.14--Determination of Annual Percentage Rate

    14(a) General rule.
    1. Tolerance. The tolerance of \1/8\ of 1 percentage point above or 
below the annual percentage rate applies to any required disclosure of 
the annual percentage rate. The disclosure of the annual percentage rate 
is required in Sec. Sec.  226.6, 226.7, 226.9, 226.15, 226.16, and 
226.26.
    2. Rounding. The regulation does not require that the annual 
percentage rate be calculated to any particular number of decimal 
places; rounding is permissible within the \1/8\ of 1 percent tolerance. 
For example, an exact annual percentage rate of 14.33333% may be stated 
as 14.33% or as 14.3%, or even as 14\1/4\%; but it could not be stated 
as 14.2% or 14%, since each varies by more than the permitted tolerance.
    3. Periodic rates. No explicit tolerance exists for any periodic 
rate as such; a disclosed periodic rate may vary from precise accuracy 
(for example, due to rounding) only to the extent that its annualized 
equivalent is within the tolerance permitted by Sec.  226.14(a). 
Further, a periodic rate need not be calculated to any particular number 
of decimal places.
    4. Finance charges. The regulation does not prohibit creditors from 
assessing finance charges on balances that include prior, unpaid finance 
charges; state or other applicable law may do so, however.
    5. Good faith reliance on faulty calculation tools. Footnote 31a 
absolves a creditor of liability for an error in the annual percentage 
rate or finance charge that resulted from a corresponding error in a 
calculation tool used in good faith by the creditor. Whether or not the 
creditor's use of the tool was in good faith must be determined on a 
case-by-case basis, but the creditor must in any case

[[Page 426]]

have taken reasonable steps to verify the accuracy of the tool, 
including any instructions, before using it. Generally, the footnote is 
available only for errors directly attributable to the calculation tool 
itself, including software programs; it is not intended to absolve a 
creditor of liability for its own errors, or for errors arising from 
improper use of the tool, from incorrect data entry, or from 
misapplication of the law.

     14(b) Annual Percentage Rate for Sec. Sec.  226.5a and 226.5b 
    Disclosures, for Initial Disclosures and for Advertising Purposes

    1. Corresponding annual percentage rate computation. For purposes of 
Sec. Sec.  226.5a, 226.5b, 226.6 and 226.16, the annual percentage rate 
is determined by multiplying the periodic rate by the number of periods 
in the year. This computation reflects the fact that, in such 
disclosures, the rate (known as the corresponding annual percentage 
rate) is prospective and does not involve any particular finance charge 
or periodic balance. This computation also is used to determine any 
annual percentage rate for oral disclosures under Sec.  226.26(a).
    14(c) Annual percentage rate for periodic statements.
    1. General rule. Section 226.14(c) requires disclosure of the 
corresponding annual percentage rate for each periodic rate (under Sec.  
226.7(d)). It is figured by multiplying each periodic rate by the number 
of periods per year. This disclosure is like that provided on the 
initial disclosure statement. The periodic statement also must reflect 
(under Sec.  226.7(g)) the annualized equivalent of the rate actually 
applied during a particular cycle (the historical rate); this rate may 
differ from the corresponding annual percentage rate because of the 
inclusion of fixed, minimum, or transaction charges. Sections 226.14 
(c)(1) through (c)(4) state the computation rules for the historical 
rate.
    2. Periodic rates. Section 226.14(c)(1) applies if the only finance 
charge imposed is due to the application of a periodic rate to a 
balance. The creditor may compute the annual percentage rate either:

    [sbull] By multiplying each periodic rate by the number of periods 
in the year; or
    [sbull] By the ``quotient'' method. This method refers to a 
composite annual percentage rate when different periodic rates apply to 
different balances. For example, a particular plan may involve a 
periodic rate of 1\1/2\% on balances up to $500, and 1% on balances over 
$500. If, in a given cycle, the consumer has a balance of $800, the 
finance charge would consist of $7.50 (500x.015) plus $3.00 (300x.01), 
for a total finance charge of $10.50. The annual percentage rate for 
this period may be disclosed either as 18% on $500 and 12% on $300, or 
as 15.75% on a balance of $800 (the quotient of $10.50 divided by $800, 
multiplied by 12).

    3. Charges not based on periodic rates. Section 226.14(c)(2) applies 
if the finance charge imposed includes a charge not due to the 
application of a periodic rate (other than a charge relating to a 
specific transaction). For example, if the creditor imposes a minimum $1 
finance charge on all balances below $50, and the consumer's balance was 
$40 in a particular cycle, the creditor would disclose an annual 
percentage rate of 30% (1/40x12).
    4. No balance. Footnote 32 to Sec.  226.14(c)(2) would apply not 
only when minimum charges are imposed on an account with no balance, but 
also to a plan in which a periodic rate is applied to advances from the 
date of the transaction. For example, if on May 19 the consumer pays the 
new balance in full from a statement dated May 1, and has no further 
transactions reflected on the June 1 statement, that statement would 
reflect a finance charge with no account balance.
    5. Transaction charges. i. Section 226.14(c)(3) transaction charges 
include, for example:
    A. A loan fee of $10 imposed on a particular advance.
    B. A charge of 3% of the amount of each transaction.
    ii. The reference to avoiding duplication in the computation 
requires that the amounts of transactions on which transaction charges 
were imposed not be included both in the amount of total balances and in 
the ``other amounts on which a finance charge was imposed'' figure. In a 
multifeatured plan, creditors may consider each bona fide feature 
separately in the calculation of the denominator. A creditor has 
considerable flexibility in defining features for open-end plans, as 
long as the creditor has a reasonable basis for the distinctions. For 
further explanation and examples of how to determine the components of 
this formula, see appendix F.
    6. Daily rate with specific transaction charge. Section 226.14(c)(3) 
sets forth an acceptable method for calculating the annual percentage 
rate if the finance charge results from a charge relating to a specific 
transaction and the application of a daily periodic rate. This section 
includes the requirement that the creditor follow the rules in appendix 
F in calculating the annual percentage rate, especially footnote 1 to 
appendix F which addresses the daily rate/transaction charge situation 
by providing that the ``average of daily balances'' shall be used 
instead of the ``sum of the balances.''
    7. Charges related to opening, renewing, or continuing an account. 
Footnote 33 is applicable to Sec.  226.14 (c)(2) and (c)(3). The charges 
involved here do not relate to a specific transaction or to specific 
activity on the account, but relate solely to the opening, renewing, or 
continuing of the account. For example, an

[[Page 427]]

annual fee to renew an open-end credit account that is a percentage of 
the credit limit on the account, or that is charged only to consumers 
that have not used their credit card for a certain dollar amount in 
transactions during the preceding year, would not be included in the 
calculation of the annual percentage rate, even though the fee may not 
be excluded from the finance charge under Sec.  226.4(c)(4). (See 
comment 4(c)(4)-2.) Inclusion of these charges in the annual percentage 
rate calculation results in significant distortions of the annual 
percentage rate and delivery of a possibly misleading disclosure to 
consumers. The rule in footnote 33 applies even if the loan fee, points, 
or similar charges are billed on a subsequent periodic statement or 
withheld from the proceeds of the first advance on the account.
    8. Classification of charges. If the finance charge includes a 
charge not due to the application of a periodic rate, the creditor must 
determine the proper annual percentage rate computation method according 
to the type of charge imposed. If the charge is tied to a specific 
transaction (for example, 3% of the amount of each transaction), then 
the method in Sec.  226.14(c)(3) must be used. If a fixed or minimum 
charge is applied, that is, one not tied to any specific transaction, 
then the formula in Sec.  226.14(c)(2) is appropriate.
    9. Small finance charges. Section 226.14(c)(4) gives the creditor an 
alternative to Sec.  226.14(c)(2) and (c)(3) if small finance charges 
(50 cents or less) are involved; that is, if the finance charge includes 
minimum or fixed fees not due to the application of a periodic rate and 
the total finance charge for the cycle does not exceed 50 cents. For 
example, while a monthly activity fee of 50 cents on a balance of $20 
would produce an annual percentage rate of 30 percent under the rule in 
Sec.  226.14(c)(2), the creditor may disclose an annual percentage rate 
of 18 percent if the periodic rate generally applicable to all balances 
is 1\1/2\ percent per month. This option is consistent with the 
provision in footnote 11 to Sec. Sec.  226.6 and 226.7 permitting the 
creditor to disregard the effect of minimum charges in disclosing the 
ranges of balances to which periodic rates apply.
    10. Prior-cycle adjustments. i. The annual percentage rate reflects 
the finance charges imposed during the billing cycle. However, finance 
charges imposed during the billing cycle may relate to activity in a 
prior cycle. Examples of circumstances when this may occur are:
    A. A cash advance occurs on the last day of a billing cycle on an 
account that uses the transaction date to figure finance charges, and it 
is impracticable to post the transaction until the following cycle.
    B. An adjustment to the finance charge is made following the 
resolution of a billing error dispute.
    C. A consumer fails to pay the purchase balance under a deferred 
payment feature by the payment due date, and finance charges are imposed 
from the date of purchase.
    ii. Finance charges relating to activity in prior cycles should be 
reflected on the periodic statement as follows:
    A. If a finance charge imposed in the current billing cycle is 
attributable to periodic rates applicable to prior billing cycles (such 
as when a deferred payment balance was not paid in full by the payment 
due date and finance charges from the date of purchase are now being 
debited to the account, or when a cash advance occurs on the last day of 
a billing cycle on an account that uses the transaction date to figure 
finance charges and it is impracticable to post the transaction until 
the following cycle), and the creditor uses the quotient method to 
calculate the annual percentage rate, the numerator would include the 
amount of any transaction charges plus any other finance charges posted 
during the billing cycle. At the creditor's option, balances relating to 
the finance charge adjustment may be included in the denominator if 
permitted by the legal obligation, if it was impracticable to post the 
transaction in the previous cycle because of timing, or if the 
adjustment is covered by comment 14(c)10.ii.B.
    B. If a finance charge that is posted to the account relates to 
activity for which a finance charge was debited or credited to the 
account in a previous billing cycle (for example, if the finance charge 
relates to an adjustment such as the resolution of a billing error 
dispute, or an unintentional posting error, or a payment by check that 
was later returned unpaid for insufficient funds or other reasons), the 
creditor shall at its option:
    1. Calculate the annual percentage rate in accord with ii.A. of this 
paragraph, or
    2. Disclose the finance charge adjustment on the periodic statement 
and calculate the annual percentage rate for the current billing cycle 
without including the finance charge adjustment in the numerator and 
balances associated with the finance charge adjustment in the 
denominator.

    14(d) Calculations where daily periodic rate applied.
    1. Quotient Method. Section 226.14(d) addresses use of a daily 
periodic rate(s) to determine some or all of the finance charge and use 
of the quotient method to determine the annual percentage rate. Since 
the quotient formula in Sec.  226.14(c)(1)(ii) does not work when a 
daily rate is being applied to a series of daily balances, Sec.  
226.14(d) gives the creditor 2 alternative ways to figure the annual 
percentage rate--either of which satisfies the requirement in Sec.  
226.7(g).
    2. Daily rate with specific transaction charge. If the finance 
charge results from a charge

[[Page 428]]

relating to a specific transaction and the application of a daily 
periodic rate, see comment 14(c)-6 for guidance on an appropriate 
calculation method.

                               References

    Statute: Section 107.
    Other sections: Sections 226.6, 226.7, 226.9, 226.15, 226.16, and 
226.26.
    Previous regulation: Section 226.5(a) and Interpretation Sec. Sec.  
226.501 and 226.506.
    1981 changes: Section 226.14 reflects the statutory amendment 
permitting a \1/8\ of 1 percent tolerance for annual percentage rates. 
The revised regulation no longer reflects the provision dealing with 
finance charges imposed on specified ranges or brackets of balances. The 
revised regulation includes a footnote providing that loan fees, points, 
or similar charges unrelated to any specific transaction are not figured 
into the annual percentage rate computation.

                   Section 226.15--Right of Rescission

    1. Transactions not covered. Credit extensions that are not subject 
to the regulation are not covered by Sec.  226.15 even if the customer's 
principal dwelling is the collateral securing the credit. For this 
purpose, credit extensions also would include the occurrences listed in 
Comment 15(a)(1)-1. For example, the right of rescission does not apply 
to the opening of a business-purpose credit line, even though the loan 
is secured by the customer's principal dwelling.
    15(a) Consumer's right to rescind.
    Paragraph 15(a)(1).
    1. Occurrences subject to right. Under an open-end credit plan 
secured by the consumer's principal dwelling, the right of rescission 
generally arises with each of the following occurrences:

    [sbull] Opening the account.
    [sbull] Each credit extension.
    [sbull] Increasing the credit limit.
    [sbull] Adding to an existing account a security interest in the 
consumer's principal dwelling.
    [sbull] Increasing the dollar amount of the security interest taken 
in the dwelling to secure the plan. For example, a consumer may open an 
account with a $10,000 credit limit, $5,000 of which is initially 
secured by the consumer's principal dwelling. The consumer has the right 
to rescind at that time and (except as noted in Sec.  226.15(a)(1)(ii)) 
with each extension on the account. Later, if the creditor decides that 
it wants the credit line fully secured, and increases the amount of its 
interest in the consumer's dwelling, the consumer has the right to 
rescind the increase.

    2. Exceptions. Although the consumer generally has the right to 
rescind with each transaction on the account, section 125(e) of the Act 
provides an exception: the creditor need not provide the right to 
rescind at the time of each credit extension made under an open-end 
credit plan secured by the consumer's principal dwelling to the extent 
that the credit extended is in accordance with a previously established 
credit limit for the plan. This limited rescission option is available 
whether or not the plan existed prior to the effective date of the Act.
    3. Security interest arising from transaction. In order for the 
right of rescission to apply, the security interest must be retained as 
part of the credit transaction. For example:

    [sbull] A security interest that is acquired by a contractor who is 
also extending the credit in the transaction.
    [sbull] A mechanic's or materialman's lien that is retained by a 
subcontractor or supplier of a contractor-creditor, even when the latter 
has waived its own security interest in the consumer's home.

    The security interest is not part of the credit transaction, and 
therefore the transaction is not subject to the right of rescission 
when, for example:

    [sbull] A mechanic's or materialman's lien is obtained by a 
contractor who is not a party to the credit transaction but merely is 
paid with the proceeds of the consumer's cash advance.
    [sbull] All security interests that may arise in connection with the 
credit transaction are validly waived.
    [sbull] The creditor obtains a lien and completion bond that in 
effect satisfies all liens against the consumer's principal dwelling as 
a result of the credit transaction.

    Although liens arising by operation of law are not considered 
security interests for purposes of disclosure under Sec.  226.2, that 
section specifically includes them in the definition for purposes of the 
right of rescission. Thus, even though an interest in the consumer's 
principal dwelling is not a required disclosure under Sec.  226.6(c), it 
may still give rise to the right of rescission.
    4. Consumer. To be a consumer within the meaning of Sec.  226.2, 
that person must at least have an ownership interest in the dwelling 
that is encumbered by the creditor's security interest, although that 
person need not be a signatory to the credit agreement. For example, if 
only one spouse enters into a secured plan, the other spouse is a 
consumer if the ownership interest of that spouse is subject to the 
security interest.
    5. Principal dwelling. A consumer can only have one principal 
dwelling at a time. (But see comment 15(a)(1)-6.) A vacation or other 
second home would not be a principal dwelling. A transaction secured by 
a second home (such as a vacation home) that is not currently being used 
as the consumer's principal dwelling is not rescindable, even if the 
consumer intends to reside there in the future.

[[Page 429]]

When a consumer buys or builds a new dwelling that will become the 
consumer's principal dwelling within one year or upon completion of 
construction, the new dwelling is considered the principal dwelling if 
it secures the open-end credit line. In that case, the transaction 
secured by the new dwelling is a residential mortgage transaction and is 
not rescindable. For example, if a consumer whose principal dwelling is 
currently A builds B, to be occupied by the consumer upon completion of 
construction, an advance on an open-end line to finance B and secured by 
B is a residential mortgage transaction. Dwelling, as defined in Sec.  
226.2, includes structures that are classified as personalty under state 
law. For example, a transaction secured by a mobile home, trailer, or 
houseboat used as the consumer's principal dwelling may be rescindable.
    6. Special rule for principal dwelling. Notwithstanding the general 
rule that consumers may have only one principal dwelling, when the 
consumer is acquiring or constructing a new principal dwelling, a credit 
plan or extension that is subject to Regulation Z and is secured by the 
equity in the consumer's current principal dwelling is subject to the 
right of rescission regardless of the purpose of that loan (for example, 
an advance to be used as a bridge loan). For example, if a consumer 
whose principal dwelling is currently A builds B, to be occupied by the 
consumer upon completion of construction, a loan to finance B and 
secured by A is subject to the right of rescission. Moreover, a loan 
secured by both A and B is, likewise, rescindable.
    Paragraph 15(a)(2).
    1. Consumer's exercise of right. The consumer must exercise the 
right of rescission in writing, but not necessarily on the notice 
supplied under Sec.  226.15(b). Whatever the means of sending the 
notification of rescission--mail, telegram, or other written means--the 
time period for the creditor's performance under Sec.  226.15(d)(2) does 
not begin to run until the notification has been received. The creditor 
may designate an agent to receive the notification so long as the 
agent's name and address appear on the notice provided to the consumer 
under Sec.  226.15(b).
    Paragraph 15 (a)(3).
    1. Rescission period. the period within which the consumer may 
exercise the right to rescind runs for 3 business days from the last of 
3 events:

    [sbull] The occurrence that gives rise to the right of rescission.
    [sbull] Delivery of all material disclosures that are relevant to 
the plan.
    [sbull] Delivery to the consumer of the required rescission notice.

    For example, an account is opened on Friday, June 1, and the 
disclosures and notice of the right to rescind were given on Thursday, 
May 31; the rescission period will expire at midnight of the third 
business day after June 1--that is, Tuesday June 5. In another example, 
if the disclosures are given and the account is opened on Friday, June 
1, and the rescission notice is given on Monday, June 4, the rescission 
period expires at midnight of the third business day after June 4--that 
is Thursday, June 7. The consumer must place the rescission notice in 
the mail, file it for telegraphic transmission, or deliver it to the 
creditor's place of business within that period in order to exercise the 
right.
    2. Material disclosures. Footnote 36 sets forth the material 
disclosures that must be provided before the rescission period can begin 
to run. The creditor must provide sufficient information to satisfy the 
requirements of Sec.  226.6 for these disclosures. A creditor may 
satisfy this requirement by giving an initial disclosure statement that 
complies with the regulation. Failure to give the other required initial 
disclosures (such as the billing rights statement) or the information 
required under section 226.5b. does not prevent the running of the 
rescission period, although that failure may result in civil liability 
or administrative sanctions. The payment terms set forth in footnote 36 
apply to any repayment phase set forth in the agreement. Thus, the 
payment terms described in Sec.  226.6(e)(2) for any repayment phase as 
well as for the draw period are ``material disclosures.''
    3. Material disclosures--variable rate program. For a variable rate 
program, the material disclosures also include the disclosures listed in 
footnote 12 to Sec.  226.6(a)(2): the circumstances under which the rate 
may increase; the limitations on the increase; and the effect of an 
increase. The disclosures listed in footnote 12 to section 226.6(a)(2) 
for any repayment phase also are material disclosures for variable-rate 
programs.
    4. Unexpired right of rescission. When the creditor has failed to 
take the action necessary to start the three-day rescission period 
running the right to rescind automatically lapses on the occurrence of 
the earliest of the following three events:

    [sbull] The expiration of three years after the occurrence giving 
rise to the right of rescission.
    [sbull] Transfer of all the consumer's interest in the property.
    [sbull] Sale of the consumer's interest in the property, including a 
transaction in which the consumer sells the dwelling and takes back a 
purchase money note and mortgage or retains legal title through a device 
such as an installment sale contract.

    Transfer of all the consumer's interest includes such transfers as 
bequests and gifts. A sale or transfer of the property need not be 
voluntary to terminate the right to rescind.

[[Page 430]]

For example, a foreclosure sale would terminate an unexpired right to 
rescind. As provided in section 125 of the act, the three-year limit may 
be extended by an administrative proceeding to enforce the provisions of 
Sec.  226.15. A partial transfer of the consumer's interest, such as a 
transfer bestowing co-ownership on a spouse, does not terminate the 
right of rescission.
    Paragraph 15(a)(4).
    1. Joint owners. When more than one consumer has the right to 
rescind a transaction, any one of them may exercise that right and 
cancel the transaction on behalf of all. For example, if both a husband 
and wife have the right to rescind a transaction, either spouse acting 
alone may exercise the right and both are bound by the rescission.
    15(b) Notice of right to rescind.
    1. Who receives notice. Each consumer entitled to rescind must be 
given:

    [sbull] Two copies of the rescission notice.
    [sbull] The material disclosures.

    In a transaction involving joint owners, both of the whom are 
entitled to rescind, both must receive the notice of the right to 
rescind and disclosures. For example, if both spouses are entitled to 
rescind a transaction, each must receive 2 copies of the rescission 
notice and one copy of the disclosures. If e-mail is used, the creditor 
complies with Sec.  226.15(b)(1) if one notice is sent to each co-owner. 
Each co-owner must consent to receive electronic disclosures and each 
must designate an electronic address for receiving the disclosure.
    2. Format. The rescission notice may be physically separated from 
the material disclosures or combined with the material disclosures, so 
long as the information required to be included on the notice is set 
forth in a clear and conspicuous manner. See the model notices in 
appendix G.
    3. Content. The notice must include all of the information outlined 
in Sec.  226.15(b)(1) through (5). The requirement in Sec.  226.15(b) 
that the transaction or occurrence be identified may be met by providing 
the date of the transaction or occurrence. The notice may include 
additional information related to the required information, such as:
    [sbull] A description of the property subject to the security 
interest.
    [sbull] A statement that joint owners may have the right to rescind 
and that a rescission by one is effective for all.
    [sbull] The name and address of an agent of the creditor to receive 
notice of rescission.

    4. Time of providing notice. The notice required by Sec.  226.15(b) 
need not be given before the occurrence giving rise to the right of 
rescission. The creditor may deliver the notice after the occurrence, 
but the rescission period will not begin to run until the notice is 
given. For example, if the creditor provides the notice on May 15, but 
disclosures were given and the credit limit was raised on May 10, the 3-
business-day rescission period will run from May 15.
    15(c) Delay of creditor's performance.
    1. General rule. Until the rescission period has expired and the 
creditor is reasonably satisfied that the consumer has not rescinded, 
the creditor must not, either directly or through a third party:
    [sbull] Disburse advances to the consumer.
    [sbull] Begin performing services for the consumer.
    [sbull] Deliver materials to the consumer.
    A creditor may, however, continue to allow transactions under an 
existing open-end credit plan during a rescission period that results 
solely from the addition of a security interest in the consumer's 
principal dwelling. (See comment 15(c)-3 for other actions that may be 
taken during the delay period.)

    2. Escrow. The creditor may disburse advances during the rescission 
period in a valid escrow arrangement. The creditor may not, however, 
appoint the consumer as ``trustee'' or ``escrow agent'' and distribute 
funds to the consumer in that capacity during the delay period.
    3. Actions during the delay period. Section 226.15(c) does not 
prevent the creditor from taking other steps during the delay, short of 
beginning actual performance. Unless otherwise prohibited, such as by 
state law, the creditor may, for example:
    [sbull] Prepare the cash advance check.
    [sbull] Perfect the security interest.
    [sbull] Accrue finance charges during the delay period.

    4. Performance by third party. The creditor is relieved from 
liability for failure to delay performance if a third party with no 
knowledge that the rescission right has been activated provides 
materials or services, as long as any debt incurred for materials or 
services obtained by the consumer during the rescission period is not 
secured by the security interest in the consumer's dwelling. For 
example, if a consumer uses a bank credit card to purchase materials 
from a merchant in an amount below the floor limit, the merchant might 
not contact the card issuer for authorization and therefore would not 
know that materials should not be provided.
    5. Delay beyond rescission period. The creditor must wait until it 
is reasonably satisfied that the consumer has not rescinded. For 
example, the creditor may satisfy itself by doing one of the following:

    [sbull] Waiting a reasonable time after expiration of the rescission 
period to allow for delivery of a mailed notice.
    [sbull] Obtaining a written statement from the consumer that the 
right has not been exercised.


[[Page 431]]


    When more than one consumer has the right to rescind, the creditor 
cannot reasonably rely on the assurance of only one consumer, because 
other consumers may exercise the right.
    15(d) Effects of rescission.
    Paragraph 15(d)(1).
    1. Termination of security interest. Any security interest giving 
rise to the right of rescission becomes void when the consumer exercises 
the right of rescission. The security interest is automatically negated, 
regardless of its status and whether or not it was recorded or 
perfected. Under Sec.  226.15(d)(2), however, the creditor must take any 
action necessary to reflect the fact that the security interest no 
longer exists.
    2. Extent of termination. The creditor's security interest is void 
to the extent that it is related to the occurrence giving rise to the 
right of rescission. For example, upon rescission:

    [sbull] If the consumer's right to rescind is activated by the 
opening of a plan, any security interest in the principal dwelling is 
void.
    [sbull] If the right arises due to an increase in the credit limit, 
the security interest is void as to the amount of credit extensions over 
the prior limit, but the security interest in amounts up to the original 
credit limit is unaffected.
    [sbull] If the right arises with each individual credit extension, 
then the interest is void as to that extension, and other extensions are 
unaffected.

    Paragraph 15(d)(2).
    1. Refunds to consumer. The consumer cannot be required to pay any 
amount in the form of money or property either to the creditor or to a 
third party as part of the occurrence subject to the right of 
rescission. Any amounts of this nature already paid by the consumer must 
be refunded. ``Any amount'' includes finance charges already accrued, as 
well as other charges such as broker fees, application and commitment 
fees, or fees for a title search or appraisal, whether paid to the 
creditor, paid by the consumer directly to a third party, or passed on 
from the creditor to the third party. It is irrelevant that these 
amounts may not represent profit to the creditor. For example:
    [sbull] If the occurrence is the opening of the plan, the creditor 
must return any membership or application fee paid.
    [sbull] If the occurrence is the increase in a credit limit or the 
addition of a security interest, the creditor must return any fee 
imposed for a new credit report or filing fees.
    [sbull] If the occurrence is a credit extension, the creditors must 
return fees such as application, title, and appraisal or survey fees, as 
well as any finance charges related to the credit extension.

    2. Amounts not refundable to consumer. Creditors need not return any 
money given by the consumer to a third party outside of the occurrence, 
such as costs incurred for a building permit or for a zoning variance. 
Similarly, the term any amount does not apply to money or property given 
by the creditor to the consumer; those amounts must be tendered by the 
consumer to the creditor under Sec.  226.15(d)(3).
    3. Reflection of security interest termination. The creditor must 
take whatever steps are necessary to indicate that the security interest 
is terminated. Those steps include the cancellation of documents 
creating the security interest, and the filing of release or termination 
statements in the public record. In a transaction involving 
subcontractors or suppliers that also hold security interests related to 
the occurrence rescinded by the consumer, the creditor must insure that 
the termination of their security interests is also reflected. The 20-
day period for the creditor's action refers to the time within which the 
creditor must begin the process. It does not require all necessary steps 
to have been completed within that time, but the creditor is responsible 
for seeing the process through to completion.
    Paragraph 15(d)(3).
    1. Property exchange. Once the creditor has fulfilled its obligation 
under Sec.  226.15(d)(2), the consumer must tender to the creditor any 
property or money the creditor has already delivered to the consumer. At 
the consumer's option, property may be tendered at the location of the 
property. For example, if fixtures or furniture have been delivered to 
the consumer's home, the consumer may tender them to the creditor by 
making them available for pick-up at the home, rather than physically 
returning them to the creditor's premises. Money already given to the 
consumer must be tendered at the creditor's place of business. For 
purpose of property exchange, the following additional rules apply:

    [sbull] A cash advance is considered money for purposes of this 
section even if the creditor knows what the consumer intends to purchase 
with the money.
    [sbull] In a 3-party open-end credit plan (that is, if the creditor 
and seller are not the same or related persons), extensions by the 
creditor that are used by the consumer for purchases from third-party 
sellers are considered to be the same as cash advances for purposes of 
tendering value to the creditor, even though the transaction is a 
purchase for other purposes under the regulation. For example, if a 
consumer exercises the unexpired right to rescind after using a 3-party 
credit card for one year, the consumer would tender the amount of the 
purchase price for the items charged to the account, rather than 
tendering the items themselves to the creditor.

    2. Reasonable value. If returning the property would be extremely 
burdensome to the

[[Page 432]]

consumer, the consumer may offer the creditor its reasonable value 
rather than returning the property itself. For example, if building 
materials have already been incorporated into the consumer's dwelling, 
the consumer may pay their reasonable value.
    Paragraph 15(d)(4).
    1. Modifications. The procedures outlined in Sec.  226.15(d)(2) and 
(d)(3) may be modified by a court. For example, when a consumer is in 
bankruptcy proceedings and prohibited from returning anything to the 
creditor, or when the equities dictate, a modification might be made.
    15(e) Consumer's waiver of right to rescind.
    1. Need for waiver. To waive the right to rescind, the consumer must 
have a bona fide personal financial emergency that must be met before 
the end of the rescission period. The existence of the consumer's waiver 
will not, of itself, automatically insulate the creditor from liability 
for failing to provide the right of rescission.
    2. Procedure. To waive or modify the right to rescind, the consumer 
must give a written statement that specifically waives or modifies the 
right, and also includes a brief description of the emergency. Each 
consumer entitled to rescind must sign the waiver statement. In a 
transaction involving multiple consumers, such as a husband and wife 
using their home as collateral, the waiver must bear the signatures of 
both spouses.
    15(f) Exempt transactions.
    1. Residential mortgage transaction. Although residential mortgage 
transactions would seldom be made on bona fide open-end credit plans 
(under which repeated transactions must be reasonably contemplated), an 
advance on an open-end plan could be for a downpayment for the purchase 
of a dwelling that would then secure the remainder of the line. In such 
a case, only the particular advance for the downpayment would be exempt 
from the rescission right.
    2. State creditors. Cities and other political subdivisions of 
states acting as creditors are not exempt from Sec.  226.15.
    3. Spreader clause. When the creditor holds a mortgage or deed of 
trust on the consumer's principal dwelling and that mortgage or deed of 
trust contains a ``spreader clause'' (also known as a ``dragnet'' or 
cross-col[chyph]la[chyph]ter[chyph]a[chyph]liz[chyph]a[chyph]tion 
clause), subsequent occurrences such as the opening of a plan or 
individual credit extensions are subject to the right of rescission to 
the same degree as if the security interest were taken directly to 
secure the open-end plan, unless the creditor effectively waives its 
security interest under the spreader clause with respect to the 
subsequent open-end credit extensions.

                               References

    Statute: Sections 113, 125, 130, and the Housing and Community 
Development Technical Amendments Act of 1984, Sec. 205 (Pub. L. 98-479).
    Other sections: Section 226.2 and appendix G.
    Previous regulation: Section 226.9.
    1981 Changes: Section 226.15 reflects the statutory amendments of 
1980, providing for a limited right of rescission when individual credit 
extensions are made in accordance with a previously established credit 
limit for an open-end credit plan. The 1980 amendments provided that 
this limited rescission right be available for a three-year trial 
period. However, Pub. L. 98-479 now permanently exempts such individual 
credit extensions from the right of rescission.
    The right to rescind applies not only to real property used as the 
consumer's principal dwelling, but to personal property as well. The 
regulation provides no specific text or format for the rescission 
notice.
    When a consumer exercises the right to rescind, the creditor now has 
20 days to return a consumer's money or property and take the necessary 
action to terminate the security interest. The creditor has 20 days to 
take possession of the money or property after the consumer's tender 
before the consumer may keep it without further obligation.
    Under the revised regulation, the waiver provision has been relaxed. 
The lien status of the mortgage is irrelevant for purposes of the 
residential mortgage transaction exemption. The exemption for 
agricultural loans from the right to rescind has been deleted.

                       Section 226.16--Advertising

    1. Clear and conspicuous standard. Section 226.16 is subject to the 
general ``clear and conspicuous'' standard for subpart B (see Sec.  
226.5(a)(1)) but prescribes no specific rules for the format of the 
necessary disclosures. The credit terms need not be printed in a certain 
type size nor need they appear in any particular place in the 
advertisement.
    2. Expressing the annual percentage rate in abbreviated form. 
Whenever the annual percentage rate is used in an advertisement for 
open-end credit, it may be expressed using a readily understandable 
abbreviation such as ``APR''.
    16(a) Actually available terms.
    1. General rule. To the extent that an advertisement mentions 
specific credit terms, it may state only those terms that the creditor 
is actually prepared to offer. For example, a creditor may not advertise 
a very low annual percentage rate that will not in fact be available at 
any time. Section 226.16(a) is not intended to inhibit the promotion of 
new credit programs, but to bar the advertising of terms that are not 
and will not be available. For example, a creditor may advertise terms 
that will be offered for only a limited period, or terms that will 
become available at a future date.

[[Page 433]]

    2. Specific credit terms. Specific credit terms is not limited to 
the disclosures required by the regulation but would include any 
specific components of a credit plan, such as the minimum periodic 
payment amount or seller's points in a plan secured by real estate.
    16(b) Advertisement of terms that require additional disclosures.
    1. Terms requiring additional disclosures. In Sec.  226.16(b) the 
phrase the terms required to be disclosed under Sec.  226.6 refers to 
the terms in Sec.  226.6(a) and Sec.  226.6(b).
    2. Use of positive terms. An advertisement must state a credit term 
as a positive number in order to trigger additional disclosures. For 
example, no annual membership fee would not trigger the additional 
disclosures required by Sec.  226.16(b). (See, however, the rules in 
Sec.  226.16(d) relating to advertisements for home equity plans.)
    3. Implicit terms. Section 226.16(b) applies even if the triggering 
term is not stated explicitly, but may be readily determined from the 
advertisement.
    4. Membership fees. A membership fee is not a triggering term nor 
need it be disclosed under Sec.  226.16(b)(3) if it is required for 
participation in the plan whether or not an open-end credit feature is 
attached. (See Comment 6(b)-1.)
    5. Variable-rate plans. In disclosing the annual percentage rate in 
an advertisement for a variable-rate plan, as required by Sec.  
226.16(b)(2), the creditor may use an insert showing the current rate; 
may give the rate as of a specified recent date; or may disclose an 
estimated rate under Sec.  226.5(c). The additional requirement in Sec.  
226.16(b)(2) to disclose the variable-rate feature may be satisfied by 
disclosing that the annual percentage rate may vary or a similar 
statement, but the advertisement need not include the information 
required by footnote 12 to Sec.  226.6(a)(2).
    6. Discounted variable-rate plans--disclosure of the annual 
percentage rates. The advertised annual percentage rates for discounted 
variable-rate plans must, in accordance with comment 6(a)(2)-10, include 
both the initial rate (with the statement of how long it will remain in 
effect) and the current indexed rate (with the statement that this 
second rate may vary). The options listed in comment I6(b)-5 may be used 
in disclosing the current indexed rate.
    7. Triggering terms. The following are examples of terms that 
trigger additional disclosures:
    [sbull] Small monthly service charge on the remaining balance, which 
describes how the amount of a finance charge will be determined.
    [sbull] 12 percent Annual Percentage Rate or A $15 annual membership 
fee buys you $2,000 in credit, which describe required disclosures using 
positive numbers.

    8. Minimum, fixed, transaction, activity, or similar charge. The 
charges to be disclosed under Sec.  226.16(b)(1) are those that are 
considered finance charges under Sec.  226.4.
    9. Deferred billing and deferred payment programs. Statements such 
as ``Charge it--you won't be billed until May'' or ``You may skip your 
January payment'' are not in themselves triggering terms, since the 
timing for initial billing or for monthly payments are not terms 
required to be disclosed under Sec.  226.6. However, a statement such as 
``No finance charge until May'' or any other statement regarding when 
finance charges begin to accrue is a triggering term, whether appearing 
alone or in conjunction with a description of a deferred billing or 
deferred payment program such as the examples above.
    16(c) Catalogs or Other Multiple-page Advertisements; Electronic 
Advertisements
    1. Definition. The multiple-page advertisements to which Sec.  
226.16(c) refers are advertisements consisting of a series of 
sequentially numbered pages--for example, a supplement to a newspaper. A 
mailing consisting of several separate flyers or pieces of promotional 
material in a single envelope does not constitute a single multiple-page 
advertisement for purposes of Sec.  226.16(c).
    Paragraph 16(c)(1).
    1. General. Section 226.16(c)(1) permits creditors to put credit 
information together in one place in a catalog or other multiple-page 
advertisement or an electronic advertisement. The rule applies only if 
the advertisement contains one or more of the triggering terms from 
Sec.  226.16(b).
    2. Electronic communication. If an advertisement using electronic 
communication contains the table or schedule permitted under Sec.  
226.16(c)(1), any statement of terms set forth in Sec.  226.6 appearing 
anywhere else in the advertisement must clearly direct the consumer to 
the location where the table or schedule begins. For example, a term 
triggering additional disclosures may be accompanied by a link that 
directly takes the consumer to the additional information.
    Paragraph 16(c)(2).
    1. Table or schedule if credit terms depend on outstanding balance. 
If the credit terms of a plan vary depending on the amount of the 
balance outstanding, rather than the amount of any property purchased, a 
table or schedule complies with Sec.  226.16(c)(2) if it includes the 
required disclosures for representative balances. For example, a 
creditor would disclose that a periodic rate of 1.5% is applied to 
balances of $500 or less, and a 1% rate is applied to balances greater 
than $500.

           16(d) Additional Requirements for Home Equity Plans

    1. Trigger terms. Negative as well as affirmative references trigger 
the requirement for additional information. For example, if a creditor 
states no annual fee, no points, or we

[[Page 434]]

waive closing costs in an advertisement, additional information must be 
provided. (See comment 16(d)-4 regarding the use of a phrase such as no 
closing costs.) Inclusion of a statement such as low fees, however, 
would not trigger the need to state additional information. References 
to payment terms include references to the draw period or any repayment 
period, to the length of the plan, to how the minimum payments are 
determined and to the timing of such payments.
    2. Fees to open the plan. Section 226.16(d)(1)(i) requires a 
disclosure of any fees imposed by the creditor or a third party to open 
the plan. In providing the fee information required under this 
paragraph, the corresponding rules for disclosure of this information 
apply. For example, fees to open the plan may be stated as a range. 
Similarly, if property insurance is required to open the plan, a 
creditor either may estimate the cost of the insurance or provide a 
statement that such insurance is required. (See the commentary to Sec.  
226.5b(d)(7) and (8).)
    3. Statements of tax deductibility. An advertisement referring to 
deductibility for tax purposes is not misleading if it includes a 
statement such as ``consult a tax advisor regarding the deductibility of 
interest.''
    4. Misleading terms prohibited. Under Sec.  226.16(d)(5), 
advertisements may not refer to home equity plans as free money or use 
other misleading terms. For example, an advertisement could not state 
``no closing costs'' or ``we waive closing costs'' if consumers may be 
required to pay any closing costs, such as recordation fees. In the case 
of property insurance, however, a creditor may state, for example, ``no 
closing costs'' even if property insurance may be required, as long as 
the creditor also provides a statement that such insurance may be 
required. (See the commentary to this section regarding fees to open a 
plan.)
    5. Relation to other sections. Advertisements for home equity plans 
must comply with all provisions in Sec.  226.16, not solely the rules in 
Sec.  226.16(d). If an advertisement contains information (such as the 
payment terms) that triggers the duty under Sec.  226.16(d) to state the 
annual percentage rate, the additional disclosures in Sec.  226.16(b) 
must be provided in the advertisement. While Sec.  226.16(d) does not 
require a statement of fees to use or maintain the plan (such as 
membership fees and transaction charges), such fees must be disclosed 
under Sec.  226.16(b) (1) and (3).
    6. Inapplicability of closed-end rules. Advertisements for home 
equity plans are governed solely by the requirements in Sec.  226.16, 
and not by the closed-end advertising rules in Sec.  226.24. Thus, if a 
creditor states payment information about the repayment phase, this will 
trigger the duty to provide additional information under Sec.  226.16, 
but not under Sec.  226.24.
    7. Balloon payment. In some programs, a balloon payment will occur 
if only the minimum payments under the plan are made. If an 
advertisement for such a program contains any statement about a minimum 
periodic payment, the advertisement must also state that a balloon 
payment will result (not merely that a balloon payment ``may'' result). 
(See comment 5b(d)(5)(ii)-3 for guidance on items not required to be 
stated in the advertisement, and on situations in which the balloon 
payment requirement does not apply.)

                               References

    Statute: Sections 141 and 143.
    Previous regulation: Section 226.10 (a) through (c) and 
Interpretation Sec.  226.1002.
    Other sections: Sections 226.2 and 226.6.
    1981 changes: Section 226.16 reflects the statutory changes to 
section 143 of the act which reduce both the number of triggering terms 
and the additional disclosures required by the use of those terms. 
Membership or participation fees are included among the additional 
disclosures required when a triggering term is used. The substance of 
Interpretation Sec.  226.1002, requiring disclosure of representative 
amounts of credit in catalogs and multiple-page advertisements, has been 
incorporated in simplified form in paragraph (c).

                      Subpart C--Closed-End Credit

             Section 226.17--General Disclosure Requirements

    17(a) Form of disclosures.
    Paragraph 17(a)(1).
    1. Clear and conspicuous. This standard requires that disclosures be 
in a reasonably understandable form. For example, while the regulation 
requires no mathematical progression or format, the disclosures must be 
presented in a way that does not obscure the relationship of the terms 
to each other. In addition, although no minimum type size is mandated, 
the disclosures must be legible, whether typewritten, handwritten, or 
printed by computer.
    2. Segregation of disclosures. The disclosures may be grouped 
together and segregated from other information in a variety of ways. For 
example, the disclosures may appear on a separate sheet of paper or may 
be set off from other information on the contract or other documents:
    [sbull] By outlining them in a box
    [sbull] By bold print dividing lines
    [sbull] By a different color background
    [sbull] By a different type style

(The general segregation requirement described in this subparagraph does 
not apply to the disclosures required under Sec. Sec.  226.19(b) and 
226.20(c) although the disclosures must be clear and conspicuous.)


[[Page 435]]


    3. Location. The regulation imposes no specific location 
requirements on the segregated disclosures. For example:

    [sbull] They may appear on a disclosure statement separate from all 
other material.
    [sbull] They may be placed on the same document with the credit 
contract or other information, so long as they are segregated from that 
information.
    [sbull] They may be shown on the front or back of a document.
    [sbull] They need not begin at the top of a page.
    [sbull] They may be continued from one page to another.

    4. Content of segregated disclosures. Footnotes 37 and 38 contain 
exceptions to the requirement that the disclosures under Sec.  226.18 be 
segregated from material that is not directly related to those 
disclosures. Footnote 37 lists the items that may be added to the 
segregated disclosures, even though not directly related to those 
disclosures. Footnote 38 lists the items required under Sec.  226.18 
that may be deleted from the segregated disclosures and appear 
elsewhere. Any one or more of these additions or deletions may be 
combined and appear either together with or separate from the segregated 
disclosures. The itemization of the amount financed under Sec.  
226.18(c), however, must be separate from the other segregated 
disclosures under Sec.  226.18. If a creditor chooses to include the 
security interest charges required to be itemized under Sec.  226.4(e) 
and Sec.  226.18(o) in the amount financed itemization, it need not list 
these charges elsewhere.
    5. Directly related. The segregated disclosures may, at the 
creditor's option, include any information that is directly related to 
those disclosures. The following is directly related information:
    i. A description of a grace period after which a late payment charge 
will be imposed. For example, the disclosure given under Sec.  226.18(l) 
may state that a late charge will apply to ``any payment received more 
than 15 days after the due date.''
    ii. A statement that the transaction is not secured. For example, 
the creditor may add a category labelled ``unsecured'' or ``not 
secured'' to the security interest disclosures given under Sec.  
226.18(m).
    iii. The basis for any estimates used in making disclosures. For 
example, if the maturity date of a loan depends solely on the occurrence 
of a future event, the creditor may indicate that the disclosures assume 
that event will occur at a certain time.
    iv. The conditions under which a demand feature may be exercised. 
For example, in a loan subject to demand after five years, the 
disclosures may state that the loan will become payable on demand in 
five years.
    v. An explanation of the use of pronouns or other references to the 
parties to the transaction. For example, the disclosures may state, 
```You' refers to the customer and `we' refers to the creditor.''
    vi. Instructions to the creditor or its employees on the use of a 
multiple-purpose form. For example, the disclosures may state, ``Check 
box if applicable.''
    vii. A statement that the borrower may pay a minimum finance charge 
upon prepayment in a simple-interest transaction. For example, when 
state law prohibits penalties, but would allow a minimum finance charge 
in the event of prepayment, the creditor may make the Sec.  226.18(k)(1) 
disclosure by stating, ``You may be charged a minimum finance charge.''
    viii. A brief reference to negative amortization in variable-rate 
transactions. For example, in the variable-rate disclosure, the creditor 
may include a short statement such as ``Unpaid interest will be added to 
principal.'' (See the commentary to Sec.  226.18(f)(1)(iii).)
    ix. A brief caption identifying the disclosures. For example, the 
disclosures may bear a general title such as ``Federal Truth in Lending 
Disclosures'' or a descriptive title such as ``Real Estate Loan 
Disclosures.''
    x. A statement that a due-on-sale clause or other conditions on 
assumption are contained in the loan document. For example, the 
disclosure given under Sec.  226.18(q) may state, ``Someone buying your 
home may, subject to conditions in the due-on-sale clause contained in 
the loan document, assume the remainder of the mortgage on the original 
terms.''
    xi. If a state or Federal law prohibits prepayment penalties and 
excludes the charging of interest after prepayment from coverage as a 
penalty, a statement that the borrower may have to pay interest for some 
period after prepayment in full. The disclosure given under Sec.  
226.18(k) may state, for example, ``If you prepay your loan on other 
than the regular installment date, you may be assessed interest charges 
until the end of the month.''
    xii. More than one hypothetical example under Sec.  226.18(f)(1)(iv) 
in transactions with more than one variable-rate feature. For example, 
in a variable-rate transaction with an option permitting consumers to 
convert to a fixed-rate transaction, the disclosures may include an 
example illustrating the effects on the payment terms of an increase 
resulting from conversion in addition to the example illustrating an 
increase resulting from changes in the index.
    xiii. The disclosures set forth under Sec.  226.18(f)(1) for 
variable-rate transactions subject to Sec.  226.18(f)(2).
    xiv. A statement whether or not a subsequent purchaser of the 
property securing an obligation may be permitted to assume the remaining 
obligation on its original terms.
    xv. A late-payment fee disclosure under Sec.  226.18(l) on a single 
payment loan.


[[Page 436]]


    6. Multiple-purpose forms. The creditor may design a disclosure 
statement that can be used for more than one type of transaction, so 
long as the required disclosures for individual transactions are clear 
and conspicuous. (See the Commentary to appendices G and H for a 
discussion of the treatment of disclosures that do not apply to specific 
transactions.) Any disclosure listed in Sec.  226.18 (except the 
itemization of the amount financed under Sec.  226.18(c)) may be 
included on a standard disclosure statement even though not all of the 
creditor's transactions include those features. For example, the 
statement may include:

    [sbull] The variable rate disclosure under Sec.  226.18(f).
    [sbull] The demand feature disclosure under Sec.  226.18(i).
    [sbull] A reference to the possibility of a security interest 
arising from a spreader clause, under Sec.  226.18(m).
    [sbull] The assumption policy disclosure under Sec.  226.18(q).
    [sbull] The required deposit disclosure under Sec.  226.18(r).
    7. Balloon payment financing with leasing characteristics. In 
certain credit sale or loan transactions, a consumer may reduce the 
dollar amount of the payments to be made during the course of the 
transaction by agreeing to make, at the end of the loan term, a large 
final payment based on the expected residual value of the property. The 
consumer may have a number of options with respect to the final payment, 
including, among other things, retaining the property and making the 
final payment, refinancing the final payment, or transferring the 
property to the creditor in lieu of the final payment. Such transactions 
may have some of the characteristics of lease transactions subject to 
Regulation M, but are considered credit transactions where the consumer 
assumes the indicia of ownership, including the risks, burdens and 
benefits of ownership upon consummation. These transactions are governed 
by the disclosure requirements of this regulation instead of Regulation 
M. Creditors should not include in the segregated Truth in Lending 
disclosures additional information. Thus, disclosures should show the 
large final payment in the payment schedule and should not, for example, 
reflect the other options available to the consumer at maturity.

    Paragraph 17(a)(2).
    1. When disclosures must be more conspicuous. The following rules 
apply to the requirement that the terms annual percentage rate and 
finance charge be shown more conspicuously:

    [sbull] The terms must be more conspicuous only in relation to the 
other required disclosures under Sec.  226.18. For example, when the 
disclosures are included on the contract document, those 2 terms need 
not be more conspicuous as compared to the heading on the contract 
document or information required by state law.
    [sbull] The terms need not be more conspicuous except as part of the 
finance charge and annual percentage rate disclosures under Sec.  226.18 
(d) and (e), although they may, at the creditor's option, be highlighted 
wherever used in the required disclosures. For example, the terms may, 
but need not, be highlighted when used in disclosing a prepayment 
penalty under Sec.  226.18(k) or a required deposit under Sec.  
226.18(r).
    [sbull] The creditor's identity under Sec.  226.18(a) may, but need 
not, be more prominently displayed than the finance charge and annual 
percentage rate.
    [sbull] The terms need not be more conspicuous than figures 
(including, for example, numbers, percentages, and dollar signs)

    2. Making disclosures more conspicuous. The terms finance charge and 
annual percentage rate may be made more conspicuous in any way that 
highlights them in relation to the other required disclosures. For 
example, they may be:

    [sbull] Capitalized when other disclosures are printed in capital 
and lower case.
    [sbull] Printed in larger type, bold print or different type face.
    [sbull] Printed in a contrasting color.
    [sbull] Underlined.
    [sbull] Set off with asterisks.

                       17(b) Time of disclosures.

    1. Consummation. As a general rule, disclosures must be made before 
``consummation'' of the transaction. The disclosures need not be given 
by any particular time before consummation, except in certain mortgage 
transactions and variable-rate transactions secured by the consumer's 
principal dwelling with a term greater than one year under Sec.  226.19. 
(See the commentary to Sec.  226.2(a)(13) regarding the definition of 
consummation.)
    2. Converting open-end to closed-end credit. Except for home equity 
plans subject to Sec.  226.5b in which the agreement provides for a 
repayment phase, if an open-end credit account is converted to a closed-
end transaction under a written agreement with the consumer, the 
creditor must provide a set of closed-end credit disclosures before 
consummation of the closed-end transaction. (See the commentary to Sec.  
226.19(b) for the timing rules for additional disclosures required upon 
the conversion to a variable-rate transaction secured by a consumer's 
principal dwelling with a term greater than one year.) If consummation 
of the closed-end transaction occurs at the same time as the consumer 
enters into the open-end agreement, the closed-end credit disclosures 
may be given at the time of conversion. If disclosures are delayed until 
conversion and the closed-end transaction has a variable-rate

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