Monday, January 3, 2011

Here’s Some Possible Help if You Missed the December 31st Renewal Period Deadline – The Reinstatement Period

December 31st was the deadline for renewing your company and loan originator licenses. A number of my clients were very busy at the end of December trying to close loans. I was calling them every week to see whether they had renewed their licenses, or to find out whether their cash flow was sufficient for me to renew their licenses and charge the renewal fees to their credit cards. If you didn’t have someone calling you to remind you to start the renewal process by December 31st, are you sure you renewed all of your licenses?

The Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System (NMLS) has been sending out emails to all company administrators informing them of any licenses that were not renewed. If you received one of these emails, you are now aware that you messed up if you had intentions of renewing a particular license (although I’m sure that many of the “failure to renew licenses” were deliberate decisions not to renew a license). Even if you did not receive that email yet, you may now be realizing that you missed a renewal or one of your loan officers may have forgotten to renew his/her license. What can you do now?

Some states allow its licensees to renew late. It is a state by state decision and the time periods for getting in a “late” renewal vary by state. You can have only 15 days up to 2 months, depending on which state’s license you need. In most cases, you will need to pay a late fee but it’s much cheaper than starting a new license application from the beginning. You can see if your state is accepting late renewals by going to http://mortgage.nationwidelicensingsystem.org/SLR/COMMON/RENEWALS/Pages/default.aspx
and clicking on the Renewals Deadline Chart in step 3 for the chart of all states.

What if your state does not accept a reinstatement of your license (since it has technically expired as of December 31, 2010)? Call your state regulatory agency and speak to the reviewers in the licensing division and find out whether you need to submit an entire new application. Make that call immediately if you need to reinstate any of your licenses or those of your loan officers.

If you do need to reinstate a license, plan now for the renewals period that starts November, 2011. Set firm deadlines on your calendar to assess which licenses you will want to renew (are you making enough money from every branch office and every loan officer?). If your company NMLS administrator is you and you are usually too busy at the end of the year to handle this job, delegate it to an employee or hire an outside company that will take care of it for you. After all, if you don't have a license, you cannot make any money at all.

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