Fannie Mae Selling Guide B2-2-01 — General Borrower Eligibility Requirements

fnma-sel-b2-2-01

Fannie Mae Selling Guide B2-2-01 — General Borrower Eligibility Requirements.

Get this register: .xlsx .csv More bundles →

Verbatim regulatory text (1)

Verbatim provisions from Fannie Mae Selling Guide B2-2-01 — General Borrower Eligibility Requirements — each quote is a verified substring of the regulator-published source snapshot, not retyped. Quoted for reference; this is not legal advice. The operational layer (P&P updates, prompts) lives in the regulation update kits.

Fannie Mae Selling Guide B2-2-01 — General Borrower Eligibility Requirements

B2-2-01, General Borrower Eligibility Requirements (09/03/2025) Introduction This topic contains information on general borrower eligibility requirements, including: General Borrower Eligibility Requirements General Borrower Identity Criteria Tax Identification Numbers Establishing Borrower Ownership Interest General Borrower Eligibility Requirements Fannie Mae purchases or securitizes mortgages made to borrowers who are natural persons and have reached the age at which the mortgage note can be enforced in the jurisdiction where the property is located. There is no maximum age limit for a borrower. Exceptions to the requirement that borrowers be natural persons are: inter vivos revocable trusts, HomeStyle Renovation mortgages, and Published May 6, 2026 224 land trusts in those states where the beneficiary is an individual. (Note: Fannie Mae permits land trusts on a negotiated basis for states where land trusts are widely accepted.) See the following for additional information: B2-1.3-04, Prohibited Refinancing Practices, B2-2-04, Guarantors, Co-Signers, or Non-Occupant Borrowers on the Subject Transaction B2-2-05, Inter Vivos Revocable Trusts, B5-3.2-02, HomeStyle Renovation Mortgages: Loan and Borrower Eligibility, and Community Land Trusts in B5-5.3-01, Shared Equity Overview. General Borrower Identity Criteria A borrower is any applicant (e.g., individually or jointly) whose credit is used for qualifying purposes to determine ability to meet Fannie Mae’s underwriting and eligibility standards. “Co-borrower” is a term used to describe any borrower other than the borrower whose name appears first on the note. Lenders must confirm each borrower’s identity prior to the extension of credit. Fannie Mae’s requirements for borrower identity verification are intended to align with lenders’ existing federal obligations under laws requiring information and document verification, including the Department of Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) regulations and the U.S. Patriot Act. See A3-2-01, Compliance With Laws, for additional information concerning borrower identity verification. Tax Identification Numbers Fannie Mae requires that each borrower have a valid Social Security number or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN), in addition to meeting existing legal residency and documentation requirements. (For additional information, see B2-2-02, Non–U.S. Citizen Borrower Eligibility Requirements.) DU and Loan Delivery may identify data integrity issues pertaining to the borrower’s Social Security number. Lenders must take steps to resolve any issues, including invalid format, numbers not issued, borrower age/issue date discrepancies, or Social Security numbers associated with deceased individuals. If a lender cannot resolve any Social Security number inconsistencies, the lender must validate the Social Security number directly with the Social Security Administration (SSA). The following requirements apply: The lender may use one of the two methods listed below to validate a borrower's Social Security number: Form SSA–89 (Authorization for the Social Security Administration to Release Social Security Number Verification), or Electronic Consent Based Social Security Number Verification (eCBSV) Service. If using a third-party vendor, the lender must ensure that the vendor goes directly to the SSA to validate the Social Security number using one of the two methods listed above. The lender must retain documentation in the loan file that evidences the validation of the Social Security number. The lender must deliver the loan with SFC 162 if the Social Security number was validated through the SSA but there is a discrepancy identified with the Social Security number in the credit report, DU, or Loan Delivery edits. Published May 6, 2026 225 If the Social Security number cannot be validated with the SSA, the loan is not eligible for sale to Fannie Mae. Establishing Borrower Ownership Interest A borrower must establish ownership interest in the security property and become liable for the note (whether individually or jointly) by: signing the security instrument, signing the mortgage or deed of trust note, and taking title to the property in the name of the individual borrower(s). If the security property is held in a life estate established under state property law, the following provisions apply: The life tenant (the individual who has the right to possess and use the subject property during their lifetime) must be a borrower. One (or more) remaindermen (individuals who have an irrevocable, vested and alienable interest in the subject property and who will receive full ownership of the subject property upon the death of the life tenant) may also be co-borrowers. Both the life tenant and all remaindermen must sign the security instrument to convey their respective interests in the property. For additional information, see B2-3-01, General Property Eligibility. Recent Related Announcements The table below provides references to recently issued Announcements that are related to this topic. Announcements Issue Date Announcement SEL-2025-07 September 03, 2025 Announcement SEL-2022-10 December 14, 2022 Announcement SEL-2020-05 September 02, 2020

Source: Fannie Mae Selling Guide B2-2-01 — General Borrower Eligibility Requirements · source URL · snapshot 5f7b8b79da595d76