HMDA Rate Spread Calculator
Calculate the difference between APR and APOR for compliance reporting.
Calculation Results
Understanding Rate Spread in Mortgage Lending
The rate spread is a critical metric used by financial institutions to comply with the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA). It represents the difference between the Annual Percentage Rate (APR) on a loan and the Average Prime Offer Rate (APOR) for a comparable transaction as of the date the interest rate is set.
How the Calculation Works
The mathematical formula for the rate spread is straightforward:
The result is expressed in percentage points, typically rounded to at least three decimal places. If the APR is lower than the APOR, the result is a negative number, which usually indicates the loan is not a "higher-priced mortgage loan" (HPML).
HMDA Reporting Thresholds
Lenders are generally required to report the rate spread if it equals or exceeds specific thresholds defined by Regulation C:
- First Lien Loans: 1.5 percentage points or more.
- Subordinate (Junior) Lien Loans: 3.5 percentage points or more.
Practical Example
Imagine a borrower receives a first-lien mortgage with a final APR of 7.250%. On the day the rate was locked, the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) published an APOR of 5.150% for that specific loan term.
- APR: 7.250%
- APOR: 5.150%
- Calculation: 7.250 – 5.150 = 2.100
- Result: The rate spread is 2.100 percentage points. Since this exceeds the 1.5 threshold for first liens, it must be reported.