What Is Qualified Written Request?
A Qualified Written Request is a formal letter a borrower sends to their mortgage servicer under RESPA Section 6 to request account information or assert that the servicer made an error. Federal law requires the servicer to acknowledge receipt within 5 business days and provide a substantive response — the requested information or a correction — within 30 business days.
Key Facts
- Under RESPA Section 6 (12 USC § 2605(e)), servicers must acknowledge a QWR within 5 business days and provide a substantive written response within 30 business days (extendable by 15 days with notice)
- A valid QWR must be written, identify the borrower's account, and include either a request for specific information about the account or a description of a servicing error the borrower believes occurred
- Servicers are prohibited from reporting negative credit information related to the disputed amount during the 60-day investigation period following receipt of a QWR
- Borrowers can recover actual damages, additional damages up to $2,000 for a pattern or practice of noncompliance, and attorney fees for RESPA violations related to QWR handling (12 USC § 2605(f))
- A QWR must be sent to the servicer's designated address for qualified written requests (sometimes different from the regular payment or correspondence address) to trigger the statutory protections
How Does a Qualified Written Request Work?
A QWR is one of the most powerful tools a mortgage borrower has to compel their servicer to provide information or fix errors. The process works as follows:
- Draft the letter: Write a letter identifying your loan account (name, address, loan number), clearly stating whether you are requesting information or disputing an error, and specifying exactly what you need. Be as specific as possible.
- Send to the correct address: Federal law requires servicers to designate a specific address for receiving QWRs. This is usually (but not always) different from the payment address. Check your monthly statement, the servicer's website, or call to confirm the correct QWR address.
- Send via certified mail with return receipt: While not legally required, certified mail creates proof of delivery and the date received — critical if you need to enforce the response timeline.
- Track the deadlines: The servicer has 5 business days to acknowledge receipt and 30 business days to provide a substantive response. They can extend by 15 business days with written notice.
What Can You Request in a QWR?
QWRs can be used for two purposes:
- Information requests: Payment history, escrow analysis, loan ownership (who holds your note), fee breakdown, loss mitigation status, servicing transfer history, property inspection reports, or any other account-related information
- Error assertions: Incorrect payment application, unauthorized fees, failure to credit payments, escrow account errors, force-placed insurance when you have coverage, failure to process a loss mitigation application, or any other servicing error
The QWR is particularly valuable when you are in a dispute with your servicer because it creates a legal obligation to respond — silence is not an option. If the servicer fails to respond adequately, you have grounds for a RESPA enforcement action.
What Protections Does a QWR Trigger?
Once a valid QWR is received, RESPA provides several important protections:
- Credit reporting freeze: The servicer cannot report negative information to credit bureaus about the disputed amount during the 60-day investigation period. This can prevent foreclosure-related delinquency reports from appearing on your credit during a dispute.
- Response obligation: The servicer must make a correction, provide the requested information, or explain why the information is unavailable or the account is correct — within 30 business days.
- Damages for noncompliance: If the servicer fails to comply, borrowers can sue for actual damages (losses caused by the failure), plus additional statutory damages up to $2,000 for a pattern or practice, plus reasonable attorney fees and court costs.
What Is the Difference Between a QWR and a Notice of Error?
A QWR under RESPA Section 6 and a Notice of Error under Regulation X (12 CFR § 1024.35) overlap significantly but are technically different legal mechanisms. The Notice of Error specifically targets servicer errors (such as failing to apply a payment correctly or charging unauthorized fees) and has its own 30-business-day response timeline. Many attorneys send both simultaneously in a single letter to maximize the borrower's legal protections. The key practical difference: a Notice of Error covers specific error categories defined by the CFPB, while a QWR covers broader information requests as well as error disputes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I include in a Qualified Written Request?
Include your name, property address, loan account number, a clear statement that this is a 'Qualified Written Request under RESPA Section 6,' and a specific description of the information you're requesting or the error you're reporting. Send it via certified mail to the servicer's designated QWR address.
How long does a servicer have to respond to a QWR?
The servicer must acknowledge your QWR within 5 business days of receipt and provide a substantive response within 30 business days. They can extend by 15 additional business days if they notify you in writing. During this period, they cannot report the disputed amount as delinquent to credit bureaus.
What happens if my servicer ignores my QWR?
If the servicer fails to respond within the required timeline, they are in violation of RESPA. You can file a complaint with the CFPB, consult a consumer rights attorney, and potentially sue for actual damages, statutory damages up to $2,000, and attorney fees under 12 USC § 2605(f).
Can I send a QWR if I'm already in foreclosure?
Yes — you can send a QWR at any stage of the loan. In foreclosure situations, a QWR is often used to obtain payment history, fee breakdowns, or loan ownership information that may reveal servicing errors. However, a QWR alone does not stop a foreclosure — you would need a loss mitigation application or court action for that.
Is a QWR the same as a debt validation letter?
No. A QWR is specific to mortgage servicing under RESPA and is sent to your mortgage servicer. A debt validation letter is used under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) and is sent to third-party debt collectors. Different laws, different procedures, different protections — but both require the recipient to provide documentation.