Study Guide
SAFE Mortgage Loan Originator Test Study Guide
Use the saved domain outline to connect federal mortgage-related laws, mortgage loan origination activities, ethics, fraud prevention, and consumer protection, mortgage products and program guidelines to scenario-based questions and explanations.
How the Exam Is Structured
SAFE Mortgage Loan Originator Test (SAFE MLO) validates federal mortgage-related laws, mortgage loan origination activities, ethics, fraud prevention, and consumer protection, mortgage products and program guidelines. The ExamPal practice bank includes 97 premium questions and 40 free questions mapped across the official blueprint.
| Domain | Weight | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Domain 1: Federal Mortgage-Related Laws | 41% | Task 1.1: Apply Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and Regulation Z requirements; Required TILA disclosures |
| Domain 2: Mortgage Loan Origination Activities | 35% | Task 2.1: Conduct borrower intake and application analysis; Six elements of a completed application |
| Domain 3: Ethics, Fraud Prevention, and Consumer Protection | 16% | Task 3.1: Apply ethical standards in mortgage lending; Honesty, fairness, and good faith |
| Domain 4: Mortgage Products and Program Guidelines | 8% | Task 4.1: Differentiate conventional and government mortgage products; Eligibility features of major loan programs |
41% of exam
Domain 1: Federal Mortgage-Related Laws
Covers the federal consumer protection laws and regulations that govern mortgage lending, disclosures, credit reporting, privacy, anti-money laundering, and fair lending. This domain is foundational because it controls what lenders must disclose, how they may collect and use consumer information, and which practices are prohibited.
35% of exam
Domain 2: Mortgage Loan Origination Activities
Covers the practical workflow of originating a mortgage loan, from taking the application through underwriting, appraisal, closing, and licensing administration. This domain emphasizes the operational knowledge needed to process files correctly and comply with SAFE Act and state requirements.
16% of exam
Domain 3: Ethics, Fraud Prevention, and Consumer Protection
Covers ethical conduct, fraud schemes, prohibited practices, and consumer protection responses to red flags. This domain emphasizes recognizing and preventing misconduct that harms borrowers or undermines the integrity of the mortgage process.
8% of exam
Domain 4: Mortgage Products and Program Guidelines
Covers major mortgage product types, program-specific eligibility rules, and how to match borrowers to appropriate financing options. This domain tests practical understanding of conventional and government programs, product features, and cost considerations.
Key Terms to Know
These terms are loaded from the shared terminology pack and appear across the question explanations.
- Adverse action notice
- A notice required under ECOA informing an applicant of a credit denial or other adverse action within a specified timeframe.
- Appraised value
- The value of a property as determined by a licensed appraiser for lending purposes.
- BSA/AML
- Bank Secrecy Act and Anti-Money Laundering rules requiring financial institutions to detect and report suspicious financial activity.
- Bankruptcy filing
- A legal proceeding involving debtor relief that may need to be disclosed in an MLO license application but is not always an automatic bar.
- Business day
- A defined counting standard in mortgage regulations that determines deadlines for disclosures and rescission periods.
- Closed-end mortgage loan
- A mortgage loan with a fixed amount borrowed and scheduled repayment terms, as opposed to open-end credit.
- Continuing education
- Required annual education that licensed MLOs must complete to maintain active licensure.
- Discount point
- A prepaid finance charge equal to 1% of the loan amount used to reduce the interest rate on a mortgage.
- ECOA
- Equal Credit Opportunity Act; federal law prohibiting discrimination in credit transactions based on protected characteristics.
- Escrow account
- An account maintained by a lender to collect and pay property taxes, insurance, and other related charges on behalf of the borrower.
- Escrow cushion
- The maximum extra amount a lender may require in an escrow account beyond projected taxes and insurance, limited under RESPA to one-sixth of annual escrow payments.
- Fair Housing Act
- Federal law prohibiting discrimination in housing-related transactions based on protected classes such as race, color, religion, sex, national origin, familial status, and disability.
- Float-down option
- A mortgage rate-lock feature allowing the borrower to obtain a lower interest rate if market rates decline before closing.
- GLBA
- Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act; federal law requiring financial institutions to provide privacy notices and safeguard consumer information.
- HMDA
- Home Mortgage Disclosure Act; federal law requiring collection and reporting of mortgage lending data to monitor lending patterns and possible discrimination.
- Income fraud
- A form of mortgage fraud involving misrepresentation of a borrower's income on a loan application.
- Initial privacy notice
- A disclosure provided under GLBA at the time a customer relationship is established, explaining information-sharing practices.
- LTV
- Loan-to-value ratio; a lending risk measure comparing the loan amount to the lesser of the property's purchase price or appraised value.
Official Materials and Guidance
This page is built from NMLS official materials and ExamPal shared release pack, the shared syllabus, topic tree, terminology pack, free pack, and premium pack.
- -Guidance: NMLS candidate handbook/test content outline saved locally
- -Domain outline: Federal mortgage laws 24%; General mortgage knowledge 20%; Mortgage loan origination activities 27%; Ethics 18%; UST/state content 11%.