TRID is the integrated mortgage disclosure framework that uses the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure for many closed-end mortgages.
TRID is the integrated mortgage disclosure framework that uses the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure for many closed-end mortgage transactions.
TRID matters because it organizes how borrowers receive two of the most important mortgage documents in the process. Instead of treating disclosures as scattered paperwork, it gives borrowers a clearer early estimate and a clearer final disclosure.
It also matters because many borrowers know the forms without knowing the rule name. Understanding TRID helps connect those forms to the broader disclosure system.
Borrowers encounter TRID through the timing and structure of the Loan Estimate early in the process and the Closing Disclosure near closing.
The framework becomes especially relevant when borrowers compare estimated costs with final costs and want to understand why those forms exist in their current structure.
A borrower receives a Loan Estimate shortly after applying and a Closing Disclosure shortly before closing. That two-form disclosure flow is the borrower-facing result of TRID in many mortgage transactions.
TRID differs from Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) because TRID is the integrated disclosure framework built from those underlying disclosure regimes for many mortgages.
It also differs from the forms themselves. TRID is the rule framework, while the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure are the documents borrowers actually read.