The removal of staples and paper clips from documents prior to document scanning.
Process of printing legal contracts, reviewing title searches, and appraisals. Lenders may or may not charge "doc prep" fees. Most commonly associated with mortgages, home equity loans, and home equity lines of credit.
Pre-scanning operation removing staples, notes, clips, bindings then sorts and inserts separator pages.
A fee charged by the lender to prepare the closing documents. This charge can be seperate or included in the lender processing fee.
Steps to ready documents for scanning by removing paper clips, staples, bindings, etc.
This is a separate fee that some lenders charge to cover the cost of preparing loan papers.
This fee covers the expenses associated with the process of preparing the legal documents that you will be signing at the time of closing, such as the mortgage, note, and truth-in-lending statement.
A fee charged by an attorney for preparing legal documents for a transaction.
fees charged to prepare various documents.
Lenders will prepare some of the legal documents that you will be signing at the time of closing, such as the mortgage, note, and truth-in-lending statement. This fee covers the expenses associated with the preparation of these documents. For our comparison purposes, the document preparation charges are considered to be a lender fee.
The manual tasks required to prepare paper documents and forms for scanning. Some document preparation is unavoidable, such as removing paper clips and staples, or making sure that all pages are face up or face down. DICOM Group technologies have eliminated the need for many other time-consuming preparation steps, such as sorting documents from forms, or sorting based on size, colour, quality, and so on.