AKA Letters Explained

Written by Posted On Friday, 11 February 2022 00:00

An AKA letter is one written by the applicant at the request of the lender. And it can be required for a number of reasons when the name on the loan application doesn’t match exactly the name or names appearing on a credit report. How can that happen? 

Let’s say John Smith completes an application and submits it to his lender. John fills out the application and provides the requested documentation. Within 72 hours, John also receives his fair share of paperwork. Various forms such as a credit explanation letter and a servicing disclosure notice for starters are included. 

In John’s instance, he also gets a request from the lender for an AKA letter. What caused this request? On the credit report, there are other similar names showing up but not exactly ‘John Smith.’ Instead, there are three other similar names, John Q. Smith, John Quincy Smith and JQ Smith. Where did these different aliases come from?

A credit report contains much more information about the applicant than just payment histories and loan balances. A credit report will also list different places John has lived over the years. This and other information comes from the credit agency’s database. A credit report lists items that was reported directly to one of the three main credit repositories, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. The credit agency doesn’t reach out on its own to create data but instead only reports what has been reported to the agency.

Consider this. John has had a credit card since he was a senior in college. When he first got that card, whatever address he was living at when in school is what will appear on the report. Upon graduation, he moved to a new apartment. With his new job, he bought a new car. Doing so, he applied for a car loan using the address where the apartment complex is located. Soon thereafter, he bought his first home with a new mortgage. Still later, he sold his first car and bought another. Each and every time John applied for a new loan, his current address was the address of record. That means all the places John has lived will be listed on the credit report. The addresses don’t disappear, they remain as part of John’s credit history.

The same situation occurs when different names are used. John applied for credit under the names John Smith, John Q. Smith, John Quincy Smith and JQ Smith over the years. The lender will want an AKA letter from John addressing each of the name variants. 

Jane Doe also applies for credit under her name. Later, she marries and takes on her new husband’s name. She is known as Jane Jones. Unfortunately the marriage didn’t work out but she kept using Jane Jones. An AKA letter will also be needed with an explanation such as “I was single then got married, then divorced and today still use Jane Jones.” 

There can also be an instance where someone else named Jane Doe appears on a credit report but it’s not the same person. This “other” Jane Doe has some spotty credit and it’s appearing on Jane’s otherwise perfect credit report. Jane will then complete a letter stating the offending items do not belong to her but belong to some other Jane Doe. The lender will do a little research and confirm. An AKA letter is just to make sure the lender is sending money to the right person.

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David Reed

David Reed (Austin, TX) is the author of Mortgages 101, Mortgage Confidential, Your Successful Career as a Mortgage Broker , The Real Estate Investor's Guide to Financing, Your Guide to VA Loans and Decoding the New Mortgage Market. As a Senior Loan Officer and Mortgage Executive he closed more than 2,000 mortgage loans over the course of more than 20 years in commercial and residential mortgage lending. 

He has appeared on CNN, CNBC, Fox Business, Fox and Friends and the Today In New York show. His advice has appeared in the New York Times, Parade Magazine, Washington Post and Kiplinger's as well as in newspapers and magazines throughout the country. 

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