Industry

5 Mortgage Accounting Gaps Costing Banks Up to $850K a Year

March 31, 2026

For banks with mortgage divisions, profitability pressure is coming from every direction. Margins are tight. Costs are rising. Operational complexity is not going away.

Yet one of the biggest sources of margin erosion often is not in production. It is in accounting and reporting.

According to STRATMOR Group’s 2025 white paper, improving mortgage accounting processes can reduce costs by as much as $71 per loan. For a mid-sized lender, that translates to approximately $850,000 a year.

That is real money. And for many institutions, it is money quietly leaking out of the business.

So where does it actually get lost?

1. Fragmented Systems Are Driving Hidden Costs

Mortgage accounting rarely lives in one place.

Data is typically spread across the LOS, the general ledger, servicing platforms, and an ecosystem of spreadsheets holding everything together. STRATMOR highlights how this fragmentation creates inefficiencies, particularly around reconciliation and reporting.

The impact shows up as:

  • Duplicate work
  • Higher risk of errors
  • Longer close cycles

These costs are rarely visible in isolation. But together, they drive up cost per loan.

When it takes multiple systems and manual workarounds to arrive at a single number, that number is costing more than it should.

2. Lack of Standardization Is Distorting Performance

This issue is quieter, but just as damaging.

Across many institutions, different teams define key metrics differently:

  • Cost per loan
  • Gain on sale
  • Branch or channel profitability

As a result, finance, production, and leadership are often looking at different versions of the truth.

That leads to:

  • Confusion in reporting
  • Slower, less confident decisions
  • Extra time spent reconciling explanations instead of results

If every leadership meeting includes a debate about how a number was calculated, the issue is not communication. It is the lack of standardization.

3. Limited Loan-Level Visibility Is Hiding Profit Leaks

Without consistent, loan-level financial visibility, small issues are easy to miss and expensive over time.

When costs, revenue, and adjustments cannot be clearly tied back to individual loans, institutions struggle to:

  • Identify unprofitable products or channels
  • Spot margin erosion early
  • Understand true performance drivers

Limited visibility does not just affect reporting accuracy. It directly impairs profitability management.

What is not visible cannot be managed.

4. Manual Processes Are Slowing Everything Down

Despite advances in technology, many mortgage accounting teams still rely heavily on manual workflows.

Common examples include:

  • Spreadsheet-based reconciliations
  • Manual journal entries
  • Offline or disconnected reporting processes

These approaches introduce:

  • Delays in financial reporting
  • Increased operational risk
  • Limited scalability as volume changes

Most importantly, they force finance teams to spend their time assembling data instead of analyzing it.

5. Delayed Reporting Is Limiting Strategic Action

Timing matters.

In many organizations, mortgage financials are not finalized until weeks after month-end. By the time leadership reviews performance:

  • Opportunities have passed
  • Issues have compounded
  • Decisions become reactive instead of proactive

Improving reporting speed and accuracy enables faster, more confident decision-making across the business. In a margin-constrained environment, that speed can be the difference between protecting profit and losing it.

The Bigger Picture: Small Improvements, Big Impact

A $71 reduction in cost per loan may not sound transformational at first glance. At scale, it adds up quickly:

  • 10,000 loans equals $710,000 in savings
  • 12,000 loans equals approximately $850,000 in savings

And those savings come solely from improving accounting and reporting processes, not from changing pricing, staffing levels, or loan volume.

It is a clear example of how operational efficiency directly drives financial performance.

Final Thought

Mortgage banking inside a bank will always be complex. Multiple systems, regulatory requirements, and organizational structures make that unavoidable.

But complexity does not have to mean inefficiency.

STRATMOR’s research makes one thing clear. There is measurable value in getting accounting and reporting right. Not just for compliance or accuracy, but for protecting profitability in a market where every loan matters.

Haleigh Heilman

Marketing Communications Manager II
About the Author

As Marketing & Communications Manager II at Loan Vision, Haleigh Heilman specializes in developing and executing demand generation strategies across multiple channels to drive sales opportunities and align marketing efforts with revenue goals. Haleigh manages external-facing content, oversees event planning, and fosters industry relationships, ensuring impactful engagement and brand presence through campaigns, corporate events, and industry partnerships.

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