PMI Cancellation Letter: Free Template That Checks Every Box
Your right to cancel PMI at 80% of original value only activates with a written request: that's the law's actual mechanism. One page does it. Here's a template that hits every requirement, followed by what to expect after you send it.
Before you send: confirm your balance is at or below 80% of your home's original value (the lesser of purchase price or original appraisal), and that you're current with a clean recent payment history. Not sure you qualify? Run the 60-second check first; no point mailing a letter that bounces off the requirements.
The template
That last paragraph is doing quiet extra work: if the servicer's own records show you already passed the automatic trigger, you've just requested your refund in the same letter.
Where to send it
Not the payment address. Look for the "qualified written request" / correspondence address on your statement or the servicer's website; requests sent there carry response-time obligations. Send it in a way that produces proof (certified mail, or the servicer's secure message center with a saved copy). Keep everything.
What happens next
- The servicer may require evidence the home's value hasn't declined (sometimes a BPO or appraisal at your cost) and confirmation that there are no subordinate liens, like a HELOC or second mortgage. Ask for the cost and process in writing before agreeing.
- Expect an answer in writing. If approved, PMI comes off and any unearned premiums must be returned to you.
- If denied, the denial must generally tell you why. The common legitimate reasons: not actually at 80% of original value (people often accidentally use current value here: different path, different rules), payment-history issues, or a junior lien.
- If the denial doesn't add up, escalate in writing, and know that the CFPB complaint portal exists and servicers generally answer it quickly.
Not sure which value or which path applies to you? The free checker sorts it in 60 seconds
Educational content, not legal or financial advice. Requirements vary by servicer and investor.