Mortgage Loan Application Experience Survey
Captures how borrowers experienced applying for a mortgage — from documentation and communication to rate transparency and closing timeline — for lenders and brokers who want to cut friction out of the process. An AI follow-up interview digs into the single biggest pain point each borrower hit, reconstructing exactly what happened instead of a vague complaint.
Sample questions
A preview of what’s in the template. Every question is editable before you launch.
What's the current status of your mortgage application?
- Approved and closed
- Approved, not yet closed
- Still in process
- Denied
- Withdrew my application
Overall, how easy or difficult was the application process from start to finish?
How much do you agree with each statement about your experience?
- The documentation requirements were clearly explained
- I always knew what stage my application was at
- Updates and requests came in a timely manner
- My loan officer or point of contact was responsive
- The interest rate and fees were explained clearly
- +1 more
How would you rate your loan officer or main point of contact?
What was the single biggest source of frustration during your application?
- Repeatedly submitting the same documents
- Unclear or changing timeline
- Slow responses to my questions
- Confusing paperwork or terminology
- Surprises in rate, fees, or terms
- Lack of a single point of contact
- Nothing — it went smoothly
You have 100 points. Distribute them across the factors that mattered most when you chose this lender.
- Interest rate offered
- Fees and closing costs
- Speed of approval/closing
- Reputation or online reviews
- Recommendation from a friend, family member, or agent
- Existing relationship with the bank
How likely are you to recommend this lender to a friend or colleague buying or refinancing a home?
Reconstruct the single biggest friction point this borrower experienced — anchor on the frustration they selected or, if they picked 'Nothing,' probe what almost went wrong or could break for a less patient borrower. Get specifics: what exactly happened, at what stage, how it was resolved (or not), and how it affected their view of the lender. If their recommend score was low, connect it directly to that moment; if high despite friction, ask what made them stick with the lender anyway.
Is there anything that would have made your application process noticeably easier?
Was this your first time applying for a mortgage?
- Yes, first-time homebuyer
- No, I've done this before
- Prefer not to say
What type of loan did you apply for?
- Conventional
- FHA
- VA
- USDA
- Jumbo
- Not sure
- Prefer not to say
That's everything — thank you! Your feedback goes directly into a review of where our mortgage process creates friction, so future applicants have a smoother path to closing.
What’s included
AI follow-ups
Adaptive probes on open-ended answers that pull out detail a static form would miss.
Attention checks
Built-in safeguards against rushed answers and low-quality respondents.
AI-drafted copy
Wording, ordering, and branching written by the AI — tuned to your research goal.
Auto report
Themes, quotes, and a plain-English summary write themselves once responses come in.
How it compares
We reviewed the closest templates from other survey tools. Here’s what they do well — and where this template goes further.
Why this template
- Includes a dedicated multiple-choice question isolating the single biggest source of frustration, then an AI follow-up interview that reconstructs exactly what happened around that specific pain point rather than collecting a vague complaint
- Combines structured measurement (rating-scale for overall ease, matrix agreement statements, rating of the loan officer, point-allocation trade-off allocation) with open-ended open-text and adaptive probing in one flow
- Captures process-stage context (application status, first-time buyer, loan type) so friction points can be segmented by borrower type and stage, not just aggregated
- Ends in an auto-generated report built from real transcripts of the AI follow-up interviews, giving lenders and brokers a concrete narrative of where the process breaks down
Jotform
Mortgage Loan Application Form TemplateThis is a data-collection form for capturing applicant and loan details (income, property, employment) rather than a survey measuring borrower experience or satisfaction. It's built for drag-and-drop customization and easy fielding, but it doesn't probe how the process felt to the borrower.
What it does well
- Drag-and-drop form builder with broad field customization
- Likely supports file uploads and e-signature-style fields common to Jotform templates
- Fast to deploy for collecting structured applicant data
Where it falls short
- Designed to intake loan data, not to measure or diagnose the applicant's experience or pain points
- Static form fields only — no adaptive follow-up questioning to dig into a specific frustration
- No automated per-response quality scoring or synthesized experience report
SurveySparrow
Online Mortgage Loan Application Form TemplateA conversational-style online form for collecting mortgage application information, styled in SurveySparrow's chat-like UI. It's oriented toward intake rather than post-application experience research, so it won't surface why a borrower struggled.
What it does well
- Conversational, chat-style form UI that may feel less intimidating than a static form
- Banking/finance template category suggests some domain-specific field defaults
- Reasonable for quick applicant intake
Where it falls short
- No adaptive AI interviewing to reconstruct a borrower's specific friction point
- Appears focused on application intake, not experience/satisfaction measurement
- No published methodology or automated quality scoring of responses
Typeform
Mortgage Loan Application Form TemplateA polished, one-question-at-a-time form for collecting mortgage application details, well-suited to intake rather than experience feedback. Typeform's format is pleasant to fill out but the template itself is not built to diagnose process friction.
What it does well
- Clean, one-at-a-time question flow with strong visual design
- Easy to customize field logic for basic branching
- Good completion rates typical of Typeform's format
Where it falls short
- No adaptive AI follow-up interviewing — branching logic is static, not conversational probing
- Not designed to capture or quantify borrower pain points or satisfaction
- No automated report synthesizing qualitative friction narratives
SurveyMonkey
Loan Application Form TemplateA generic loan application template, not specific to mortgages, aimed at collecting applicant financial and personal data. It's a reasonable starting point for basic intake but requires heavy editing to address mortgage-specific steps like rate transparency or closing timeline, and it doesn't measure experience.
What it does well
- Backed by SurveyMonkey's established survey-logic and distribution tools
- Generic structure is easy to adapt across different loan types
- Simple to deploy quickly for basic applicant data collection
Where it falls short
- Not mortgage-specific — lacks questions on documentation, rate transparency, or closing timeline out of the box
- No adaptive AI follow-up to dig into the borrower's single biggest pain point
- No per-response quality scoring or auto-generated experience report
Ready to launch?
Open this template in the editor. Every part is yours to change before the first respondent sees it.