A coupon book is a set of mortgage payment stubs or coupons used for mailing paper payments to the servicer.
A coupon book is a set of mortgage payment stubs or coupons used for mailing paper payments to the servicer.
Coupon book matters because it is the physical paper-payment tool some borrowers still use to pay a mortgage by mail. It usually carries the monthly remittance details, due dates, and account identifiers needed to make sure the payment is applied correctly.
It also matters because borrowers sometimes use the coupon book and the mortgage statement as if they are the same thing. They are related, but not identical. The statement is the summary of the account. The coupon book is the payment tooling that may come with or reference that account.
Borrowers usually encounter a coupon book after closing, once the loan is in servicing and the servicer has issued paper remittance materials for future payments.
The term becomes practical when the borrower mails checks instead of using Autopay, and wants the payment stub that tells the servicer where the payment belongs.
| Term | What it answers |
|---|---|
| Coupon Book | The packet or set of payment stubs used for repeated paper payments |
| Payment Coupon | One individual stub or remittance slip from that packet |
| Mortgage Statement | The broader recurring account summary that may include payment details |
| Autopay | The non-paper alternative that drafts payment automatically |
| Payment Posting Date | When the mailed payment is actually applied |
A borrower receives a stack of monthly payment stubs in the mail. Each stub is part of the coupon book, and the borrower tears off the next one to mail with a check.
Coupon book differs from Payment Coupon because the payment coupon is one individual slip, while the coupon book is the broader set or packet of those slips.
It also differs from Mortgage Statement. The statement is the account summary, while the coupon book is a paper-payment tool associated with sending the money.
It also differs from Autopay. Autopay removes the need for paper stubs, while the coupon book is used when the borrower still pays manually.