📜 Closing Costs Calculator

🏠 Property Details
🏠 Buyer Lender Fees (customize)
📅 Prepaid Items (Buyer)
💰 Seller Costs (customize)

⚠️ Disclaimer: Estimates only. Actual costs vary by state, lender and negotiation. Always review your Loan Estimate (LE) from lender.

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Total Closing Costs

📐 What Are Closing Costs?

Overview

Closing costs are fees paid at settlement to complete a real estate transaction. They are separate from the down payment. Total closing costs: 2-5% of purchase price (buyers) Seller costs: 6-10% of sale price (mostly commission) Example: $450,000 home Buyer closes: $9,000 - $22,500 in fees Seller closes: $27,000 - $45,000 (commissions + fees)

Buyer Costs - Lender Fees (Section A)

Origination fee: 0.5-1% of loan (processing charge) Discount points: Optional - 1pt = 1% loan, reduces rate Underwriting fee: $400-$900 (lender review) Application fee: $0-$500 (varies by lender) Rate lock fee: Sometimes charged for longer locks

Buyer Costs - Third-Party Fees (Section B-H)

Appraisal: $300-$700 (required by lender) Credit report: $25-$75 Home inspection: $300-$600 (highly recommended) Title search: $150-$400 (verify clear title) Title insurance (lender): $500-$1,500 (protects lender) Title insurance (owner): $500-$1,500 (protects buyer) Escrow/Settlement: $500-$1,000 (closing agent) Survey: $300-$700 (property boundaries) Recording fees: $50-$500 (county recorder) Attorney fee: $500-$1,500 (some states require)

Prepaid Items (Not Fees - Escrow Deposits)

Prepaid interest: Interest from closing to month end = Loan x Rate/365 x Days remaining in month Insurance prepaid: 12-14 months upfront (lender requirement) Property tax escrow: 2-6 months prepaid into escrow HOA prepaid: Some require 2-3 months upfront These are not lost money - they go into YOUR escrow account to pay future bills.

FHA / VA Specific Costs

FHA Upfront MIP: 1.75% of loan amount (financed or paid) FHA Annual MIP: 0.55% of loan per year (in monthly payment) VA Funding Fee: 1.25% - 3.3% of loan (varies by usage) Waived for veterans with disability rating Can be financed into loan USDA Guarantee Fee: 1.0% upfront + 0.35% annual

Seller Costs

Agent commission: 5-6% total (listing + buyer agent) Note: Post-NAR settlement (Aug 2024), commission structures are changing Transfer/excise tax: Varies by state (0% to 2%+) Title insurance: Sometimes seller pays owner policy Seller concessions: Credits to buyer for repairs/costs Attorney fee: $500-$1,500 (some states) Mortgage payoff: Existing loan balance + any prepayment Home warranty: $300-$600 (optional; peace of mind) Property taxes: Prorated to closing date

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

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Closing Costs Calculator - What Every Home Buyer and Seller Needs to Know

Closing costs are one of the most consistently underestimated expenses in a real estate transaction. Most first-time buyers focus entirely on the down payment and then experience sticker shock when they see the Closing Disclosure three days before settlement. Understanding what every fee is, what range is reasonable, and which costs are genuinely negotiable can save thousands of dollars on a single transaction.

Quick estimate for a $450,000 home purchase: Buyer closing costs typically run $9,000–$18,000 (2–4% of purchase price), not including the down payment. Seller costs typically run $25,000–$40,000 (mostly the 5–6% agent commission). Total cash to close on a 20% down payment: approximately $100,000–$108,000.

Buyer Closing Costs - Every Fee Explained

Buyer closing costs fall into three categories: lender fees, third-party fees, and prepaid items. Understanding the difference matters because lender fees are the most negotiable, third-party fees can often be shopped, and prepaids are fixed by your loan terms and closing date.

Lender Fees (Most Negotiable)

  • Origination fee - 0.5–1% of loan. The lender's primary charge for processing the loan. Always negotiate this.
  • Discount points - Optional. 1 point = 1% of loan = roughly 0.25% rate reduction. Worth it only if you keep the loan 5+ years.
  • Underwriting fee - $400–$900. Lender's cost to evaluate your application. Sometimes negotiable.
  • Application fee - $0–$500. Many lenders waive this. Avoid lenders who don't.

Third-Party Fees (Can Shop Around)

  • Appraisal - $400–$700. Required by lender. Ordered through lender but paid by buyer.
  • Home inspection - $350–$600. Not required but strongly recommended. Hire your own inspector.
  • Title search + insurance - $800–$2,500 combined. Shop title companies - prices vary significantly.
  • Survey - $300–$700. Determines exact property boundaries. May not be required by all lenders.
  • Escrow / settlement fee - $500–$1,000. Fee paid to closing agent for handling the transaction.

Prepaid Items - The Costs That Look Like Fees But Aren't

Prepaids appear on your Closing Disclosure alongside the real fees, which causes confusion. But unlike fees, prepaids are deposits into your escrow account - money that belongs to you and will be used to pay future bills. They are not lost.

  • Prepaid interest - Interest owed from your closing date through the end of that month. If you close on the 15th, you prepay 15–16 days of interest. Closing at the end of a month minimises this cost.
  • Homeowner's insurance prepaid - Lenders typically require 12–14 months of insurance upfront at closing to fund the initial escrow balance. This is your money paying your future insurance premium.
  • Property tax escrow - Usually 2–6 months of property tax deposited to ensure sufficient escrow balance. Varies by state and local tax payment schedules.

The total prepaid amount is often $3,000–$7,000 on a typical purchase. It's not negotiable - it's determined by your loan terms, closing date, and local tax schedules. But understanding that it's your money going into an account (not a fee to the lender) changes how you should think about it.

FHA, VA, and USDA Loan-Specific Costs

Government-backed loans have specific upfront fees that conventional loans don't. These can significantly change the buyer's cash to close:

  • FHA Upfront Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP) - 1.75% of the loan amount, due at closing. On a $360,000 FHA loan, that is $6,300. This can be financed into the loan rather than paid out of pocket. FHA also has an annual MIP of 0.55% added to monthly payments.
  • VA Funding Fee - 1.25% to 3.3% of the loan, depending on down payment and whether it's a first or subsequent use. For a first-time VA user with no down payment, the fee is 2.15%. Completely waived for veterans with a service-connected disability rating.
  • USDA Guarantee Fee - 1.0% of the loan upfront plus 0.35% annually. On a $250,000 USDA loan, the upfront fee is $2,500. Can also be financed into the loan.

Seller Closing Costs - What Reduces Your Net Proceeds

Sellers are often surprised that closing is not simply receiving the sale price. Several deductions come out before you see a check:

  • Real estate agent commission - Traditionally 5–6% total, split between listing and buyer agents. This is by far the largest seller cost. On a $500,000 sale, a 5% commission is $25,000. Following the NAR settlement effective August 2024, commission structures are becoming more negotiable and buyer agent fees are no longer automatically paid by sellers through MLS.
  • Transfer tax - Varies dramatically by state: zero in some states, up to 2%+ in Delaware, New York, and DC. Typically paid by the seller, but negotiable and sometimes split.
  • Mortgage payoff - If you have an existing mortgage, the full outstanding balance plus any prepayment penalty and accrued interest is paid from sale proceeds at closing. Get a payoff statement from your lender before closing.
  • Seller concessions - If you agreed to pay some of the buyer's closing costs, this comes off your proceeds. Common in buyer's markets and post-inspection negotiations.

How to Reduce Your Closing Costs

Several legitimate strategies can meaningfully reduce your closing costs without risking the deal:

  1. Shop for lenders and compare Loan Estimates - Lender fees vary significantly. Get Loan Estimates from at least 3 lenders within 45 days (the credit pull impact is minimised when done within a short window). Comparing lenders consistently saves $1,000–$3,000+.
  2. Negotiate lender fees directly - Origination fees, underwriting fees, and application fees are profit items for the lender. Ask for them to be reduced or waived, especially if you're a strong borrower or bringing large assets to the bank.
  3. Shop title insurance independently - In most states you can choose your own title company. Prices for the same coverage can vary by $300–$800.
  4. Negotiate seller concessions - Ask the seller to contribute toward your closing costs, especially if the home has been on market a while or inspection found issues. This doesn't reduce the seller's proceeds by the full concession amount - they likely factor it into price expectations.
  5. Consider a no-closing-cost mortgage - The lender covers your closing costs in exchange for a slightly higher interest rate. Makes sense if you plan to sell or refinance within 5 years before the higher rate cost exceeds what you saved upfront.