Prepaid Items and Escrow Reserves at Closing

Prepaid items and escrow reserves are advance payments collected at mortgage closing for recurring obligations including homeowners insurance premiums, property taxes, and per-diem mortgage interest. Escrow reserves fund the initial balance of the escrow account that the servicer uses to pay taxes and insurance throughout the year. Together, these charges typically add $3,000 to $8,000+ to the cash required at closing beyond traditional fees.

Key Takeaways

  • Prepaid items (insurance premium, property tax proration, per-diem interest) are advance payments for recurring obligations, not fees for loan services.
  • Escrow reserves are initial deposits into the escrow account, which the servicer uses to pay property taxes and insurance on the borrower's behalf.
  • RESPA limits the escrow cushion to no more than two months of escrow payments at the lowest annual account balance.
  • Prepaid mortgage interest (per-diem interest) depends on the closing date: closing later in the month reduces prepaid interest but shortens the time before the first payment.
  • Prepaid items and escrow reserves can add $3,000 to $8,000+ to cash-to-close beyond the down payment and standard closing fees.
  • Escrow waivers may be available on conventional loans at or below 80% LTV, but they shift the responsibility for tax and insurance payments to the borrower.
  • The first-year homeowners insurance premium is typically paid in full at or before closing as a prepaid item.

How It Works

How Prepaid Interest Is Calculated

Prepaid interest covers the period from the closing date to the end of the closing month. It is calculated using the daily interest rate multiplied by the number of remaining days in the month. The daily rate is calculated by dividing the annual interest rate by 365, the standard convention for residential mortgage per-diem interest. Some commercial or portfolio lenders use a 360-day year, which produces a slightly higher daily rate .

Example: A $400,000 loan at 6.50% closing on March 15. Daily interest rate: 6.50% / 365 = 0.01781%. Daily interest amount: $400,000 x 0.0001781 = $71.23 per day. Days remaining in March: 16 (March 15 through March 31). Prepaid interest: $71.23 x 16 = $1,139.68.

If the same borrower closed on March 28, prepaid interest would cover only 3 days: $71.23 x 3 = $213.70. The $926 difference illustrates why closing date selection can meaningfully affect cash to close. However, closing later also means the first payment due date may be sooner, so the total interest paid over the life of the loan is essentially the same. The borrower is simply shifting when the payment occurs, not reducing the total cost.

How Initial Escrow Deposits Are Calculated

The initial escrow deposit calculation is governed by RESPA guidelines. The servicer must determine the annual cost of property taxes and homeowners insurance, divide it into monthly amounts, and then calculate how many months of deposits are needed at closing to ensure the account can cover the next upcoming payment while maintaining the permitted two-month cushion at the account's lowest point.

Example: Annual property taxes are $6,000 (due in two installments of $3,000 in April and October). Annual homeowners insurance is $1,800 (due in one payment in January). The monthly escrow for taxes is $500 and for insurance is $150, totaling $650 per month. If the borrower closes in February, the next tax payment of $3,000 is due in April (two months away). The servicer needs enough in the account to cover the April tax payment and maintain a two-month cushion. The servicer calculates the account balance month by month, identifies the lowest projected balance, and adjusts the initial deposit to ensure the cushion requirement is met.

The actual calculation involves a 12-month escrow analysis that projects account inflows (monthly escrow payments) and outflows (tax and insurance disbursements) to determine the starting balance needed. This analysis is performed by the lender's closing department and is reflected on the Closing Disclosure. Borrowers can request a copy of the escrow analysis to understand the calculation.

How Closing Date Affects Prepaids and Escrow

The closing date influences prepaid interest directly (more days remaining in the month means more prepaid interest) and escrow reserves indirectly (the proximity to the next tax or insurance due date affects how much the servicer needs to collect upfront). Borrowers who have flexibility in choosing a closing date can use this to optimize cash to close.

Closing near the end of the month minimizes prepaid interest but may result in a shorter time until the first payment is due. Closing near the beginning of the month maximizes prepaid interest but provides a longer grace period before the first payment. Neither approach is universally better; it depends on the borrower's cash flow preferences and liquid asset situation.

For escrow reserves, the timing effect is more complex and depends on the specific tax and insurance due dates in the borrower's jurisdiction. In some cases, closing shortly after a tax payment is made can reduce the initial escrow deposit because the next payment is many months away. Borrowers should ask their loan officer to model the escrow calculation at different potential closing dates if cash to close is a concern.

Annual Escrow Account Analysis

After closing, the loan servicer performs an annual escrow analysis, typically on the anniversary of the loan or at a fixed date set by the servicer. This analysis compares the projected account balance to the actual balance, incorporating any changes in property tax assessments or insurance premiums. If the account is projected to have a shortage (insufficient funds to cover upcoming payments plus the required cushion), the servicer increases the monthly escrow payment. If the account has a surplus exceeding $50, the servicer is required to refund the excess .

Property tax increases are the most common cause of escrow shortages. When a municipality raises tax assessments, the annual escrow requirement increases, and the account may not have enough to cover the new amount. The servicer will notify the borrower of the shortage and offer the option to pay the shortage in a lump sum or spread it over the next 12 months through a higher monthly payment. Borrowers should anticipate that their total monthly payment (principal, interest, taxes, and insurance) may change annually based on escrow analysis results, even on a fixed-rate mortgage.

Related topics include closing costs explained: what to expect and how to estimate, title insurance and title fees explained, principal, interest, taxes & insurance (piti) explained, homeowners insurance and mortgage requirements, and loan offers: total cost analysis.

Key Factors

Factors relevant to Prepaid Items and Escrow Reserves at Closing
Factor Description Typical Range
Closing Date Determines the number of days of prepaid interest and influences the escrow reserve calculation based on proximity to next tax/insurance due dates. Closing on the 1st: ~30 days prepaid interest. Closing on the 28th: ~2-3 days prepaid interest. Difference can be $1,000-$2,000+ on larger loans.
Property Tax Amount Higher property taxes require larger escrow reserves and higher monthly escrow payments. Tax rates vary significantly by location. Property tax rates range from under 0.5% to over 2.5% of assessed value depending on jurisdiction .
Homeowners Insurance Premium The first year's premium is a prepaid item, and monthly insurance payments are part of the ongoing escrow deposit. Annual homeowners insurance premiums typically range from $1,000 to $4,000 or more for standard single-family homes, with the national average near $2,300 as of 2025 and significantly higher costs in disaster-prone areas..
Escrow Waiver Availability If the borrower obtains an escrow waiver, initial escrow reserves are not collected at closing, reducing cash to close but shifting payment responsibility to the borrower. Available on conventional loans with LTV at or below 80%. May carry a pricing adjustment of 0.125%-0.25% rate increase .

Examples

Calculating Prepaid Interest for Different Closing Dates

Scenario: A borrower has a $350,000 loan at 6.25%. The daily interest rate is $59.93 per day ($350,000 x 6.25% / 365). The borrower is considering closing on either April 5 or April 25.
Outcome: Closing April 5: 25 days of prepaid interest at $59.93/day = $1,498.25. Closing April 25: 5 days of prepaid interest at $59.93/day = $299.66. The difference in prepaid interest is $1,198.59. However, closing on April 25 means the first mortgage payment is due June 1 (covering May interest), while closing on April 5 also results in a June 1 first payment (covering May interest) but the borrower has already paid for April interest. The total interest cost is equivalent; only the timing differs.

Escrow Reserve Calculation on a New Purchase

Scenario: A borrower closes on July 15 in a jurisdiction where property taxes are $4,800/year (due in two installments on December 1 and June 1) and homeowners insurance is $1,500/year. Monthly escrow: $400 (taxes) + $125 (insurance) = $525/month.
Outcome: The servicer performs a month-by-month escrow analysis. The first insurance premium was already prepaid at closing. The next tax installment of $2,400 is due December 1 (approximately 4.5 months away). The servicer collects initial escrow reserves of approximately $2,625 (enough to cover the December tax payment plus a two-month cushion of $1,050, minus the monthly escrow payments that will accumulate between July and December). The exact figure depends on the detailed escrow analysis but is typically 3-5 months of escrow payments .

Escrow Shortage After Property Tax Increase

Scenario: A borrower has been paying $525/month in escrow ($400 taxes + $125 insurance). The county reassesses the property and increases annual taxes from $4,800 to $5,400 (a $600 annual increase). The servicer performs the annual escrow analysis.
Outcome: The monthly tax escrow increases from $400 to $450, and the total monthly escrow rises to $575 (a $50/month increase). Additionally, the servicer identifies a $600 shortage in the escrow account because the higher taxes were not anticipated in the original calculation. The servicer offers the borrower the option to pay the $600 shortage as a lump sum or spread it over 12 months (adding $50/month). If spread, the total monthly escrow payment for the next year is $625 ($575 regular escrow + $50 shortage repayment). The borrower's total monthly mortgage payment increases by $100.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Not budgeting for prepaids and escrow reserves in addition to the down payment and closing fees

    Prepaid items and escrow reserves can add $3,000 to $8,000+ to the cash required at closing. Borrowers who calculate their savings target based only on the down payment and fee-based closing costs may come up short. The Loan Estimate provides preliminary estimates, and the Closing Disclosure provides final figures.

  • Confusing prepaid items with fees for services

    Prepaid items are advance payments for obligations the borrower would owe regardless of the mortgage (taxes, insurance, interest). They are not fees paid to the lender or third parties for processing the loan. Understanding this distinction helps borrowers evaluate the true cost of closing more accurately.

  • Electing an escrow waiver without a plan for managing tax and insurance payments

    An escrow waiver reduces cash to close but shifts the responsibility for paying property taxes and insurance to the borrower. Borrowers who lack the discipline to budget for these large semi-annual or annual payments risk falling behind, which can result in lender-placed insurance or tax liens. An escrow waiver should only be chosen with a concrete plan for managing these obligations.

  • Assuming the monthly mortgage payment is fixed because the interest rate is fixed

    On a fixed-rate mortgage, the principal and interest portion of the payment does not change. However, the escrow portion (taxes and insurance) is adjusted annually based on actual tax assessments and insurance premiums. Changes in escrow can increase or decrease the total monthly payment, sometimes significantly if property taxes rise sharply.

Documents You May Need

  • Homeowners insurance policy declaration page (showing annual premium and coverage)
  • Property tax bill or assessment from the county assessor
  • Loan Estimate showing preliminary prepaid and escrow estimates
  • Closing Disclosure with final prepaid and escrow figures
  • Escrow analysis statement (provided by the servicer after closing)
  • Escrow waiver request form (if opting out of escrow, subject to lender approval)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between prepaids and escrow reserves?
Prepaids are advance payments for specific upcoming obligations: the first year's homeowners insurance, prorated property taxes for the period the buyer owns the home in the current period, and per-diem mortgage interest from the closing date to the end of the month. Escrow reserves are deposits into the escrow account to build a balance for future tax and insurance payments. Both are collected at closing but serve different purposes.
Why is prepaid interest collected at closing?
Mortgage interest is paid in arrears. The first regular payment is due on the first of the second month after closing and covers the prior month's interest. Prepaid interest covers the gap between the closing date and the end of the closing month, ensuring that all interest is accounted for without a missing period.
Can I reduce the amount of escrow reserves collected at closing?
The escrow reserve amount is governed by RESPA rules and depends on the closing date relative to upcoming tax and insurance due dates. You have limited ability to reduce it directly, but choosing a closing date that maximizes the time until the next major escrow disbursement can sometimes lower the initial deposit. Alternatively, an escrow waiver (if available) eliminates the reserve requirement entirely.
What happens if my escrow account has a surplus?
Under RESPA, if your escrow account balance exceeds the required amount by more than $50 at the time of the annual analysis, the servicer is required to refund the surplus to you. This can happen if property taxes decrease or if the initial deposit was calculated conservatively.
Does the closing date affect my total prepaid costs?
Yes. Closing later in the month reduces prepaid interest because fewer days remain in the month. However, this does not save money overall because the total interest over the life of the loan remains the same. The closing date also affects escrow reserve calculations based on the proximity to the next tax and insurance due dates.
Can the seller pay for prepaid items?
Seller concessions can be applied toward closing costs and prepaids, subject to the maximum concession limits for the loan program. If the seller agrees to a credit toward the buyer's closing costs, that credit can be allocated to prepaids and escrow reserves. See the page on seller concessions and credits for program-specific limits.
Last updated: Reviewed by:

Related Calculators