Closing Costs Explained:
What to Expect and How to Estimate

Closing costs are the collection of fees and charges paid at mortgage settlement, separate from the down payment, that cover lender fees, third-party services, government recording, prepaid items, and escrow reserves. For most purchase transactions, closing costs range from 2% to 5% of the loan amount, and they are itemized on the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure documents.

Key Takeaways

  • Closing costs typically range from 2% to 5% of the loan amount and are separate from the down payment.
  • Costs fall into categories: lender origination charges, third-party fees, government recording fees, prepaid items, and escrow reserves.
  • The Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure are federal disclosure documents that itemize all closing costs with specific tolerance protections.
  • Borrowers can reduce closing costs through seller concessions, lender credits, shopping for third-party services, and direct negotiation.
  • Program-specific fees like FHA UFMIP, VA funding fee, and USDA guarantee fee add to total closing costs and must be factored into comparisons.
  • TRID tolerance rules (12 CFR 1026.19(e)(3)) place closing costs into three categories: zero tolerance for lender-controlled charges, 10% cumulative tolerance for recording fees and services from the lender's written provider list, and no limitation for services where the borrower selects an independent provider. after the Loan Estimate is issued.
  • Under TRID (12 CFR 1026.19(f)(1)(ii)), borrowers must receive the Closing Disclosure at least three business days before consummation, where business days include Saturdays but exclude Sundays and federal holidays. for identifying errors or unexpected charges.

How It Works

How the Loan Estimate Process Works

Within three business days of receiving a mortgage application (defined by six specific data points: borrower name, income, Social Security number, property address, estimated property value, and desired loan amount), the lender must provide a Loan Estimate. This standardized three-page form breaks down estimated closing costs into the sections described above, provides the projected monthly payment, and calculates the total cost of the loan over five years and over the full term.

The Loan Estimate serves as both a disclosure and a comparison tool. Because all lenders must use the same form and format, borrowers can place Loan Estimates from different lenders side by side and compare origination charges, third-party cost estimates, and total costs directly. The key comparison point is often Page 2, Section A (origination charges), because this is where lender pricing differences are most visible.

Lenders are bound by tolerance rules that limit how much certain costs can increase between the Loan Estimate and the final Closing Disclosure. Under the TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure rule, zero-tolerance items include origination charges, transfer taxes, and fees for services where the consumer is not permitted to shop for the provider. These charges cannot increase between the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure.. The 10% cumulative tolerance category (12 CFR 1026.19(e)(3)(ii)) applies to recording fees and charges for services where the borrower selects a provider from the lender’s written list, with the aggregate increase across all such fees capped at 10% from Loan Estimate to Closing Disclosure. from the LE to the CD. If tolerances are violated, the lender must issue a cure (refund) to the borrower.

How Cash to Close Is Calculated

The cash to close figure on the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure represents the total amount the borrower needs to bring to the closing table. It is calculated as follows: down payment plus total closing costs, minus any lender credits, minus any seller credits, minus any earnest money deposit already paid, plus or minus any adjustments for prorated items like property taxes.

For example, on a $400,000 purchase with 10% down ($40,000), estimated closing costs of $12,000, a $5,000 seller credit, and a $5,000 earnest money deposit already made, the cash to close would be approximately $42,000 ($40,000 + $12,000 - $5,000 - $5,000). This figure is an estimate until the Closing Disclosure is finalized, but it provides the borrower with a target savings goal.

Borrowers should also account for reserves that the lender may require beyond closing. Some loan programs require the borrower to have a specified number of months of mortgage payments remaining in liquid assets after closing. These reserves are not paid to anyone; they simply must be documented as available. This means the borrower’s total liquid asset need is the cash to close plus any required reserves.

How to Compare Closing Costs Across Lenders

Effective comparison requires looking beyond the interest rate. Two lenders may quote the same rate but have materially different origination charges, or one lender may quote a lower rate but charge higher points. The Annual Percentage Rate (APR), which incorporates certain closing costs into the effective rate, provides one comparison metric, but it has limitations. See the dedicated page on APR vs. interest rate for a full explanation.

The most reliable comparison approach is to examine the total cost of the loan over the expected holding period. For a borrower who expects to stay in the home for seven years, the total cost includes all closing costs paid upfront plus the sum of monthly payments over 84 months. A lower rate with higher closing costs may or may not be cheaper than a higher rate with lower closing costs, depending on how long the borrower holds the loan. This is the same analytical framework used in the refinance break-even analysis, applied to purchase scenarios.

What Happens at the Closing Table

At closing (also called settlement), the borrower signs the final loan documents, the title is transferred (in a purchase), funds are disbursed, and the mortgage is recorded with the county. The closing agent (which may be a title company, escrow company, or attorney depending on the state) facilitates the process and ensures that all parties receive correct payments. Total closing costs vary substantially by location; states like New Jersey and Pennsylvania impose significant transfer taxes, while Texas has no state transfer tax.

The borrower typically brings a cashier’s check or wires funds for the cash to close amount. The closing agent collects the funds, pays off the seller’s existing mortgage (if any), distributes the real estate commissions, pays all third-party fees and government charges, and funds the borrower’s escrow account. Any remaining proceeds go to the seller. The entire process is documented on the settlement statement, and the borrower receives copies of all signed documents.

After closing, the mortgage is recorded with the county recorder’s office, establishing the lender’s lien on the property. The borrower receives the original note and deed of trust (or mortgage) after recording is complete. The first mortgage payment is typically due on the first of the month following the end of the interest proration period, which is why borrowers who close at the beginning of a month may not have a payment due for nearly 60 days while those who close at the end of the month will have a payment due in approximately 30 days.

Related topics include origination fees and lender charges explained, discount points: buying down your mortgage rate, prepaid items and escrow reserves at closing, title insurance and title fees explained, appraisal costs and the appraisal process, and loan offers: total cost analysis.

Key Factors

Factors relevant to Closing Costs Explained: What to Expect and How to Estimate
Factor Description Typical Range
Loan Amount Many closing costs are calculated as a percentage of the loan amount, so larger loans generate higher total closing costs in dollar terms. Percentage-based fees (origination, title insurance, recording) typically result in total closing costs of 2%-5% of the loan amount.
Property Location State and local government fees, transfer taxes, title insurance rates, and attorney requirements vary significantly by jurisdiction. States like New York and Connecticut have higher transfer taxes, while states like Colorado and Oregon have relatively low government closing costs .
Loan Program FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional loans each have program-specific fees (UFMIP, funding fee, guarantee fee, LLPAs) that affect total costs. FHA UFMIP: 1.75%. VA funding fee: 1.25%-3.3%. USDA guarantee: 1.00%. Conventional: variable LLPA based on score/LTV.
Seller Concessions and Lender Credits Negotiated credits from the seller or lender can offset a significant portion of closing costs, reducing the borrower's out-of-pocket requirement. Seller concession limits, known as interested party contributions, are set by each loan program: conventional loans allow 3% to 9% based on LTV and occupancy, FHA permits up to 6%, and VA allows up to 4% in concessions plus all standard closing costs.. Lender credits vary by rate tradeoff.

Examples

First-Time Buyer Estimating Cash to Close

Scenario: A first-time buyer is purchasing a $350,000 home with an FHA loan at 3.5% down ($12,250 down payment). The loan amount is $337,750. Estimated closing costs are 3% of the loan amount ($10,133) plus prepaids and escrow reserves of approximately $4,500. The buyer has negotiated a $6,000 seller concession and has paid a $3,000 earnest money deposit.
Outcome: Total cash to close is approximately $17,883 ($12,250 down + $10,133 closing costs + $4,500 prepaids - $6,000 seller credit - $3,000 earnest deposit). The FHA UFMIP of 1.75% ($5,911) is financed into the loan balance and does not increase cash to close. The buyer needs approximately $18,000 in available funds plus any lender-required reserves.

Comparing Loan Estimates from Two Lenders

Scenario: A borrower receives Loan Estimates from Lender A and Lender B for a $300,000 conventional loan. Lender A quotes 6.25% with $2,100 in origination charges. Lender B quotes 6.00% with $5,400 in origination charges (including 0.75 discount points). Third-party costs and prepaids are similar on both estimates.
Outcome: Lender B's lower rate saves approximately $50 per month in payment ($1,847 vs. $1,897 on a 30-year term). However, Lender B charges $3,300 more upfront. The break-even point is approximately 66 months ($3,300 / $50). If the borrower expects to keep the loan for more than 5.5 years, Lender B is the better deal. If the borrower plans to sell or refinance sooner, Lender A's lower upfront cost is more favorable.

Closing Disclosure Reveals Unexpected Charge

Scenario: A borrower receives the Closing Disclosure three days before closing and compares it to the original Loan Estimate. The appraisal fee on the LE was $500 and is now $650 on the CD. The title insurance premium was $1,200 on the LE and is now $1,350 on the CD. The origination fee matches the LE exactly.
Outcome: The appraisal fee is in the 10% cumulative tolerance bucket (services the borrower cannot shop for). The title insurance was on the lender's list of providers, so it also falls into the 10% bucket. The lender must check whether the aggregate of all charges in this bucket exceeds 10% of the LE estimate. If the total increase exceeds 10%, the lender must issue a cure credit at closing. The origination fee is zero-tolerance and correctly matches. The borrower should contact the loan officer immediately to request clarification and any applicable cure.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Budgeting for the down payment but not for closing costs

    Closing costs add 2%-5% of the loan amount on top of the down payment. A borrower saving exactly 5% for a down payment will not have sufficient funds to close if they have not also saved for closing costs, prepaids, and escrow reserves. Accurate budgeting requires estimating total cash to close, not just the down payment.

  • Comparing lenders based solely on interest rate without examining closing costs

    A lower interest rate often comes with higher origination charges or discount points. The true cost comparison requires evaluating total closing costs alongside the rate over the expected loan holding period. The Loan Estimate makes this comparison possible if borrowers take the time to review it.

  • Failing to shop for third-party services when permitted

    Borrowers have the right to select their own title company, settlement agent, and other providers listed in the shoppable services section of the Loan Estimate. Using the lender's affiliated providers without comparing pricing can result in paying more than necessary for these services.

  • Not reviewing the Closing Disclosure carefully before closing day

    The three-day review period exists specifically so borrowers can identify errors, unexpected charges, or tolerance violations. Waiting until the closing table to review the numbers leaves no time for corrections and may result in the borrower paying fees that should have been challenged.

Documents You May Need

  • Loan Estimate from each lender being considered (provided within 3 business days of application)
  • Closing Disclosure (provided at least 3 business days before closing)
  • Purchase contract showing negotiated seller concessions or credits
  • Homeowners insurance policy declaration page (required for closing)
  • Property tax information from the county assessor (for proration calculations)
  • Wire transfer instructions or cashier's check for cash to close amount

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the typical range for closing costs on a mortgage?
Closing costs typically range from 2% to 5% of the loan amount for the fee portion. When prepaids (prepaid interest, insurance, taxes) and escrow reserves are included, the total cash needed beyond the down payment can reach 3% to 6% of the loan amount. The exact figure depends on the loan program, property location, and lender pricing.
Can closing costs be financed into the loan?
Most standard closing costs cannot be directly financed into a purchase loan because the loan amount is limited to the purchase price (minus down payment). However, some program-specific fees like FHA UFMIP and the VA funding fee can be financed. On refinances, closing costs can often be rolled into the new loan balance if there is sufficient equity. Alternatively, a lender credit (in exchange for a higher rate) can cover closing costs without increasing the loan amount.
What is the difference between prepaids and closing costs?
Closing costs are fees for services rendered in connection with the loan (origination, title, appraisal, etc.). Prepaids are advance payments for recurring obligations the borrower would owe regardless of the loan, such as homeowners insurance premiums, property taxes, and per-diem mortgage interest. They appear on the same settlement statement but serve different purposes.
Can I negotiate closing costs?
Yes, several categories of closing costs are negotiable. Lender origination charges can be negotiated directly or by comparing offers from multiple lenders. Seller concessions can be negotiated as part of the purchase contract. Third-party services in the shoppable category can be priced competitively. Government fees and transfer taxes are not negotiable.
What happens if closing costs on the Closing Disclosure are higher than the Loan Estimate?
Federal tolerance rules limit how much certain costs can increase. Zero-tolerance charges cannot increase at all. Charges in the 10% cumulative tolerance bucket can increase by no more than 10% in aggregate. If tolerances are violated, the lender must issue a cure credit to the borrower. Borrowers should compare the LE and CD line by line and raise any discrepancies with their loan officer.
Do I need to bring cash to closing or can I wire the funds?
Most closings accept either a cashier's check or a wire transfer for the cash to close amount. Personal checks are generally not accepted for amounts above a small threshold. Wire transfers are increasingly preferred for large amounts but require careful verification of wire instructions to avoid fraud. Borrowers should confirm the acceptable payment method and wire instructions directly with the closing agent, not through email alone.
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