Consumer's
Guide To Mortgage Settlement Costs
Of all the steps in buying a home
or refinancing a loan, the mortgage closing or settlement probably
causes more confusion and uncertainty for the borrower than any
other.
A settlement may involve several
people, and a variety of documents and fees. Once you understand
what is involved, you may find the entire closing process far simpler
than you might have imagined. While this brochure focuses on settlements
in home purchases, much of the information also will be useful if
you are refinancing a mortgage.
Let's start with two important facts.
Fact Number 1:
Many buyers may think of settlement as the last step to becoming
the legal owners of their new home. But it's a process that begins
weeks or even months before, and follows an outline set largely
by a buyer's original offer to the seller of the house. That offer
becomes the sales contract, once it's signed by the seller, and
it covers many of the key elements of the settlement or closing.
Fact Number 2:
Practices differ from one locality to another regarding who pays
what closing costs. Across the country, however, buyers and sellers
are free to negotiate certain fees. In some cases, certain costs
can be shifted, it may affect the sale price of the property. In
most states, costs can also be cut by shopping around among providers
of the settlement services.
The point is this: The more
you know about the process, the better your chances are for saving
money at settlement time.
Types of Closing Costs
There are three basic categories
of charges and fees in settlement or closing transactions:
- Charges for establishing and
transferring ownership.
These include title search, title insurance, related legal fees,
and fees for conducting the settlement.
- Amounts paid to state and local
governments.
These include city, county and state transfer taxes, recordation
fees, and prepaid property taxes.
- Costs of getting a mortgage.
These include survey, appraisals, credit checks, loan documentation
fees, notary charges, loan origination, commitment and processing
fees, hazard insurance, interest pre-payments, and lender's inspection
fees.
Let's examine them one by one.
Title Search: Who Owns What?
When someone buys or sells a car,
proving ownership is relatively easy. The owner has a certificate
of title issued by the state in which the car is registered. When
it comes to houses, providing clear title is not so simple. Moreover,
your lending institution will not give you a mortgage loan on a
house unless you can prove that the seller owns it. The proof comes
in the title search.
How the title search is carried out
depends upon where the property is located. In many parts of the
country, public records affecting real estate title are spread among
several local government offices, including recorders of deeds,
county courts, tax assessors, and surveyors. Records of deaths,
divorces, court judgments, liens, and contests over wills (all of
which can affect ownership rights) also must be examined.
In a few localities, property records
are fully computerized and the job can be completed fairly quickly.
In the majority of localities, however, title search must be performed
to establish the seller's clear title. This means examining public
records, in courthouses and elsewhere, to assure both you and your
lender that there are no claims against the property that you are
buying.
The title search may be carried out
by an escrow or title company, a lawyer, or other specialist.
Title Insurance
In addition to a formal title search,
your lender is likely to require a title insurance policy. The policy
guards the lender against an error by whomever searched the title.
(In some cases, the title insurer might arrange for or conduct the
title search.) Let's say, for example, that a long-lost relative
of the seller turns up with indisputable evidence that the relative
- and not the seller - holds legal title to the property. Though
it should have been found in the public records, the relative's
claim was missed somehow. Errors are rare, but they do occur.
When this happens, the lending institution
finds that it has loaned the home buyer thousands of dollars to
buy a house from someone who did not own it. To avoid such problems,
the lender will insist on title insurance prior to settlement. The
cost of the policy ( a one-time premium ) is usually based on the
loan amount, and is often paid by the purchaser. There's nothing,
however, to keep you from asking the seller, during your negotiations,
to pay part or all of the premium.
The title insurance required by the
lender protects only the lender. To protect yourself against unforeseen
title problems, you may also want to take out an owner's title insurance
policy. Normally the additional premium cost is only a fraction
of the lender's policy, but this can vary from area to area.
Some final advice on keeping title
insurance costs low: if the house you are buying was owned by the
seller for only a few years, check with a title company. If you
can obtain a re- issue rate, the premium is likely to be significantly
lower than the regular charge for a new policy. If no claims have
been made against the title since the previous title search was
done, the seller's insurer may consider the property to be a lower
insurance risk.
Finally, shop around. Not just for
the premium (which can vary depending on how much competition there
is in a market area), but for coverage as well . Generally, you
should look for a policy with as few exclusions from coverage as
possible. The exclusions are listed in each policy. Some policies
have so many exclusions - that is, situations under which the insurer
will not pay for your title problems - that you end up with little
coverage for your premium dollar.
Government Imposed Costs
In some parts of the country, the
transfer, recordation, and property taxes collected by local and
state governments may be among the heftiest charges paid at settlement.
While there is no way to avoid paying
these taxes, you may be able to lessen your share of the bill. Try
shifting some or all of the cost to the house. But remember, you
must do this when you make your offer to purchase the property.
Mortgage-Related Closing Costs
The costs of getting a mortgage may
be imposed by your lender as early as when you apply for your loan.
Mortgage-related closing costs include:
- Application Fee.
Imposed by your lender, this charge covers the initial costs of
processing your loan request and checking your credit report.
- Appraisal Fee.
This fee pays for an independent appraisal of the home you want
to purchase. The lender requires this opinion or estimate of the
market value of the house for the loan.
- Survey.
At a minimum, the lender will require an independent verification
from a surveying firm that your lot has not been encroached upon
by any structures since the last survey conducted on the property.
Alternatively, the lender may insist upon a complete (and more
costly) survey to ensure that the house and other structures legally
are where you and the seller say they are.
- Loan Origination Fees and Discount
Points.
The origination fee is charged for the lender's work in evaluating
and preparing your mortgage loan. Discount points are prepaid
finance charges imposed by the lender at closing to increase the
yield to the lender beyond the stated interest rate on the mortgage
note. One point equals one percent of the loan amount. For example,
one point on a $75,000 loan would be $750. In some cases - especially
with refinances - the points can be financed by adding them to
the loan amount.
- Mortgage Insurance.
Buyers who make down payments less than 20 percent (and in some
cases 30 percent) of the value of the house may be required by
lenders, and by law in some states, to take out mortgage insurance.
The policy covers the lender's risk in the event the buyer fails
to make the loan payments. Premiums are typically paid annually
from an escrow or reserve account, or in a lump sum at closing.
A buyer, whose mortgage is insured by FHA or guaranteed by VA,
will have to pay FHA mortgage insurance premiums or VA guarantee
fees.
- Homeowner's & Hazard Insurance.
A form or protection against physical damage to the house by fire,
wind, vandalism, and other causes. Your lender will expect you
to have a policy in effect at closing.
Miscellaneous Closing Costs
Depending upon the location and type
of property, and extra services you or your lender request, you
may also have to pay some of the following at closing:
- An assumption fee is charged when
you are taking over or assuming an existing mortgage on the house.
The size of the fee will depend on the lender, but it may range
from several hundred dollars to 1 percent of the loan amount.
- Home inspection fees for an analysis
of the structural condition of the property by an engineer or
consultant, and for termite inspections.
- Adjustments for various types
of expenses prorated between the seller and the purchaser. Some
of the adjustments may involve large amounts. Local property taxes,
annual condominium fees and other lump-sum service charges, for
instance, may be split between you and the seller to cover your
respective periods of ownership for the calendar year or tax period.
Settlements are conducted by lending
institutions, title insurance companies, escrow companies, real
estate brokers, or attorneys. In most cases, whoever conducts the
settlement is providing a service to the lender. You may be required
to pay for related legal services provided to the lender. You can
also retain you own attorney to represent you at all stages of the
transaction including settlement.
How Can You Anticipate How Much
You Will Have To Pay In Closing Costs?
With such a long list of potential
charges at settlement, it is important to know what to expect. To
enable you to do that, Congress passed the Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA).
Your mortgage lender is required to supply you with a Good
Faith Estimate of all your
closing costs within three business days of your application for
a loan, together with a special information booklet called Settlement
Costs - A HUD Guide. In
addition, a statement of your actual costs should be given to you
at or before settlement. Within the same three days, the lender
is required, under the Truth
in Lending Act, to provide you with
a disclosure estimating the costs of the loan you have applied for,
including your total finance charge and the Annual
Percentage Rate (APR). The APR expresses
the cost of your loan as a yearly rate. This rate is likely to be
higher than the stated interest rate on your mortgage because it
takes into account discount points, mortgage insurance, and certain
other fees that add to the cost of your loan.
What Charges Are You Likely To Encounter
For Different Services?
Because customs vary significantly
from area to area, it is difficult to provide estimates for closing
costs that fit everywhere. One rule of thumb for buyers is to figure
that at least an additional 3 percent will be added to the price
of your home through settlement expenses. In some relatively high-tax
areas of the country, 5 to 6 percent is more common.
On the page below, is a sample range
of closing cost charges for specific services on a $75,000 home
purchase with either a 10 percent down payment or a 20 percent down
payment.
|
Down Payment
|
10 %
|
20%
|
|
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|
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|
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|
|
Loan Application Fees
|
$75 to $300
|
$75 to $300
|
|
Loan Origination Fees
|
$675
|
$600
|
|
Points
|
$675 to $2,025
|
$600 to $1,800
|
|
Mortgage Insurance
|
$338 to $675
|
$338 to $675
|
|
Title Search/Insurance Fees
|
$450 to $600
|
$450 to $600
|
|
Attorney's Fees
|
$500 to $1,500
|
$500 to $1,500
|
|
Appraisal
|
$100 to $300
|
$100 to $300
|
|
Homeowners Insurance
|
$300 to $600
|
$300 to $600
|
|
Inspections
|
$175 to $350
|
$175 to $350
|
|
Survey
|
$125 to $300
|
$125 to $300
|
|
Notary Fees
|
$10 to $25
|
$10 to $25
|
|
Recording Fees
|
$40 to $60
|
$40 to $60
|
|
State/Local Transfer Fees
|
$75 to $1,125
|
$75 to $1,125
|
|
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|
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|
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|
|
TOTAL
|
$3,438 to $8,235
|
$2,950 to $7,260
|
Remember the key rules:
- think about settlement fees before
you submit your sales offer;
- shop around for competitive prices
for as many services as possible; and
- never hesitate to negotiate.
This page has been prepared to help
you make the important decisions involved in buying and financing
your home. Because real estate settlement practices vary depending
in state law and local custom, the information contained in this
brochure should not be viewed as a replacement for professional
advice. Talk with mortgage lenders, real estate agents, attorneys,
and other advisors for information about lending practices, mortgage
instruments, and your own interests before you commit to a specific
loan.
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