Mortgage Closing Fees Calculator

See every fee before you sign the papers. Tune lender charges, services, and escrows fast. Download a report, share it, and compare offers smarter.

Enter your details
Use realistic numbers from a loan estimate when possible.
Responsive layout: 3 / 2 / 1 columns

Home price used for taxes and down payment.
Principal borrowed (excludes closing costs).
Leave blank to auto-calculate.
Used for prepaid interest estimate.
Common range: 5–20 days.
Set to 0 if not applicable.

Lender fees
Percent fees use the loan amount.

Title & third-party services
Toggle optional services to match your situation.
Often recommended; sometimes optional.
May be required in some areas.
Often required for closings in some states.
Buyer-paid in many transactions.

Government and recording
These can vary widely by location.

Prepaids and escrows
Escrows are funds deposited for future bills.

Credits and adjustments
These reduce (or increase) cash required at closing.
Cushion for small local or lender items.
Optional unless your property has an HOA.
Reset
Example data
Sample scenario to demonstrate typical ranges. Replace with your loan estimate for accuracy.
Scenario Purchase Price Loan Amount Rate Estimated Cash to Close
Conventional, moderate escrows $350,000 $280,000 6.75% $79,000 – $86,000
Higher points, lower rate strategy $350,000 $280,000 6.25% $81,000 – $88,000
Lower escrows, minimal optional services $350,000 $280,000 6.75% $77,000 – $83,000
Formula used
How to use this calculator
  1. Enter your purchase price and loan amount. Leave down payment blank to auto-calculate.
  2. Copy fees from your lender’s estimate into the matching fields (origination, points, underwriting, and processing).
  3. Toggle optional services such as owner title policy, survey, attorney, inspection, or HOA items.
  4. Set escrow months and annual insurance/taxes to approximate your upfront escrow deposit.
  5. Add seller credits and earnest money to see how they reduce your required cash.
  6. Press Calculate. The results appear above the form. Use CSV/PDF buttons to export your breakdown.

Article

Closing cost range and structure

Closing costs often land between 2% and 5% of the purchase price, yet the drivers differ by lender and location. This calculator groups costs into lender fees, third‑party services, government charges, and prepaids so you can trace every dollar. Use the category totals to spot quick wins: percent-based items scale with loan size, while flat charges reveal which provider is simply more expensive. Review totals by category to understand where each estimate can shift today.

Comparing lender charges with precision

Lender fees are the easiest to compare across quotes because they reflect pricing and underwriting policy. Origination and points use the loan amount, so 1.00% on a $280,000 loan equals $2,800. A 0.50% point adds $1,400. Processing, underwriting, and credit report fees are flatter and often vary by $200–$900, making them strong negotiation targets. Use the itemized view to mirror your lender worksheet line by line.

Title, settlement, and optional services

Title and settlement costs protect ownership and coordinate the closing process. Lender title coverage is typically required; owner coverage may be optional but can reduce long‑term risk. Appraisals are common for purchase loans, while inspections help you budget repairs. Surveys and attorney services depend on state rules and property complexity. Toggle each item to match your contract so the cash-to-close estimate stays realistic. Pricing can differ by county, insurer, and closing date, so update promptly.

Taxes, recording, and local variability

Government charges are largely location-driven and rarely negotiable. Recording fees can be modest or several hundred dollars depending on document counts and local schedules. Transfer taxes may be zero, a flat amount, or exceed 1% in higher-tax jurisdictions. Enter the local transfer rate and keep a small buffer for municipality add-ons. The goal is not perfection, but preventing last‑minute funding surprises. Check your locality’s published rates before signing final disclosures and wiring funds.

Prepaids, escrows, and cash planning

Prepaids are not “fees,” but they require cash at closing. Prepaid interest depends on the days between closing and your first payment; at 6.75% on $280,000, daily interest is about $51.78, so 15 days is roughly $777. Escrows commonly collect two months of insurance and three months of taxes. Credits and earnest money reduce funds due and improve liquidity. Adjust escrow months for lender cushions and seasonal tax or premium cycles.

FAQs

1) What is the difference between closing costs and cash to close?

Closing costs are fees and prepaids tied to the loan and transaction. Cash to close includes your down payment, adds closing costs, then subtracts credits and deposits already paid.

2) Are discount points always worth paying?

Points can lower your interest rate, but the value depends on how long you keep the loan. Compare the upfront point cost against the monthly payment savings to find a breakeven period.

3) Why can prepaids feel so high compared with fees?

Prepaids fund future bills like interest, insurance, and taxes. They are not lender profit, but they still require cash at closing, especially when escrow months and tax timing are high.

4) Which items are most negotiable?

Lender charges such as origination, processing, and underwriting can vary widely by provider. Title and settlement pricing may also differ by company, while government fees and transfer taxes are usually fixed.

5) How do seller credits and earnest money affect my total?

Seller credits reduce allowable costs on your settlement statement, lowering funds you bring. Earnest money is typically applied at closing as money already paid, reducing the remaining balance due.

6) How accurate should I expect this estimate to be?

Accuracy depends on how closely your inputs match the official loan estimate and local fees. Use the buffer for small items, then replace placeholders with real figures as disclosures update.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.