Typical Closing Costs in Texas for Buyers and Sellers

6 min read ·  Reviewed May 1, 2025

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Texas buyers typically pay 2-5% of the purchase price in closing costs. On a $350,000 home, that is $7,000-$17,500 due at closing on top of your down payment. The range is wide because lender fees, title insurance, and prepaid escrow amounts vary significantly between lenders and transactions.

Sellers in Texas typically pay 6-10% – mostly real estate commissions (5-6%) plus title costs and any concessions. Texas has no state transfer tax, which is a meaningful advantage for buyers compared to states that charge 1-2% transfer taxes.

Key Takeaways

  • Texas buyers pay 2-5% of purchase price in closing costs; sellers pay 6-10% (mostly commissions).
  • Texas has no state real estate transfer tax - a significant advantage over states charging 1-2%.
  • Shopping origination fees between three lenders can save $2,000-$3,000.
  • Closing near end of month saves prepaid interest; seller concessions and lender credits reduce cash to close.
  • VA loans cap origination at 1% and allow seller concessions up to 4% of the loan amount.
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The Three Categories of Closing Costs and Why They Matter

Closing costs fall into three functionally different categories with different implications for negotiation and comparison shopping. Lender fees — origination, underwriting, processing — are charged by your specific lender and are directly negotiable and comparable across competing lenders. Third-party fees — title, appraisal, survey, recording — are charged by service providers you can shop in some cases and not others. Prepaids and escrow items — homeowners insurance, prepaid interest, property tax reserves — aren’t fees at all but cash you’re funding for your own escrow account and first month’s interest. They’re not negotiable because they’re based on your actual insurance premium and local tax rate.

Understanding which category each line item falls into tells you where to push back and where to accept what you’re quoted. Spending 30 minutes comparing origination charges across three lenders can save $1,500–$3,000. Spending that same 30 minutes arguing about a $75 credit report fee is a poor return on time.

In Texas, total buyer closing costs — including prepaids and escrow setup — typically run 2–5% of the purchase price. On a $350,000 purchase, that’s $7,000–$17,500. The wide range is primarily driven by whether you’re paying discount points to buy down your rate. CFPB HMDA data shows median total loan costs (lender plus third-party fees, excluding prepaids) on Texas purchase mortgages running approximately 1.2–1.8% of the loan amount.

Complete Buyer Cost Breakdown: Every Line on the Closing Disclosure

Section A — Origination charges (zero tolerance — cannot increase after Loan Estimate):

Origination fee: The lender’s compensation for making the loan. On VA loans: federally capped at 1% per VA Lender Handbook Chapter 8. On conventional and FHA: uncapped but negotiable and directly comparable across lenders. Ranges from zero (lender takes compensation through a higher rate) to 2%. On a $300,000 loan, 1% origination is $3,000. Zero-origination lenders typically price 0.125–0.25% higher in rate — the trade-off is cash now vs. rate later. Which is better depends on your expected hold period. Under 5 years: pay points (lower rate saves more than it costs). Over 5 years: more nuanced; run the math with your specific loan amount.

Discount points: Optional prepaid interest. One point equals 1% of the loan amount and typically buys approximately 0.125–0.25% in rate reduction. On a $300,000 loan: one point = $3,000. Break-even at $55/month savings from a 0.25% rate reduction: $3,000 ÷ $55 = 54 months. If you hold the loan beyond 54 months, the point was worth buying. If you sell or refinance within 4 years, it wasn’t.

Credit report fee: $25–$75. Fixed. The tri-merge report from all three bureaus.

Section B — Services you cannot shop (zero tolerance):

Appraisal: $450–$900. VA appraisals in Texas run $600–$900 ordered through VA’s portal. FHA: $450–$700. Conventional: $500–$800. Paid upfront before closing. The appraiser is assigned by an AMC — your lender doesn’t choose the specific appraiser. VA appraisals evaluate both market value and VA Minimum Property Requirements in a single visit.

Tax service fee: $50–$80. Covers property tax monitoring for the life of the loan — your servicer receives alerts if your taxes become delinquent.

Section C — Services you can shop (10% aggregate tolerance):

Title search and examination: $150–$300. In Texas, title insurance premiums are promulgated (set by the Texas Department of Insurance) — they’re the same at every title company. What varies is the settlement/escrow fee ($250–$750) and other ancillary title charges. You can shop the ancillary fees; you cannot negotiate the insurance premium itself. The simultaneous issue rate — when lender’s and owner’s policies are issued together — significantly reduces the lender’s policy cost. Always request simultaneous issue when buying an owner’s policy.

Owner’s title insurance: Required by most Texas lenders. Premiums are TDI-promulgated: approximately $1,935 on a $350,000 purchase. In Texas, the seller customarily pays for the buyer’s owner’s policy — this is the market norm, not a legal requirement. Sellers who attempt to shift this cost to buyers in Texas typically face negotiation friction because it’s so deeply embedded in local practice.

Lender’s title insurance: Required on all mortgaged transactions. With simultaneous issue, cost is approximately $100–$300 on the same transaction.

Survey: $400–$700 if a current survey isn’t available. Always ask in the offer whether the seller has a current survey. If they do and no boundary changes have occurred, you may be able to use it — potentially saving $400–$600. Title companies will specify their acceptable survey currency requirements.

Prepaids — your money going into escrow:

Homeowners insurance (first year): Texas averages $2,200–$4,500/year — substantially above the national average due to hail, wind, severe weather exposure, and the claims experience of Texas carriers. For a $300,000 home, budget $2,800–$3,500/year. This is collected at closing covering year one.

Prepaid mortgage interest: Interest from your closing date to the end of the calendar month. On a $280,000 loan at 7.0%, daily interest is $53.70. Closing on August 5th vs. August 28th: 23 days × $53.70 = $1,235 difference in cash at closing. The interest is owed regardless — it’s a question of when. For cash-constrained buyers, closing near month-end meaningfully reduces the cash needed at closing while only marginally accelerating the first mortgage payment.

Escrow setup (impounds): 2–3 months property taxes plus 2 months insurance collected upfront. On a $350,000 Texas home with a 2.0% tax rate and $3,000/year insurance: annual taxes $7,000 + insurance $3,000 = $10,000 total annual escrow. Two-month cushion: $1,667. Total escrow collected at closing: approximately $2,500–$4,200 depending on timing relative to tax due dates. This is your money, held in escrow, returned at payoff or refinance.

Seller Closing Costs in Texas: The Full Picture

Texas sellers typically net 6–9% less than the gross sale price after all closing costs. The dominant cost is real estate commission, followed by the customary title cost obligations.

Real estate commissions: The post-NAR settlement landscape (August 2024) changed how buyer’s agent compensation is documented and disclosed. Sellers negotiate listing commission directly with their agent; the decision about whether to offer buyer’s agent compensation is now explicitly a negotiation item rather than an assumed percentage. In Texas’s current market conditions, most sellers continue to offer buyer’s agent compensation to remain competitive, but the amount is increasingly negotiated case-by-case rather than defaulting to a historical norm. Sellers should explicitly understand what their listing agreement commits them to pay and to whom.

Owner’s title insurance (buyer’s policy): Texas custom: seller pays. Promulgated rate on a $350,000 sale: approximately $1,935. If a buyer requests an owner’s policy and the seller refuses, it creates meaningful negotiation friction — the buyer is either paying out-of-pocket for something they’d normally get, or perceiving the seller as uncooperative in ways that affect the overall deal dynamics.

Property tax proration: Texas taxes are paid in arrears — the 2025 tax bill arrives in October 2025 and is due January 31, 2026. A seller closing in July 2025 has incurred 7/12 of the 2025 tax obligation but hasn’t paid it yet. At closing, the seller credits the buyer for the prorated portion. On a $7,000/year tax bill: July close = seller credits $4,083. This shows as a buyer credit and seller debit on the settlement statement. It’s not a “fee” — it’s an adjustment of an obligation the seller incurred that the buyer will eventually pay when the bill arrives.

HOA transfer fee: $200–$500 if applicable. Who pays is negotiated. Common in Texas: split or buyer-pays, especially in buyer’s markets where sellers make additional concessions.

Seller Concessions: How to Reduce Buyer Cash at Closing

Seller concessions toward buyer closing costs reduce the cash a buyer needs at closing while leaving the seller’s net proceeds unchanged if the purchase price is adjusted to offset. Program limits:

  • Conventional (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac): Up to 3% at LTV above 90%; up to 6% at 75–90% LTV; up to 9% at below 75% LTV. Per Fannie Mae Selling Guide B3-4.1-02.
  • FHA: Up to 6% of the purchase price. Per HUD 4000.1.
  • VA: All normal buyer closing costs plus up to 4% in “concessions” — VA’s definition includes funding fee payment, debt payoffs, rate buydowns, escrow setup, and HOA fees. Per VA Lender Handbook Chapter 8.
  • USDA: Up to 6% of appraised value.

On a $350,000 purchase, a 3% conventional concession covers $10,500 of buyer costs — often enough to cover all lender fees, title fees, and survey, with some remaining for prepaid interest. The mechanism: the buyer offers the full purchase price; the seller agrees to credit $10,500 at closing applied to buyer’s closing costs. The loan amount is based on the full $350,000 purchase price. The appraised value must support the price — concessions can’t inflate a transaction above appraised value.

In a buyer’s market or with motivated sellers, maximum concessions plus a negotiated price are both achievable simultaneously. In competitive multiple-offer markets, concession requests reduce the net offer value — a $350,000 offer with $10,500 in concessions nets the seller $339,500, equivalent to a $339,500 cash offer. In that context, buyers must weigh whether the closing cost savings are worth a reduced competitive position.

Comparing Lender Quotes: Using the Loan Estimate Correctly

RESPA requires lenders to provide a standardized Loan Estimate (LE) within 3 business days of receiving a complete application. The LE organizes costs with tolerance categories that have legal weight: Section A (zero tolerance — can’t increase), Section B (zero tolerance), and Section C (10% aggregate tolerance). Get LEs from at least three lenders on identical loan parameters: same loan amount, same loan type, same rate, same lock period. Compare Section A directly — $2,500 origination at Lender A versus $800 at Lender B is a $1,700 difference that’s fully actionable.

Watch for inflated Section C estimates. Some lenders estimate title and third-party fees high to create a favorable Closing Disclosure “comparison” at closing — the final CD shows costs came in “below estimate” even if the lender’s own Section A charges came in above competitors. The CFPB’s mortgage resources at consumerfinance.gov/owning-a-home include a Loan Estimate explainer that walks through every line item with plain-language descriptions. Understanding the LE structure before you’re in the middle of a live transaction reduces the risk of surprises and improves your negotiating position with lenders.

Itemized estimate – $350,000 FHA purchase in Texas: Origination $1,750. Underwriting $795. Appraisal $700. Title insurance (lender + owner) $2,100. Settlement fee $550. Recording $100. Prepaid insurance $1,800. Prepaid interest (15 days) $1,010. Escrow setup $2,400. Total closing costs: approximately $11,205 plus FHA upfront MIP of $6,125 (financed). Cash to close: approximately $11,200 + $12,250 down = $23,450. Varies by lender, county, and closing date.

Frequently Asked Questions

2-5% of the purchase price. On a $350,000 home: $7,000-$17,500. Largest line items are lender fees, title insurance, and prepaid escrow for taxes and insurance.
Both parties pay. Buyers pay lender and title fees. Sellers pay commissions (5-6%) plus their share of title costs. Sellers can also agree to pay a portion of buyer costs as a concession negotiated in the purchase contract.
Yes. Seller concessions are negotiable. Conventional loans allow up to 3-9% depending on LTV. VA allows 4% of the loan amount in additional concessions plus normal closing costs. Ask for concessions in your offer.
No. Texas does not impose a state transfer tax. This saves Texas buyers significantly compared to states like New York (1%), Pennsylvania (1%), or Florida (0.35%) that charge transfer taxes on every transaction.
Most are not deductible in the year of purchase. Origination points paid to lower your rate may be deductible. Property taxes prepaid at closing are deductible. Consult a tax professional for your situation.
Negotiate seller concessions in the purchase contract, shop origination fees between at least three lenders, request lender credits (higher rate for lender-paid costs), and close near end of month to minimize prepaid interest.
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This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. It is not a commitment to lend. Loan programs, rates, and eligibility requirements are subject to change without notice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.