Average Closing Costs
by State 2026
What buyers and sellers actually pay — broken down by state, with real dollar estimates.
State-Specific Closing Cost Estimator
Select your state and enter the home price to get a localized estimate.
Closing Costs by State — All 50 States
Average buyer closing costs as a percentage of home price, plus estimated dollar amounts based on median home prices in each state:
| State | Avg Closing Cost % | Est. Dollar Amount | Median Home Price | Cost Level |
|---|
Why Do Closing Costs Vary So Much by State?
The biggest driver of state-by-state variation is transfer taxes — state and local government taxes on property transfers. New York charges up to 2.65% in transfer taxes alone, while Texas charges just 0.1%.
Other state-specific factors
Some states require attorney review of real estate transactions — adding $500–$1,500 to closing costs. States like New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Georgia require attorneys; others don’t. Additionally, state-specific title insurance regulations affect pricing.
5 Ways to Reduce Your Closing Costs
Shop multiple lenders
Getting Loan Estimates from Rocket Mortgage, Better.com, Chase, and a local credit union can reveal $1,000–$3,000 in fee differences. Better.com charges no origination fee.
Ask for seller concessions
In a buyer’s market, requesting $5,000–$15,000 in seller concessions is common and accepted. Even in neutral markets, it’s worth asking.
Close at end of month
Closing at the end of the month reduces prepaid interest — since interest accrues from closing day to month-end. Closing on the 28th vs the 1st can save $300–$800.
Shop title insurance
In most states, you can choose your title company. Comparing rates from First American, Fidelity National, and local companies can save $200–$500.
Review every line item
Lenders sometimes include junk fees — document prep fees, processing fees, rate lock fees — that are negotiable or removable. Ask your lender to justify every line on the Loan Estimate.
Check state assistance programs
Many states offer closing cost assistance for first-time buyers. The CFPB and HUD maintain databases of state programs — some cover up to $10,000 in closing costs.
Ready to Understand Every Cost?
You’ve completed the full closing costs guide. Start with the overview if you want a refresher, or go straight to the seller cost breakdown — where the biggest numbers are.