Property · Buy/Sell

Seller Closing Cost Calculator

This is the line-item cleanup page, not another generic percentage calculator.

Estimate seller-side closing costs with title company charges, tax proration, resale documents, dues, transfer fees, payoff fees, and recording costs separated.

Plain English

What closing costs might I pay when I sell?

This breaks one scary closing number into smaller lines you can check.

Start here: Enter sale price, title costs, taxes, HOA, and payoff fees.

Estimate inputs

Assumptions

  • Who pays each line depends on contract, state, title practice, and local custom.
  • A title-company quote is the source of truth before closing.

Decision check

Before you act on the number

The output is useful only if it survives the missing-scope, fragile-assumption, and next-step check.

Mistake check

Letting small closing lines hide inside one generic percentage.

What people forget

  • Title and escrow add-ons
  • Tax proration direction
  • Resale documents and rush fees
  • Association dues, transfer fees, and assessments

What makes it go bad

  • The final statement moves because local custom or contract language differs
  • A fee belongs to the other side in your mental model
  • A title, HOA, or tax line arrives late

What to do next

Users usually break closing into title, tax, association, payoff, credit, and contract lines.

Ask the title company or association for the fee sheet and put every unknown line in the packet.

Closing math that sellers miss

A seller net sheet should not stop at commission. Title company charges, escrow fees, tax proration, association resale certificates, association dues, transfer fees, payoff demand fees, repairs, credits, and concessions all change the usable proceeds.

  • Tax proration can be a credit or debit depending on local custom, closing date, and whether taxes are paid in arrears.
  • Association fees vary widely. The safest calculator pattern is to expose each line item instead of hiding them in one percentage.
  • A title-company quote should be used before signing final documents.

Related tools and tracks

Source links used for this calculator family