Calculator Methodology
How the Seller Proceeds Calculator estimate works
Use this when you need the one-page answer: sale price minus every visible deduction.
This estimate is for planning. Actual results may change based on local pricing, contracts, title practice, lender disclosures, insurance documents, inspection findings, hidden conditions, timing, and professional review.
Inputs used
Defaults are planning placeholders, not recommendations.
Expected sale price
Default: 450000 $
Mortgage payoff
Default: 285000 $
Total commission
Default: 5.5 %
Other seller closing costs
Default: 1.2 %
Title / escrow company costs
Default: 1450 $
Property tax proration credit
Default: 3200 $
Resale certificate
Default: 375 $
Association dues owed at closing
Default: 450 $
Association transfer fee
Default: 275 $
Repairs / credits / prep
Default: 5000 $
Buyer concessions
Default: 0 $
What is included
- The visible inputs listed on the calculator page.
- The assumptions shown below the calculator.
- A planning estimate based on the calculator family, not a binding quote, contract, appraisal, insurance settlement, title statement, or lender disclosure.
- Input: Expected sale price.
- Input: Mortgage payoff.
- Input: Total commission.
- Input: Other seller closing costs.
- Input: Title / escrow company costs.
- Input: Property tax proration credit.
- Input: Resale certificate.
- Input: Association dues owed at closing.
- Input: Association transfer fee.
- Input: Repairs / credits / prep.
- Input: Buyer concessions.
What is excluded
- Final contractor pricing, local permit interpretation, lender underwriting, title-company settlement, insurance claim approval, tax advice, legal advice, or property-specific professional judgment.
- Every local custom, contract term, hidden condition, inspection finding, market shift, and timing issue.
- Guaranteed savings, resale value, coverage, approval, or final cash due.
- Full title commitment review, purchase contract interpretation, settlement statement preparation, payoff quote, tax bill reconciliation, HOA resale package, or brokerage advice.
What can make the estimate too low
- Title, tax proration, association fees, payoff timing, seller credits, concessions, prepaids, escrow setup, repair credits, or contract-specific terms are missing.
- The estimate uses optimistic sale price, low fee assumptions, or stale payoff data.
- Local custom shifts a cost to the side that did not budget for it.
What can make the estimate too high
- Seller credits, lender credits, negotiated fees, lower concessions, lower association charges, or better payoff timing apply.
- A title company or lender fee sheet replaces broad percentage assumptions.
- A conservative scenario was used for planning but the final contract is cleaner.
Assumptions
- Local custom and contract terms decide who pays many fees.
- Use a title-company estimate before relying on final numbers.
When to verify before acting
- Before signing a contractor quote, purchase contract, listing agreement, loan document, title document, insurance claim document, or association document.
- When a result depends on local custom, contract language, code, warranty, hidden conditions, eligibility, or professional judgment.
- When the result changes whether you repair, replace, sell, buy, claim, finance, or walk away.