What Are Closing Costs and Why Are They So High?
Closing costs are all the fees and expenses beyond your down payment that you pay to officially purchase your home. They include lender fees, title insurance, appraisal, escrow, government recording fees, and transfer taxes. In California, these add up quickly—typically 2-5% of your purchase price.
On a $1M home in the Bay Area, that means $20,000-$50,000 in closing costs. For a $1.5M home in San Francisco, it could be $40,000-$75,000. These aren't optional—they're necessary to close the transaction legally and transfer ownership.
Complete Breakdown of California Closing Costs
Lender Fees (Fixed by Your Lender)
| Item | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Origination Fee | 0.5-1.5% | Lender's fee for processing and underwriting. On $900K, that's $4,500-13,500. Shop lenders to compare. |
| Discount Points | 0-2% | Optional. You pay to lower your interest rate. 1 point = 1% of loan amount = typically 0.25% rate reduction. |
| Loan Processing Fee | $500-1,000 | Fee for loan file assembly and verifications. Can sometimes be waived. |
| Underwriting Fee | $400-800 | Fee for underwriter review. Fixed by lender. |
| Appraisal Fee | $500-800 | Appraisal for homes up to $1.5M. Higher-priced homes (jumbo) may be $1,000+. |
| Credit Report | $50-100 | Pulled at pre-qualification and again before closing. |
| Flood Determination | $15-25 | Whether property is in a flood zone. Required by FEMA. |
Title and Insurance Fees (Variable by County)
| Item | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Title Insurance (Lender) | 0.4-0.6% | Covers lender's interest. Required. On $900K, that's $3,600-5,400. One-time premium. |
| Title Insurance (Owner) | 0.1-0.2% | Optional but recommended to protect your equity. Covers you for life. |
| Title Search | $200-400 | Search for any liens, judgments, or claims on the property. |
| Homeowners Insurance | $1,200-2,500 | First year's premium, often paid at closing. Vary by home, location, and coverage. |
| HOA Search/Transfer | $300-600 | If property is in HOA. Cost varies by association. |
Government and Recording Fees (Mostly Fixed)
| Item | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| State Transfer Tax | 0.55% | California state tax. Seller usually pays. On $1M, that's $5,500. |
| Alameda County Transfer Tax | 1.5% | Alameda County additional tax. Buyer typically pays. On $1M, that's $15,000. |
| San Francisco Transfer Tax | 1.5-2.5% | SF County tax. Usually split or buyer pays. On $1M, that's $15,000-25,000. |
| Recording Fees (County Recorder) | $100-200 | Cost to record deed with county. Varies by county and page count. |
| Property Tax Prorations | Variable | Adjustment between buyer and seller for property taxes. Usually a credit to buyer. |
| HOA Prorations | Variable | Adjustment for HOA fees paid in advance. Varies by association. |
Escrow Fees (Negotiable)
| Item | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Escrow Closing Fee | $800-1,500 | Escrow company's fee to coordinate and close the transaction. Can be negotiated or split. |
| Wire Transfer Fee | $10-30 | Fee to wire funds. Usually charged per wire. |
Real Bay Area Example: $1M Home in Alameda
Let's calculate total closing costs for a typical $1M purchase in Alameda County:
| Cost Category | Estimated Cost | Who Pays |
|---|---|---|
| Lender Fees | ||
| Origination (1.0%) | $10,000 | Buyer |
| Processing | $750 | Buyer |
| Underwriting | $600 | Buyer |
| Appraisal | $700 | Buyer |
| Title & Insurance | ||
| Title Insurance (Lender) | $4,500 | Buyer |
| Title Insurance (Owner) | $1,000 | Buyer (optional) |
| Title Search | $300 | Buyer |
| Homeowners Insurance (1 yr) | $1,500 | Buyer |
| Taxes & Recording | ||
| State Transfer Tax (0.55%) | $5,500 | Seller |
| Alameda County Transfer Tax (1.5%) | $15,000 | Buyer |
| Recording Fees | $150 | Buyer |
| Escrow | ||
| Escrow Closing Fee | $1,000 | Split* |
| TOTAL BUYER COST | $43,500 | |
| Plus Down Payment (20%) | $200,000 | |
| TOTAL CASH AT CLOSING | $243,500 |
*Escrow fees are often split 50/50 between buyer and seller, but negotiable. This example assumes 50/50 split ($500 buyer share).
San Francisco County: Higher Closing Costs
San Francisco has the highest transfer tax in California. The rate structure is:
- $250,000-$500,000: 1.5% ($3,750-7,500)
- $500,000-$1M: 1.5% ($7,500-15,000)
- $1M-$2M: 1.75% ($17,500-35,000)
- $2M+: 2.5% ($50,000+)
On a $1.5M SF home, the SF transfer tax alone is $26,250 (vs. $15,000 in Alameda). Add state transfer tax and Alameda homeowners might save $5,000-10,000 just in transfer taxes.
What Can You Negotiate or Reduce?
Fixed Costs (Can't Negotiate)
- Government transfer taxes (set by state and county)
- Recording fees (set by county recorder)
- Title insurance rates (set by CA Department of Insurance)
- Appraisal fee (market-driven but fairly uniform)
Negotiable Costs
- Lender origination fee: Shop multiple lenders. Brokers can often beat bank origination fees by 0.25-0.5%.
- Escrow fee: Often split 50/50. You can ask for buyer/seller split to be 40/60 or 30/70 in your favor.
- Attorney fees: California doesn't require attorneys for most closings (that's the escrow company's job), but if you want one, shop around.
- Processing/Underwriting fees: Some lenders will waive these if you ask. Offer stronger with multiple rate quotes.
- Seller concessions: Negotiate with seller to cover some of your closing costs (allowed up to 3-6% depending on loan type).
What About Prepaids and Reserves?
Beyond the closing costs listed above, you may also pay "prepaids" and "reserves" at closing:
Prepaids (Due at Closing)
- Property Taxes: Your share of the year's taxes through closing date. Prorated between buyer and seller.
- Insurance: First month's homeowners insurance premium (or annual upfront).
- HOA Fees: If applicable, your share of HOA dues from closing through end of month.
Reserves (Held by Lender)
- Property Taxes: 2-3 months held in escrow account to pay taxes when due.
- Insurance: 2-3 months held in escrow account to pay insurance when due.
- PMI: If you're putting down less than 20%, the lender may hold 1-3 months of PMI in reserve.
These reserves add to your cash-at-closing but aren't part of "closing costs" technically—they're funds held on your behalf. On a $1M home with 10% down, reserves might be another $5,000-$8,000.
Closing costs in California range from 2-5% of the purchase price, with transfer taxes being the biggest line item in the Bay Area. On a $1M Alameda County purchase, expect $40,000-50,000 in total closing costs. In San Francisco, it's $45,000-60,000+ due to higher transfer taxes. Shop your lender to negotiate origination fees, ask your escrow company about discounts, and negotiate seller concessions during the purchase contract. Many first-time buyers are surprised by the total cash needed beyond down payment—planning ahead for these costs is essential.
Frequently Asked Questions
Typical closing costs in California range from 2-5% of the purchase price. On a $1M home in the Bay Area, that's $20,000-50,000. This includes origination fees, appraisal, title insurance, escrow fees, transfer tax, and recording fees. The exact amount depends on your loan type, property value, and local taxes.
The seller typically pays California's state transfer tax (0.55% of purchase price). However, Alameda County and San Francisco County have additional transfer taxes (1.5% in each) that buyers often pay. Always confirm with your title company and real estate agent who pays which taxes in your transaction.
Yes. Sellers can contribute to buyer's closing costs (called 'seller concessions' or 'seller credit'). Conventional loans allow up to 3% seller contribution; FHA allows 6%; VA allows 4%. This is negotiated during the purchase contract. More common when the market favors buyers.
Title insurance protects you and your lender against claims that someone else owns the property or has a lien on it. A one-time premium (0.6% of purchase price in California) covers you for the entire ownership period. This is different from homeowners insurance and is typically paid at closing.
Some closing costs are fixed (appraisal, title insurance, transfer tax), but others can be negotiated: lender origination fees, attorney fees, inspection costs. Shop multiple lenders to compare origination fees. Ask your title company for a discount if you're a repeat buyer. Always review your Loan Estimate for accuracy.