
Investment Property Closing Costs: A Complete Breakdown
Loan origination, appraisal, title, attorney fees—what you'll pay at closing. Typically 2–5% of purchase price. How to budget and what's negotiable.
- Closing costs typically run 2–5% of purchase price for investment properties
- Loan origination (0.5–1%), appraisal ($500–700), title ($1,000–3,000), attorney ($500–1,500)
- Investment properties cost more than primary residence—no first-time buyer breaks
- Budget reserves on top of closing; lenders often require 6–24 months PITI
Investment Property Closing Costs: A Complete Breakdown
You've run the numbers. The cap rate works. The cash flow pencils. Then you get to closing and discover you need $8,000 more than you planned. Closing costs are easy to underestimate—and they can kill a deal.
Here's what you'll actually pay.
Loan-Related Costs
Loan origination: 0.5–1% of the loan amount. On a $200,000 loan at 1%, that's $2,000. Some lenders charge less; some roll it into the rate. Shop.
Appraisal: $500–700. The lender orders it. You pay. Non-negotiable if you're financing.
Credit report: $25–50. Usually bundled into the loan estimate.
Points: Optional. Paying points buys down your rate. One point = 1% of the loan. On a $200,000 loan, 1 point = $2,000. Whether it's worth it depends on how long you'll hold the loan. Run the math.
Third-Party Costs
Title insurance: $1,000–3,000. Varies by state and purchase price. Lender's policy protects the bank. Owner's policy protects you. You need both. Shop title companies—prices can vary 20–30% for the same deal.
Attorney fees: $500–1,500. Required in some states (New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts). In others, the title company handles it. Check your state.
Recording fees: $100–300. Paid to the county to record the deed and mortgage. Set by the jurisdiction.
Inspection: $400–600. You paid this during the contingency period—but it's part of your total out-of-pocket cost to close. If you skipped it, don't. See Purchase Contingencies for Investment Properties.
Taxes and Prepaids
Transfer tax: 0.1–2% of purchase price. Varies wildly by state. Some states have none. Pennsylvania: 1%. New York: can exceed 2% in NYC. Check your closing disclosure for the exact number.
Prepaid insurance: 6–12 months. The lender wants proof of coverage. You'll prepay the first year (or more) at closing. Investment property insurance often runs 15–25% higher than owner-occupied—factor that in.
Escrow deposits: Property taxes and insurance. The lender may require 2–6 months in escrow. You're not paying more—you're funding the account that will pay future bills. But it's cash out of pocket at closing. In high-tax states, that can be a big number. A $200,000 property with 2% annual taxes means $4,000/year—two months in escrow is $667 at closing.
Total: Typically 2–5% of Purchase Price
On a $200,000 investment property, that's $4,000–$10,000. On a $400,000 property, $8,000–$20,000.
The low end assumes you shop title, skip points, and you're in a low-transfer-tax state. The high end assumes 1% origination, full title costs, attorney, and a higher transfer tax.
Budget 3–4% as a default. Then get a loan estimate and adjust.
How Investment Property Closing Differs From Primary Residence
Higher down payment. Investment properties typically require 15–25% down. Primary residence can go as low as 3.5% (FHA) or 3% (conventional first-time buyer). Your loan amount is smaller, so your origination fee is smaller—but your down payment is bigger.
No first-time buyer programs. Most programs are for owner-occupants. Investors pay full freight.
Higher rates. Investment property rates run 0.25–0.75% above primary residence. That's a cost—but it's in the monthly payment, not the closing cost line item.
Reserves. Lenders often require 6–24 months of PITI in reserves for investment properties. That's separate from closing costs. You need the down payment, closing costs, and reserves. A $200,000 property with 25% down: $50,000 down + $6,000–$8,000 closing + $8,000–$20,000 reserves. Total cash to close: $64,000–$78,000.
Why reserves matter. Your first vacancy or major repair can hit within months. If you've drained every dollar into the down payment and closing costs, you're one bad month from missing a mortgage payment. Reserves buy you time. They're not optional—they're part of the cost of being a landlord. Budget for them from day one.
What's Negotiable
Seller concessions. In some markets, sellers agree to pay a portion of closing costs. Common in slower markets. Rare when you're competing with multiple offers.
Lender credits. Some lenders offer credits in exchange for a higher rate. You pay less at closing, more monthly. Makes sense if you're refinancing or selling within a few years. Doesn't make sense for a long hold.
Title and escrow. You have the right to choose your title company in most states. Get two or three quotes. Savings can be $500–$1,000.
The lender's role. Your lender provides a Loan Estimate within three days of application. It itemizes closing costs. Use it. Compare it to the Closing Disclosure you get three days before closing. The numbers can shift slightly—but big changes should be explained. If something doesn't make sense, ask. Before closing, not after.
Budget Reserves on Top of Closing Costs
Closing costs are one-time. Reserves are your cushion. If you have a vacancy or a big repair, reserves keep you from missing a mortgage payment.
Lenders want to see that you can survive 6–24 months of payments without rent. That's 6–24 months of PITI in reserves. On a $1,200/month payment, 6 months = $7,200. 24 months = $28,800.
Add it up: down payment + closing costs + reserves. That's your total cash to close. Don't show up with only the down payment and closing costs. The lender will ask for reserves.
First-time investor reality check. On a $180,000 property with 25% down, you're looking at roughly $45,000 down, $5,500–$7,200 closing, and $8,000–$15,000 in reserves. Total: $58,500–$67,200. That's a lot of capital. Save for it. Or start with a smaller property. Or house hack and owner-occupy to reduce the down payment. The numbers are real. Plan for them.
Compare to your first primary residence. If you've bought a home before, investment property closing will feel familiar—but heavier. Higher down payment. No first-time buyer programs. Reserves on top. The First Rental Down Payment and Costs article breaks down the full capital stack for your first rental. Closing costs are one piece. See the whole picture before you commit. And if you're stacking this on top of Purchase Contingencies for Investment Properties, remember: inspection and appraisal costs hit before closing. Add those to your total out-of-pocket.
Wire fraud warning. Closing involves wiring large sums. Scammers send fake wiring instructions by email—often after compromising a title company or agent's account. Never wire based on email alone. Call your title company or escrow officer using a number you looked up yourself—not from the email—and verify the wiring instructions. Every year investors lose six figures to wire fraud. One phone call can prevent it. This isn't a closing cost—but it's a closing risk. Worth a reminder.
The Purchase Process guide walks through the full sequence from offer to closing. Closing costs are one line in that process—but they're easy to miss. Budget for them. Shop where you can. And keep reserves on top. Your first property is the hardest. Get the numbers right.
The ratio of a loan amount to a property's appraised value, expressed as a percentage — a 75% LTV on a $200,000 property means a $150,000 loan and $50,000 in equity.
Read definition →Cash flow is what's left in your pocket after a rental pays all its expenses — including the mortgage. NOI minus debt service. What actually hits your bank account each month or year.
Read definition →NOI (net operating income) is what a property earns from operations each year. Rental revenue minus vacancy loss and operating expenses. Before you subtract the mortgage, CapEx, or taxes.
Read definition →Jacob Hill
Financing & Strategy Analyst
Financing and leveraging real estate assets are where I shine, strategizing for maximum gains. A chess aficionado, I bring my love for the game's tactics to every deal.
The Real Estate Purchase Process
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