When Are Closing Costs Due? Timing, Payment Methods, and What to Expect
When Are Closing Costs Due? Timing, Payment Methods, and What to Expect
You've been approved for a mortgage, you've signed the purchase agreement, and closing day is circled on your calendar. But you're wondering: when do you actually have to come up with the money for closing costs?
The short answer is at the closing table — but the full picture is more nuanced, and the timing of certain payments and actions matters more than most buyers realize.
The Official Answer: Closing Costs Are Due at Closing
Closing costs are paid on the day you close on your home — the day you sign the final loan documents and take ownership. This is also called "settlement day" or "the closing."
At closing, you'll pay your closing costs as a single lump sum, along with your down payment, via wire transfer or cashier's check. The closing agent (attorney or escrow/title company) distributes the funds to all the appropriate parties: the lender, the title company, the county recorder, and so on.
What Gets Paid Before Closing Day?
Some expenses show up on your Closing Disclosure but are typically paid before closing day:
Home inspection fee: Usually paid directly to the inspector on the day of the inspection — weeks before closing. Expect $400–$700.
Appraisal fee: Often paid at application or before the appraisal is conducted, not at closing. Your lender may collect this upfront.
Earnest money deposit: Paid within 3–5 days of contract acceptance and held in escrow. It's credited toward your closing costs or down payment at settlement.
Survey fee: If required, often paid directly to the surveyor before closing.
These expenses are sometimes called "out-of-pocket" or "pre-closing" costs. They're separate from the lump sum you wire on closing day, but they're still part of your total buying costs.
How Far in Advance Should You Wire Closing Funds?
Most title companies and closing attorneys require your wire to arrive at least one business day before closing. Some require funds 48–72 hours in advance.
Your closing agent will send you wiring instructions in advance. Follow them exactly — wire fraud is common in real estate transactions, and criminals sometimes intercept emails to redirect wire transfers.
Verify wiring instructions by calling the title company directly at the phone number from their original, verified email or letterhead. Never use a phone number from a follow-up email with new or "updated" wire instructions.
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The Three-Day Rule: When You Receive Your Closing Disclosure
By federal law (TRID), your lender must deliver your Closing Disclosure at least three business days before closing. This document shows the final, exact closing costs you'll owe.
Use those three days to:
- Compare the Closing Disclosure to your Loan Estimate line by line
- Confirm your wire transfer amount with your closing agent
- Verify the wiring instructions via phone
- Arrange your cashier's check if you're paying that way
If the Closing Disclosure shows numbers that increased significantly from your Loan Estimate, you can request a delay to get answers — and in some cases, lenders are legally required to restart the three-day clock.
Acceptable Payment Methods for Closing Costs
You generally have two options for paying closing costs:
Wire transfer: The most common method. Your bank sends funds electronically to the closing agent's escrow account. Works for any amount but requires a business day or two to arrange and verify.
Cashier's check: Issued by your bank, guaranteed funds. Most closing agents accept cashier's checks for amounts up to a certain threshold (commonly $5,000–$10,000). Larger amounts usually require a wire.
Personal checks, debit cards, and credit cards are almost never accepted at closing.
Can You Delay Payment or Finance Your Closing Costs?
You can't delay closing costs — they're due at settlement. But you have legitimate ways to reduce the cash required:
Seller concessions: If negotiated in the purchase contract, the seller pays a portion of your closing costs. This is agreed upon before closing, not at the table.
Lender credits: Your lender credits your closing costs in exchange for accepting a higher interest rate. Reduces cash needed but costs more over time.
Rolling costs into the loan: On some loan types (FHA, VA, USDA), certain fees can be financed. On a conventional loan, you typically can't add closing costs to the loan directly, but lender credits achieve a similar effect.
Down payment assistance programs: Many state housing finance agencies offer grants or forgivable second mortgages that can cover closing costs for qualifying buyers.
What Happens If You Don't Have Enough at Closing?
If there's a shortfall, the closing will not proceed. The transaction falls through, and you could lose your earnest money if the contract doesn't include a financing contingency or other protection.
To avoid this: get a precise wire amount from your closing agent at least 5–7 business days before closing, and make sure funds are accessible in your bank account (not in investments or other accounts that take days to liquidate).
Also keep in mind that the final amount can differ from your Loan Estimate — sometimes by a few hundred dollars due to prorations and adjustments calculated at closing. Build in a small buffer.
Timeline Summary
| Timeframe | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Day of offer acceptance | Earnest money due within 3–5 days |
| During due diligence | Home inspection fee paid |
| Shortly after application | Appraisal fee paid (if required upfront) |
| At least 3 business days before closing | Receive Closing Disclosure with exact amounts |
| 1–2 business days before closing | Wire transfer sent to closing agent |
| Closing day | Sign documents, transfer ownership |
| After closing | Funds distributed to all parties |
Know Your Numbers Before Closing Day
Surprises at the closing table are stressful and avoidable. The best protection is understanding every line on your Closing Disclosure before you arrive.
Our Closing Cost Guide includes a Closing Disclosure review checklist that walks you through every section, flags what can and can't legally change from your Loan Estimate, and shows you which fees are negotiable even at the last minute.
Download the Closing Cost Guide →
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