Florida Closing Cost Calculator
Estimate buyer closing costs in Florida. Pre-loaded with the state's transfer tax (0.7%), property tax rate (0.91%), and typical recording fees — every line item editable.
Closing costs in Florida
Buyers in Florida typically pay around 2.3% of the purchase price in closing costs — separate from the down payment. On a $400,000 home that's roughly $9,200 in fees, taxes, and prepaid escrow.
What goes into closing costs?
- Lender fees — origination (typically 0.5–1.5% of loan), credit report, underwriting.
- Third-party fees — appraisal ($500–$700), home inspection ($400–$600), title search and title insurance.
- State and local taxes — transfer tax (0.7% in Florida), recording fees, and Florida also imposes a mortgage recording tax — factor that in for higher loan amounts.
- Prepaid items — first months of property tax escrow, hazard insurance, and prepaid interest from closing day to month-end.
First-time buyer assistance in Florida
The Florida Hometown Heroes program offers down payment and closing cost assistance to qualifying first-time buyers in Florida. Income limits and home price caps apply — check with a local lender or Florida housing finance agency for current terms.
Who pays for what?
Closing cost responsibility splits vary by state custom and contract negotiation. In most US transactions the buyer pays lender, appraisal, inspection, and prepaid items. The seller typically pays real estate commissions and the owner's title policy. Transfer taxes split differently by state — in Florida, transfer tax responsibility is negotiable but often follows local custom.
Compare to other states
Closing costs vary widely. Florida buyers pay 2.3% on average — compare to high-cost states like Delaware (4.5%), New York (4.0%), and DC (4.0%), or low-cost states like Indiana (1.9%) and Missouri (1.6%). See the national calculator to compare side-by-side.
Browse other state closing cost guides
Disclaimer: Estimates only. Closing costs vary by lender, title company, county, and property. Numbers reflect typical residential purchases in Florida — your final Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure are authoritative. This is not financial or legal advice.