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When you're
getting a mortgage and you want to pay the lowest
fees possible, Wyoming is the place to live, and you
should stay away from New York.
Wyoming had the lowest
mortgage-related fees and New York had the highest
in Bankrate.com's 2005 survey. That's without taking
taxes into account.
To get a $180,000 mortgage on a
single-family home worth at least $225,000, the
average buyer in Laramie, Wyo., would pay $2,101 in
origination fees, title insurance and other closing
costs. The average buyer in New York City would pay
almost twice as much: $3,907 for the same size loan.
Nationally, the average fees and title insurance
totaled $2,748.
Bankrate surveyed nine to 15
lenders in each state, plus Washington, D.C., and
asked them to estimate the closing costs on a
$180,000 loan to a buyer with an excellent credit
history who had made a down payment of at least 20
percent on a single-family home in the state's
largest city. The survey showed that:
- The biggest differences
among states came from the wildly varying costs
for title insurance;
- fees for settlement services
and title searches accounted for much of the
rest of the disparities;
- origination costs -- the fees
that lenders control -- didn't vary much from
state to state (but they did differ from lender
to lender).
How to
comparison shop for a mortgage
You should compare mortgage offers by adding up all
the origination fees and all the title insurance and
settlement fees. Ignore taxes and prepaid items when
comparison shopping -- lenders don't always estimate
those correctly, and they'll be roughly the same for
each lender, anyway.
But costs differ substantially from
state to state. New York claimed the highest costs
for title insurance, an average of $1,451. North
Carolina had the cheapest title insurance, at $439,
followed by Wyoming, at $461. The national average
was $756.
Title insurance -- why does
it cost more here? It's kind of hard to say.
Property is expensive in New York, the city is
densely populated and homes are bought and sold
frequently. All of these factors can increase a
title insurer's risk.
On the other hand, In Wyoming, land
is wide-open with fewer transactions and less
opportunity for fraud. Buyers, sellers and lenders
are more likely to know one another. Contrast that
to Miami-Dade County, Fla., where mortgage fraud is
rampant and, not coincidentally, title insurance is
costly.
"And some states simply
represent greater risks associated with doing
business there," says James Maher, executive vice
president of the American Land Title Association,
the lobbying arm of the title insurance industry.
Some states, such as Arkansas and Mississippi, have
a regulatory or judicial climate that's not friendly
to title insurers. Other states are riskier because
of their real-estate laws or customs.
Different flavors of title
insurance
There are other reasons for price variations, Maher
adds. Some places have "all-inclusive" title
insurance, where the price includes not only the
insurance premium, but other services such as title
search, examination of title, closing and other
settlement services. Other places are called
"risk-only" jurisdictions, where the insurance
premium is itemized separately from related
services. |