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How to Reduce Closing Costs on Your Mortgage: 7 Proven Strategies

Closing costs typically run 2-5% of your home's purchase price. On a $350,000 home, that's $7,000-$17,500 out of pocket at the closing table. Most homebuyers don't negotiate these costs — which means they're leaving money on the table.

Here are 7 strategies to reduce what you pay at closing.

1. Shop Around for Your Lender (And Compare Loan Estimates)

By law, your lender must provide a Loan Estimate (LE) within 3 days of your application. This document breaks down every fee. Get Loan Estimates from at least 3 lenders and compare line by line.

Origination fees alone can vary from 0% to 2% between lenders — on a $300,000 loan, that's a $6,000 difference.

The RESPA rule: You have 10 days after receiving your Loan Estimate to "shop" for a better rate. Starting a new application within 10 days does NOT reset your 3-day clock for a new Loan Estimate — so you can compare without penalty.

2. Negotiate for a Seller Credit (Closing Cost Credit)

Sellers can credit you for a portion of your closing costs. This is especially common in neutral or buyer's markets. Here's how it works:

Frame it as a net-neutral ask: "I'm offering full asking price if you credit me $8,000 toward closing costs."

3. Ask Your Lender to Lower or Waive Their Fees

Not all lender fees are fixed. Origination fees, application fees, and processing fees are often negotiable. Ask your loan officer: "Can you reduce or waive any of these fees?" Many will — especially if you're a strong borrower or they're trying to hit volume targets.

4. Use a Lender with "No-Cost" or Low-Cost Options

Some lenders (especially online lenders) advertise "no origination fee" loans. The trade-off is usually a slightly higher interest rate, which may or may not be worth it depending on your situation.

Try the Closing Costs Calculator →

5. Use Lender Credits in Exchange for a Higher Rate

You accept a higher interest rate (say +0.25%) in exchange for the lender crediting you $3,000-$5,000 at closing. It makes sense if:

Watch the math: A 0.25% rate increase on a $300,000 30-year loan costs roughly $48/month extra (the exact figure depends on the underlying rate). Over the full 30-year term that's around $17,000 in additional interest. Only do this if you plan to sell or refinance before the break-even point.

6. Split Closing Costs With the Seller

In competitive markets, you can offer to pay some and ask the seller to pay some. Many sellers will cover title insurance, transfer taxes, or half the escrow fees as a goodwill gesture.

What's typically negotiable from the seller's side:

7. Use Down Payment Assistance Programs

Many states, counties, and nonprofits offer programs that cover closing costs for first-time buyers. Common options include:

What Closing Costs Typically Include

FeeTypical RangeCan You Negotiate?
Origination fee0-1%Yes — shop lenders
Appraisal$300-$600Generally no (paid to 3rd party)
Credit report$30-$50Sometimes waived
Title insurance0.5-1%Shop title companies
Escrow/closing fee$500-$1,500Yes — compare providers
Recording fees$50-$250No — set by county
Prepaid interestVaries by closing dateNo — but you can choose closing date
Prepaid property taxesVariesNo — but can be financed
Prepaid insurance1 year upfrontNo — but can be financed

Bottom Line

On a $350,000 home, these strategies can save you $3,000-$10,000 at closing. The biggest leverage points: shop lenders, negotiate seller credits, and ask for fee waivers. Don't just accept the first Loan Estimate you receive.

Calculate Your Estimated Closing Costs →