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What is Escrow?
An escrow is created when money and documents are deposited by two or more persons with a third party which are to be delivered upon the
happening of certain conditions. The Third party is known as the escrow agent or escrow holder.
The authority given to an escrow holder is strictly
limited by instructions provided by the parties involved. Consequently, an escrow holder acts on mutual instructions deposited into escrow and does
not represent the party. The escrow officer is authorized by instructions to allocate funds for items during the escrow period,
such as real estate
commissions, title insurance, liens, recording fees and other costs. Instructions also specify the method of collecting funds, proration issues,
time limitations and all the terms of the transaction. The escrow process protects all parties involved by retaining money and documents until the
mutual instructions are met.
The statutory definition of escrow is found in Section 17003 of the California Financial code and reads as follows:
“Escrow” means any transaction wherein one person, for the purpose of effecting the sale, transfer, encumbering, or
leasing of real or personal property to another person, delivers any written instrument, money evidence of title to real
or personal property, or other thing of value to a third person to be held by such third person until the happening of a specified event or the
performance or a prescribed condition, when it is then to be delivered by such third person to a grantee, grantor, promisee, promisor, obligee,
oblior, bailee, bailor, or any agent or employee or any of the later.
Who Pays What- Closing Costs
The SELLER can generally
be expected to pay for:
• Real Estate Commission
• Document preparation fee for Deed
• Document transfer tax
($1.10 per $1,000.00 of sales price)
• Any City Transfer/Conveyance Tax
(according to contract)
• Any loan fees required by buyer's lender
• Payoff of all loans in seller's name
(or existing loan balance if being
assumed by buyer)
• Interest accrued to lender being paid off,
Statement Fees,Reconveyance Fees and any
Prepayment Penalties
• Termite Inspection (according to contract)
• Termite Work (according to contract)
• Home Warranty (according to contract)
• Any judgments, tax liens, etc. against
the seller
• Recording charges to clear all documents
of record against seller
• Tax pro-ration (for any taxes unpaid at time
of transfer of title)
• Any unpaid Homeowner's dues
• Any bonds or assessments
(according to contract)
• Any and all delinquent taxes
• Notary Fees
The BUYER can generally
be expected to pay for:
• Title insurance premiums
• Escrow Fee
• Document preparation (if applicable)
• Notary Fees
• Recording charges for all documents in
buyer's names
• Termite Inspection(according to contract)
Tax pro-ration(from date of acquisition)
• Homeowner's transfer fee
• All new loan charges (except those required
by lender for seller to pay)
• Interest on new loan from date of funding
to 30 days prior to first payment date
• Assumption/Change of Records fees for
takeover of existing loan
• Beneficiary Statement Fee for assumption
of existing loan
• Inspection Fees (roofing, property
inspection, geological, etc.)
• Home Warranty (according to contract)
• City Transfer/Conveyance Tax (according
to contract)
• Fire Insurance Premium for first year
Northern California closing costs
CALIFORNIA
— Not only do escrow procedures differ between Northern and Southern California, they also vary somewhat from county to county. Title companies handle closings through escrow in Northern California, whereas escrow companies and lenders handle them in Southern California. Conveyance is by grant deed. Deeds of trust with private power of sale are the security instruments used throughout the state. In Southern California
, sellers pay the title insurance premium and the transfer tax. Buyer and seller split the escrow costs.
In the Northern California counties of Amador, Merced, Plumas, San Joaquin, and Siskiyou, buyers and sellers share title insurance and escrow costs equally. In ButteCounty, sellers pay 75%; buyers pay 25%. In Alameda, Calaveras, Colusa, Contra Costa, Lake, Marin, Mendocino, San Francisco, San Mateo, Solano, and Sonoma counties, buyers pay for the title insurance policy, whereas sellers pay in the other Northern California counties. Each California county has its own transfer tax; some cities have additional charges. Property taxes may be paid annually on or before December 10th, or semiannually by December 10th and April 10th. California is a community-property state.
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County
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Escrow Charges
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Title Fees
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County
Transfer
Tax/ $1,000
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City Transfer Tax/$1,000
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Alameda
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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Alameda
- $5.40
Albany
- $11.50
Berkeley
- $15.00
Hayward
- $4.50
Oakland
- $15.00
Piedmont
- $13.00
San Leandro
- $6.00
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Contra Costa
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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Richmond
- $7.00
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El Dorado
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50/50
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50/50
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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None
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Marin
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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San Rafael
- $3.10
All Others - $1.10
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Mendocino
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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None
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Napa
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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None
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Sacramento
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50/50
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Seller Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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Buyer/Seller 50/50
Sacramento
- $2.75
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San Francisco
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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San Francisco
<250K - $5.00
San Francisco
>250K - $6.80
San Francisco
>1Mil - $7.50
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San Joaquin
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50/50
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50/50
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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Stockton
- $3.00
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San Mateo
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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Buyer/Seller 50/50
San Mateo
- $5.00
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Santa Clara
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Seller Pay
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Seller Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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Buyer/Seller 50/50
Alviso, Mt.View, Palo Alto, San Jose - $3.30
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Santa Cruz
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Seller Pay
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50/50
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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None
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Solano
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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Vallejo
- $3.30
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Sonoma
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Buyer Pay
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Buyer Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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Cloverdale - $1.10
Cotati - $1.90
Petaluma
- $2.00
Santa Rosa
- $2.00
Sebastopol
- $2.00
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Stanislaus
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50/50
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Seller Pay
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Seller Pay - $1.10
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None
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UNDERSTANDING COMMON WAYS OF HOLDING TITLE How Should I take ownership of the property I am buying? This important question is one California real property purchasers ask their real estate, escrow and title professionals every day. Unfortunately, though these professionals may identify the many methods of owning property, they may not recommend a specific form of ownership, as doing so would constitute practicing law. Because real property has become increasingly more valuable, the question of how parties take ownership of their property has gained greater importance. The form of ownership taken—the vesting of title—will determine who may sign various documents involving the property and future rights of the parties to the transaction. These rights involve such matters as: real property taxes, income taxes, inheritance and gift taxes, transferability of title and exposure to creditor’s claims. Also, how title is vested can have significant probate implications in the event of death. The California Land Title Association (CLTA) advises those purchasing real property to give careful consideration to the manner in which title will be held. Buyers may wish to consult legal counsel to determine the most advantageous form of ownership for their particular situation, especially in cases of multiple owners of a single property. The CLTA has provided the following definitions of common vestings as an informational overview only. Consumers should not rely on these as legal definitions. The Association urges real property purchasers to carefully consider their titling decision prior to closing, and to seek counsel should they be unfamiliar with the most suitable ownership choice for their particular situation. Common Methods of Holding Title SOLE OWNERSHIP Sole ownership may be described as ownership by an individual or other entity capable of acquiring title. Examples of common vesting cases of sole ownership are: 1. A Single Man/Woman: A man or woman who is not legally married or in a registered domestic partnership. For example: Bruce Buyer, a single man. 2. A Married Man or Woman as His or Her Sole and Separate Property: A married man or woman who wishes to acquire title in his or her name alone. The title company insuring title will require the spouse of the married man or woman acquiring title to specifically disclaim or relinquish his or her right, title and interest to the property. This establishes that both spouses want title to the property to be granted to one spouse as that spouse’s sole and separate property. For example: Bruce Buyer, a married man, as his sole and separate property. 3. A Registered Domestic Partner as His or Her Sole and Separate Property: A registered domestic partner who wishes to acquire title in his or her name alone. The title company insuring title will require the domestic partner of the person acquiring title to specifically disclaim or relinquish his or her right, title and interest to the property. This establishes that both registered domestic partners want title to the property to be granted to one partner as that person’s sole and separate property. For example: Bruce Buyer, a registered domestic partner, as his sole and separate property. CO-OWNERSHIP Title to property owned by two or more persons may be vested in the following forms: 1. Community Property: A form of vesting title to property owned together by husband and wife or by registered domestic partners. Community property is distinguished from separate property, which is property acquired before marriage or before a registered domestic partnership, by separate gift or bequest, after legal separation, or which is agreed in writing to be owned by one spouse or registered domestic partner. In California, real property conveyed to a married person, or to a registered domestic partner, is presumed to be community property, unless otherwise stated. Since all such property is owned equally, both parties must sign all agreements and documents transferring the property or using it as security for a loan. Each owner has the right to dispose of his/her one half of the community property, by will. For example: Bruce Buyer and Barbara Buyer, husband and wife, as community property. 2. Community Property with Right of Survivorship: A form of vesting title to property owned together by husband and wife or by registered domestic partners. This form of holding title shares many of the characteristics of community property but adds the benefit of the right of survivorship similar to title held in joint tenancy. There may be tax benefits for holding title in this manner. On the death of an owner, the decedent’s interest ends and the survivor owns the property. For example: Bruce Buyer and Barbara Buyer, husband and wife, as community property with right of survivorship. 3. Joint Tenancy: A form of vesting title to property owned by two or more persons, who may or may not be married or registered domestic partners, in equal interests, subject to the right of survivorship in the surviving joint tenant(s). Title must have been acquired at the same time, by the same conveyance, and the document must expressly declare the intention to create a joint tenancy estate. When a joint tenant dies, title to the property is automatically conveyed by operation of law to the surviving joint tenant(s). Therefore, joint tenancy property is not subject to disposition by will. For example: Bruce Buyer, George Buyer, as joint tenants. 4. Tenancy in Common: A form of vesting title to property owned by any two or more individuals in undivided fractional interests. These fractional interests may be unequal in quantity or duration and may arise at different times. Each tenant in common owns a share of the property, is entitled to a comparable portion of the income from the property and must bear an equivalent share of expenses. Each co-tenant may sell, lease or will to his/her heir that share of the property belonging to him/her. For example: Bruce Buyer, a single man, as to an undivided 3/4 interest and Penny Purchaser, a single woman, as to an undivided 1/4 interest, as tenants in common... Other ways of vesting title include as: 1. A Corporation*: A corporation is a legal entity, created under state law, consisting of one or more shareholders but regarded under law as having an existence and personality separate from such shareholders. 2. A Partnership*: A partnership is an association of two or more persons who can carry on business for profit as co-owners, as governed by the Uniform Partnership Act. A partnership may hold title to real property in the name of the partnership. 3. Trustees of a Trust*: A Trust is an arrangement whereby legal title to property is transferred by the grantor to a person called a trustee, to be held and managed by that person for the benefit of the people specified in the trust agreement, called the beneficiaries. 4. Limited Liability Companies (L.L.C.)*: This form of ownership is a legal entity and is similar to both the corporation and the partnership. The operating agreement will determine how the L.L.C. functions and is taxed. Like the corporation its existence is separate from its owners. *In cases of corporate, partnership, L.L.C. or trust ownership - required documents may include corporate articles and bylaws, partnership agreements, L.L.C. operating agreements and trust agreements and/or certificates. Remember: How title is vested has important legal consequences. You may wish to consult an attorney to determine the most advantageous form of ownership for your particular situation. Courtesy of North American Title.
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