Title Insurance for the Buyer
The title is what gives you ownership of a property. As the
buyer you want a clear or clean title — one that doesn’t have liens for unpaid taxes against
it or claims of ownership by dear Aunt Millie or a surprise easement through the backyard
to reach power lines or a cell phone tower.
As for your lender, he wants to know that the loan is going
to a legitimate transaction — the seller really does own the property and
therefore can sell it to you.
The Title Search
In other words, nobody wants an unpleasant surprise after
the settlement. So a couple of things happen. First, a title search is
conducted. Public records are examined manually or by computer or both. It
depends on how pertinent records are kept in your area. The searcher looks at
deeds, will, and trusts, tracing the history of the property back many, many
years. Among the important questions are whether all past mortgages and liens
have been paid. Does anyone hold an easement? Are there any pending legal
actions?
But what if the title search misses something and it comes
back to bite after you’ve moved in? This could happen. Buyers have even been
known to lose their houses because of clouded ownership — some past problem
that wasn’t discovered.
Title Insurance
The way to avoid losing everything is to buy title insurance, which is available from title insurance
companies, title agents, or, in some states, attorneys.
Title insurance is a one-time, up-front investment with
rates based on the purchase price of your home and the type of policy you buy.
Some are more comprehensive than others.
The policy protects you by making the insurance company
liable for most claims against your ownership. If a critical document was
overlooked during the title search and you actually lose the house, you’ll
likely receive damages — but only if you bought an owner’s title policy at
closing. You can see why experts advise you to do this.
Make sure you understand the policy you’re buying — what it
covers and what’s excluded. The owner’s policy should cover your full sales
price. If you want a policy that covers the value of your home as it increases,
ask about adding an inflation rider.
Your lender wants a policy, too. He or she won’t even loan
you money unless you buy a separate lender’s title insurance policy to cover
the bank’s interest in your property. The lender’s policy should be for the
amount of the mortgage.
Shopping for Title Insurance
The only time you can purchase insurance is at closing.
Whether buyer, seller, or both pay for the coverage varies according to local
custom. In some areas the seller buys the owner’s policy and the buyer pays for
the lender’s policy. Both policies take effect on closing day.
A congressional subcommittee hearing on title insurance in
early 2006 looked into why consumers were paying so much for title insurance.
They found the industry rife with joint ventures between title insurance
companies, real estate brokers, and lenders and heard that these deals are a
factor contributing to rates higher than they should be.
The Federal Citizen Information Center
Web site
offers advice on title coverage and cost savings from the Department of Housing
and Urban Development.
Buyer's Tip: You need a clear title on closing day
and two title insurance policies — one to cover the owner, the other the
lender.
How to Take Title
Many home buyers, especially first-time buyers, are at the
closing ceremony signing the mysterious documents when the closing agent asks
how they want to take title to the property — sole owner, joint tenancy,
tenants-in-common ... Oops! Another new subject that sounds like a foreign
language. Will this never be over?
Don’t let your eyes glaze over. This really is important.
There are tax and estate considerations to ponder prior to deciding. And you
also need to ask whether you need to protect your home from, say, a lawsuit
against your business or a malpractice suit against a partner or spouse.
Here are three of numerous ways to take title:
1) Sole owner
An unmarried person buying a house alone has the easiest
task. Title is taken as a sole owner in the individual’s name.
2) Joint tenancy
When a married or unmarried couple buy a house together,
things get more complicated. If they choose to take title with joint tenancy,
each has the right of survivorship. If the spouse or partner dies, full
ownership goes to the survivor. There are tax advantages for the survivor as
well, regardless of marital status.
3) Tenants-in-common
When two or more individuals buy a home together as
tenants-in-common, they are partners who may own unequal shares and who can
sell their shares of ownership independently.
Buyer's Tip: Decide before you attend the closing how
you wish to take title to the property. Consult an accountant, real estate
attorney, or estate planner to learn the advantages and disadvantages of each
type of ownership.
Recording the Deed
When you have title to your property, you own it. But the
deed is the written document used to transfer the title from seller to buyer.
It is only when the deed is recorded at the appropriate county office that your
ownership is official.
Here’s what happens. On the day of closing, buyer and seller
sign numerous documents and
the closing agent disburses the money. Then, depending on the time of day and
practices in your area, someone from the title company takes the deed and other
documents that must be recorded to the county office. This is usually done
first thing in the morning or at the end of the business day. A recording fee
is paid.
The county recorder assigns each document a number and
records the time of entry to the minute. A copy is made for the county file.
Your real estate transaction is now part of the public record.
The Keys, Please
Your sales and purchase contract spells out when you can
take possession of your new home. But ask your real estate or closing agent
whether you’ll get the keys to the house at your closing ceremony or after the
deed is recorded.
If you live where all parties gather with a closing attorney
to sign documents, you might leave the meeting with keys. But if your seller is
signing paperwork after you, it might be later in the day or even the next day
before you get the keys, garage door opener, and security alarm codes.
Related links:
Closing on a House for the Buyer;
Homeowner's Insurance for
the Buyer;
Explaining Escrow for Buyers
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