What’s included in closing costs for sellers?
What are sellers really paying at closing? The truth will surprise you — and it will affect your net proceeds.
Legal & Paperwork: What’s Included in Closing Costs for Sellers
Selling a home isn’t just staging and offers. The legal and paperwork side of closing costs for sellers can shave thousands off your sale price if you don’t plan. Below is a straight, no-fluff breakdown of every typical seller closing cost, how it shows up on the closing statement, and what you can control.
Common seller closing costs
- Realtor commission: Usually 4%–6% of the sale. This is often the biggest line item on the seller closing statement. Negotiate structure upfront.
- Legal / solicitor fees: Closing requires a lawyer or notary to handle title transfer, closing statements, and disbursements. Expect a flat fee plus disbursements.
- Mortgage payoff and discharge fees: Your remaining mortgage balance, plus a discharge or admin fee from the lender.
- Realtor-related administrative costs: MLS fees, marketing expenses, professional photos or staging credits if negotiated.
- Title insurance (if seller provides it): Not always required, but sometimes negotiated as part of sale.
- Closing adjustments and prorations: Property taxes, condo fees, utilities — prorated to closing date and shown on the closing statement.
- Outstanding liens or judgments: These must be cleared at closing and appear as payoffs on the statement.
- Payouts for repairs or agreed credits: Any credits agreed to in the purchase agreement (repair credits, appliance buyouts).
- Courier, registry, and transfer fees: Small but real — courier for documents, local registry fees, and municipal charges.
Legal paperwork lines to watch on the seller closing statement
- Gross proceeds: Sale price before deductions.
- Net proceeds: What you walk away with after all costs.
- Disbursements: Exact lawyer fees, title handling, and registration costs.
- Payoffs: Mortgage and lien payoffs must match lender statements.
Local rules and variation
Laws vary by province and state. In Ontario and many Canadian markets, buyers typically pay land transfer tax, while sellers handle legal fees and mortgage discharge. Always ask for a local closing estimate.
How to reduce seller closing costs (actionable steps)
- Get a written seller closing estimate from your agent and lawyer before listing. Revisit it after offers.
- Shop legal quotes — lawyers’ fees can vary. Ask for an itemized estimate.
- Pay off small liens before listing to avoid surprise payoffs.
- Negotiate commission structure if the market and service level allow.
- Review the final closing statement line-by-line with your lawyer and agent at least 48 hours before closing.
Final checklist before closing
- Verify mortgage payoff amount and discharge fee.
- Confirm prorations for taxes/condo fees.
- Check for outstanding permits or municipal charges.
- Have funds ready for any shortfall or last-minute credits.
Selling a home has predictable closing costs. The difference between leaving money on the table and maximizing net proceeds is planning and scrutiny of legal paperwork. Need a local, precise closing estimate that reflects Toronto/Ontario rules? Contact Tony Sousa — local realtor with the tools to get your closing statement clean and profitable.
Tony Sousa — tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca


















