Should I change my mailing address before closing?
Should you change your mailing address before closing? Most sellers and buyers get this wrong — and it costs time, money, and stress.
Why your mailing address matters in the closing process
Your mailing address ties to title documents, lender notices, tax bills, insurance, and legal notices. If it’s wrong at closing, you risk missed documents, delayed possession, and even title issues. You want every party — title company, lender, municipality — to have the right contact.
When to change your mailing address (and when not to)
- If you’re moving out before closing: do not change the official mailing address for escrow/title until closing instructions are signed. Use mail forwarding and personal updates instead.
- If you’re closing then moving in: update your address with the lender, insurer, and utility providers after closing. Notify the title company of your new mailing address the day of closing.
- If you’re selling and moving permanently: keep the property address on file for closing, but set up mail forwarding immediately.

Actionable checklist to avoid closing mistakes
- Confirm the “notice” address: Ask your title or escrow officer which mailing address they will use for closing documents.
- Mail forwarding: Set USPS/Canada Post forwarding at least two weeks before closing. This catches any last-minute paperwork.
- Notify key parties: lender, title company, insurance, utility companies, homeowners association, and municipality.
- Keep proof: Take screenshots and save confirmation numbers for all address change requests.
- Day-of-closing update: Give the closing officer your final preferred mailing address and email address.
Common pitfalls and how to avoid them
- Changing address too early: If you switch the official address before closing, lenders or title companies might send documents to the wrong place. Keep the closing address as instructed until the transaction completes.
- Relying only on email: Paper notices still matter. Use mail forwarding plus email for redundancy.
- Forgetting tax bills and HOA notices: Update the municipality and HOA separate from your mortgage lender.
Quick rules that save deals
- Rule 1: Trust the title company’s instructions about the mailing address until closing is complete.
- Rule 2: Use forwarding for safety. Don’t rely on one method.
- Rule 3: Confirm contact details with all parties 48 hours before closing.
If you want a no-surprises closing, follow the checklist. Simple steps prevent delays and protect your money.
For expert, local guidance and a closing-day checklist tailored to your situation, contact Tony Sousa — the go-to local real estate expert. Reach him at tony@sousasells.ca or 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca for local closing resources and a free checklist.



















