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Closing costs in Kansas

What a buyer or seller pays at the closing table in Kansas — the real transfer-tax rate, recording fees, title-insurance method and attorney rules, plus a calculator that uses Kansas's actual rates.

Estimated — not yet source-verified.Estimated — not yet source-verified. This figure is a knowledge estimate we have not yet confirmed against the official source, so this page is not indexed. Treat it as a rough guide only and verify with the state revenue department or county recorder.

Transfer tax
none
customarily negotiable-paid
Recording fee (deed)
~$40
charged per page of the document
Title insurance
filed
~$4.00 / $1,000
Attorney at closing
Not required

How closing costs work in Kansas

The biggest closing-cost variable in Kansas is the real-estate transfer tax, which here is none and is customarily negotiable-paid. Kansas has no real-estate transfer tax; a mortgage registration fee was repealed.

On a $400,000 home, the state-level transfer tax works out to roughly $0 — there is no state transfer tax here, before any county or city add-ons. County recording fees are charged per page of the document and run around $40 for the deed.

For title insurance, Kansas title-insurance rates are filed with the state and broadly similar between companies, though you can sometimes shop. Kansas does not require an attorney at closing — a title or escrow company typically handles settlement, though you can hire an attorney if you want one. Lenders here typically charge $1,400–$3,200 in origination and processing fees, and 2 months of property-tax escrow is commonly collected at closing.

Statute: No transfer-tax statute.

Kansas closing cost calculator

Pre-set to Kansas. Adjust your price, down payment and loan type.

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Estimated closing costs

$8,439

≈ 2.11% of the home price · excludes your down payment

Cash to close

$88,439

incl. down payment

Line-by-line breakdown

Transfer tax (buyer share) $0
Deed & mortgage recording fees $40
Owner's title insurance $1,600
Lender's title insurance $896
Lender fees (origination, underwriting, processing) $2,300
Appraisal $550
Credit report & flood cert $70
Home inspection $450
Homeowners insurance (first year) $1,800
Property-tax escrow (~2 months) $733

Frequently asked questions

How much are closing costs in Kansas?

In Kansas, buyer closing costs typically run about 2%–5% of the purchase price. The state-specific pieces are the transfer tax (none, customarily negotiable-paid), county recording fees (charged per page of the document, around $40), and title insurance. Kansas does not require an attorney at closing. Use the calculator above for your price.

What is the transfer tax in Kansas?

Kansas's real-estate transfer tax is none and is customarily negotiable-paid. Kansas has no real-estate transfer tax; a mortgage registration fee was repealed.

Who pays closing costs in Kansas?

Both buyer and seller pay different items. The transfer tax in Kansas is customarily negotiable-paid. Buyers generally cover lender fees, the appraisal, lender's title insurance and prepaids; sellers generally cover the agent commission and, in most states, the bulk of the transfer tax. Everything is negotiable in the contract.

Do I need an attorney to close in Kansas?

No. Kansas does not require an attorney at closing; a title or escrow company typically handles settlement. You may still choose to hire one.

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