Average Title Insurance in New York (2026 Data)
Last updated: 2026-04-04
New York title insurance benchmark
| Range | Low | Typical | High | Flag Above |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Title Insurance | $3.09/thousand | $3.78/thousand | $4.69/thousand | $5.50/thousand |
Based on New York closing cost data. Median home price: $460,000. Rates shown per $1,000 of coverage or sale price.
What the title insurance covers
Title insurance protects against losses from defects in the property's title — liens, encumbrances, forgery, recording errors, or ownership disputes that existed before you bought the home. There are two policies: the owner's policy (protects you) and the lender's policy (protects the lender, required by your mortgage company).
Title insurance is a one-time premium paid at closing. Costs vary dramatically by state — from under $2 per thousand in regulated states like North Carolina to over $5 per thousand in states like New Jersey. In some states, rates are set by the state insurance department and are non-negotiable. In others, rates are filed by each company and can be shopped.
This fee appears in Section C — Services You Did Shop For of your Closing Disclosure.
Is the title insurance negotiable in New York?
Title insurance rates in New York are regulated by the state and are non-negotiable. All licensed insurers charge the same rate. However, you should still verify the rate matches the official schedule and confirm the simultaneous issue discount is applied.
New York note
NY is a filed-rate state (not file-and-use). Rates are set by TIRSA and approved by NY DFS — all licensed title insurers must use these rates. The $100K–$500K bracket ($3.78/K) covers most residential transactions outside NYC; the $500K–$1M bracket ($3.38/K) covers many NYC condos and co-ops. New York City has additional closing costs (transfer taxes, mansion tax, mortgage recording tax) that often dwarf title insurance costs.
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Red flags: signs your title insurance is inflated
Rate per thousand significantly exceeds your state's benchmark range
Lender's policy is priced separately at full premium (simultaneous issue discount not applied)
No reissue rate discount offered on a resale property
Agent charges title insurance plus a separate 'title search fee' above $300
Rate does not match the state-regulated schedule (in promulgated-rate states)
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Title Insurance questions
Do I need both owner's and lender's title insurance?
Your lender requires the lender's policy — that's non-negotiable. The owner's policy is technically optional but strongly recommended. It protects your equity if a title defect surfaces after closing. The simultaneous issue discount makes it relatively inexpensive to add.
Can I shop for title insurance?
In file-and-use states (CA, VA, CO, and others), yes — rates vary by company. In promulgated-rate states (TX, FL, OH, NM, NC), all companies charge the same rate, so shopping on price won't help, but you can still compare service quality.
What is a simultaneous issue discount?
When you purchase both the owner's and lender's title insurance policies at the same time, the lender's policy is issued at a steep discount — often $100 to $200 flat instead of the full premium. Always confirm this discount is applied on your Closing Disclosure.
Related pages
You have 3 days to review your Closing Disclosure.
Federal law gives you 72 hours to push back before you sign. Every fee is cross-referenced against New York benchmarks and the negotiation email is drafted for you.
Most buyers find $1,500–$3,000 in negotiable fees.
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