Average Title Insurance in Ohio (2026 Data)

Last updated: 2026-04-04

Ohio title insurance benchmark

RangeLowTypicalHighFlag Above
Title Insurance$3.50/thousand$5.00/thousand$5.75/thousand$7.00/thousand

Based on Ohio closing cost data. Median home price: $250,000. 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 Ohio?

Negotiable

Title insurance rates in Ohio 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.

Ohio note

Ohio uses a bureau-filed rate system (OTIRB). Rates are tiered by coverage amount — the first $150K tranche is charged at $5.75/K, higher tranches step down. At the state median (~$250K), the blended effective rate is approximately $4.75–$5.25/K. Simultaneous issue discount applies when both owner's and lender's policies are issued together. The $5.75/K flagAbove threshold is appropriate given the first-tier rate.

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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)

Is your title insurance overpriced?

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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 Ohio benchmarks and the negotiation email is drafted for you.

Most buyers find $1,500–$3,000 in negotiable fees.

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