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TermVerify Closing Cost Index · 2025 Edition

TermVerify Closing Cost Index: What Borrowers Actually Paid in 2025

Every mortgage lender in America is required by federal law to report what each closed loan cost. We analyzed all 3,781,100 first-lien loans on primary residences reported for 2025 — no surveys, no estimates, no lender partnerships.

By TermVerify Research Team · Published July 12, 2026 · Data: CFPB HMDA 2025 Modified LAR · Methodology

$6,731

2,706,510 loans

Median loan costs, purchase

$6,232

1,074,590 loans

Median loan costs, refinance

$10,955

Hawaii

Costliest state (purchase median)

$2,747

Iowa

Least costly state (purchase median)

Key findings

  1. The median purchase borrower paid $6,731 in loan costs (Loan Estimate Sections A+B+C) at a median rate of 6.49% — but the middle half of borrowers ranged from $4,416 to $10,653. That $6,237 spread between comparable loans is the case for shopping in one number.
  2. Geography moves the bill by $8,208. Hawaii borrowers paid a median $10,955; Iowa borrowers paid $2,747. Loan size explains much of it — costlier states have bigger loans, and points and title premiums scale with the amount.
  3. Refinances closed cheaper than purchases — median $6,232 vs. $6,731 — largely because purchases carry title and settlement work a refinance can streamline. Any benchmark that mixes the two overstates what a refinance should cost.
  4. Lender-set charges are the stable core of the bill: median origination charges were $1,890 on purchases — the number to anchor on when a Section A total runs into the thousands more.

Every state, ranked by purchase closing costs

Median total loan costs (LE Sections A+B+C) for 2025 first-lien purchase and refinance loans on site-built primary residences. Typical range is the 25th–75th percentile for purchases.

Median mortgage loan costs by state, 2025, purchase and refinance
#StatePurchase medianTypical rangeRefi medianMedian loan
1Hawaii$10,955$6,759$17,525$9,453$585,000
2California$9,428$6,308$15,335$5,903$585,000
3Puerto Rico$8,884$6,489$12,211$8,870$145,000
4Florida$8,798$5,536$12,944$8,056$345,000
5Idaho$8,763$5,502$13,375$7,841$385,000
6Nevada$8,648$5,015$13,182$7,664$415,000
7Texas$8,515$5,702$12,074$6,608$315,000
8Arizona$8,505$5,534$13,121$6,594$385,000
9Utah$8,426$4,800$13,524$7,160$445,000
10Georgia$8,090$5,243$11,795$7,338$335,000
11Maryland$7,842$5,212$12,317$7,437$405,000
12Alaska$7,798$4,521$11,952$7,230$375,000
13Oregon$7,785$5,095$12,462$7,402$415,000
14Washington$7,709$5,181$12,745$6,227$505,000
15Montana$7,540$5,027$11,533$6,842$365,000
16District of Columbia$7,531$5,819$11,390$6,256$565,000
17New Jersey$7,494$5,540$11,918$8,060$455,000
18Wyoming$7,393$4,573$10,504$6,785$315,000
19Delaware$7,378$5,143$11,545$8,132$345,000
20Virginia$6,907$4,718$11,168$6,603$385,000
21New Mexico$6,818$4,344$10,419$7,180$305,000
22South Carolina$6,783$4,481$10,174$6,354$295,000
23Tennessee$6,715$4,388$10,379$6,820$325,000
24Connecticut$6,548$4,980$10,396$7,388$355,000
25Pennsylvania$6,511$4,891$9,335$7,184$275,000
26New York$6,505$4,496$10,522$7,747$385,000
27Colorado$6,435$3,707$11,868$6,230$455,000
28Louisiana$6,303$4,441$8,908$6,133$245,000
29Illinois$6,273$4,341$8,003$3,939$275,000
30Mississippi$6,272$4,134$8,906$5,711$245,000
31Oklahoma$6,223$4,399$9,046$6,793$235,000
32Alabama$6,162$3,858$8,911$6,152$265,000
33North Dakota$5,776$3,811$8,400$5,728$285,000
34Rhode Island$5,767$4,393$11,614$6,814$415,000
35North Carolina$5,707$4,105$9,219$6,122$325,000
36South Dakota$5,637$3,565$8,075$5,695$295,000
37Minnesota$5,611$4,201$8,248$5,505$305,000
38Massachusetts$5,560$4,529$8,804$5,370$505,000
39West Virginia$5,437$3,815$8,332$5,652$235,000
40Ohio$5,258$3,888$8,006$5,518$245,000
41Vermont$5,156$4,065$7,570$5,175$325,000
42Arkansas$5,128$3,450$7,703$5,476$245,000
43Kentucky$4,958$3,467$7,981$5,097$245,000
44Maine$4,737$3,774$7,955$5,642$335,000
45New Hampshire$4,702$3,957$8,072$5,914$405,000
46Michigan$4,530$3,538$6,795$5,065$245,000
47Missouri$4,262$3,215$6,745$4,602$245,000
48Indiana$3,920$2,860$6,801$5,148$245,000
49Kansas$3,758$2,877$6,357$4,796$255,000
50Nebraska$3,511$2,736$6,327$4,443$265,000
51Wisconsin$3,446$2,656$5,219$3,087$275,000
52Iowa$2,747$2,019$4,886$3,280$215,000

What this data is — and is not

It is the federal Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) loan-level register for 2025, published by the CFPB and FFIEC on March 31, 2026: closed first-lien loans on site-built principal residences with reported loan costs, segmented purchase vs. refinance. "Total loan costs" is the HMDA field corresponding to Loan Estimate Sections A+B+C — lender and settlement charges, excluding taxes, prepaid interest, and escrow deposits.

It is not a rate sheet. These are last year's closed loans; rates have moved since and will keep moving. Cost structure moves far more slowly, which is why the cost columns are durable benchmarks while the rate column is context. It also is not a lender ranking — HMDA contains no per-fee breakdown, and no public dataset does; any site claiming per-fee "verified" national benchmarks is working from the same five HMDA cost fields shown here.

Full population filters, field definitions, suppression thresholds, and known limitations: termverify.com/methodology.

Cite or reuse this research

This analysis is derived entirely from public-domain federal data and may be cited with attribution:

TermVerify Closing Cost Index, 2025 Edition — analysis of CFPB HMDA 2025 Modified LAR. termverify.com/research/mortgage-closing-costs-2025

Journalists and researchers: for state extracts or questions about the methodology, contact support@eloiseai.net.

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