Closing Costs in Connecticut: Attorney + Highest US Property Tax

Connecticut has high closing costs (2-3% of home price). Connecticut is an attorney-required state. The state’s property tax effective rate is the highest in the US at 2.15%, driving the single largest closing-cost line item: prepaid property tax escrow.

Use the calculator below — your state has already been selected. Adjust the home price, down payment, and loan type for an estimate calibrated to Connecticut.

Home Closing Cost Calculator

State-by-state estimates. Updates as you type.

20%
Auto-fills using state effective rate. Override with your actual annual tax bill.

Estimated typical closing costs

$0

Range: $0 – $0

Total cash needed at closing

$0

Itemized breakdown

Line itemTypical
Total typical closing costs$0
Get a real rate quote in 60 seconds

Estimates only — your actual closing costs depend on lender, property, locality, and the specifics of your transaction. Not financial advice. Verify all figures with a licensed lender or attorney. See our methodology below.

CT closing cost structure

1. Mandatory attorney

CT is an attorney-required state. Buyer-side $1,200-$1,800.

2. Conveyance Tax — seller pays

CT state + municipal conveyance tax is 0.75-1.25% (seller-paid). Doesn't directly affect the buyer.

3. Highest property tax escrow in the US

CT effective property tax rate is 2.15% — the highest in the US. On a $400K home, $8,600/year. 3 months at closing: $2,150.

4. Title insurance and recording

CT title insurance is competitive, recording fees modest.

How to reduce CT closing costs

  1. Shop attorneys — CT closing attorneys vary $1,000-$2,000.
  2. Negotiate seller-paid closing costs.
  3. Get three Loan Estimates.
  4. Plan for high property tax escrows — 2.15% effective rate is brutal.
  5. Watch HOA fees in Fairfield County condos.

Frequently asked questions (Connecticut)

Does Connecticut require an attorney for closings?

Yes. CT is one of 15 attorney-required states. Buyer-side attorney fees $1,200-$1,800 typical.

Why are CT property tax escrows so high?

Connecticut has the highest effective property tax rate in the US at 2.15%. On a $400K home, annual tax is $8,600 — meaning the 3-month escrow at closing is $2,150.

Who pays the CT conveyance tax?

The seller pays Connecticut's conveyance tax (state 0.75% + municipal up to 1.25% on the seller's side). Buyers don't pay state transfer tax.

Closing costs on a $500K Fairfield County home?

Approximately $12,000-$17,000 for the buyer. Prepaid escrows ($2,700+), attorney ($1,500), title insurance ($2,700), lender fees ($3,750).

About these estimates

The calculator above uses Connecticut state averages for transfer taxes, recording fees, title insurance, attorney requirements, and property tax rates — sourced from the Connecticut Department of Revenue, the 2024 ClosingCorp survey, the Tax Foundation 2024 property tax rankings, and state-specific regulatory tariffs. Real closing costs depend on your specific lender, the property, and the county-level rules where you're buying. For a sanity check on the calculator's output, request a Loan Estimate from your lender (federal law requires one within 3 business days of mortgage application).

Related

Reviewed by the CalcCottage editorial team. Updated May 14, 2026. Estimates only — not financial advice.

Closing costs in other states