North Carolina has moderate closing costs (1.5-2.5% of home price). NC is an attorney-required state. The state excise tax of $1 per $500 (~0.2%) is paid by the seller in standard transactions. Property tax effective rate is 0.84% — slightly below the national average — keeping prepaid escrows modest.
Use the calculator below — your state has already been selected. Adjust the home price, down payment, and loan type for an estimate calibrated to North Carolina.
Home Closing Cost Calculator
State-by-state estimates. Updates as you type.
Estimated typical closing costs
$0
Range: $0 – $0
Total cash needed at closing
$0
Itemized breakdown
| Line item | Typical |
|---|---|
| Total typical closing costs | $0 |
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.
NC closing cost structure
1. Attorney required
NC requires a licensed attorney for residential real estate closings. Cost: $600-$1,200 typical.
2. Excise tax — seller pays
The state revenue stamps tax (excise tax) of $2 per $1,000 (0.2%) is by convention paid by the seller. Buyer doesn't pay state transfer tax.
3. Title insurance
NC title insurance is competitive market pricing — combined lender + owner premium ~0.45% of home value.
4. Property tax escrow
NC effective property tax rate is 0.84%. On a $350K home, that's $2,940/year — lender collects 3 months at closing.
How to reduce NC closing costs
- Shop attorneys. NC closing attorney fees range $600-$1,500 — get 2-3 quotes.
- Negotiate seller-paid closing costs. NC sellers often contribute 1-3% in slower markets.
- Shop title insurance. NC has competitive pricing — get 2-3 title quotes.
- Verify the excise tax split — convention is seller-paid but you can negotiate.
- Watch HOA / community fees — NC has many planned communities with transfer fees.
Frequently asked questions (North Carolina)
Does North Carolina require an attorney for closings?
Yes. NC is one of 15 attorney-required states. A licensed attorney handles residential real estate closings. Cost: $600-$1,200 typical.
Who pays the NC excise tax?
By convention, the seller pays the NC excise tax of $2 per $1,000 of home value (0.2%). Buyers can negotiate this in slower markets.
What's the average NC closing cost?
1.5-2.5% of home price for the buyer. On a $350K home, expect $5,500-$8,750 total.
Does NC have property tax escrow?
Yes — your lender will collect 3 months of property tax at closing as prepaid escrow. On a $350K NC home, that's about $735.
About these estimates
The calculator above uses North Carolina state averages for transfer taxes, recording fees, title insurance, attorney requirements, and property tax rates — sourced from the North Carolina 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
- Main Closing Cost Calculator (all 50 states)
- Closing Costs by State 2026 — 10 most expensive and 10 cheapest
- Rent vs Buy Calculator
- FHA vs Conventional Loan Calculator
- All CalcCottage calculators
Reviewed by the CalcCottage editorial team. Updated May 14, 2026. Estimates only — not financial advice.
Closing costs in other states
- Alabama
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California
- Colorado
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- District of Columbia
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New York
- North Dakota
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Vermont
- Virginia
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin
- Wyoming