Clever Closings
Title Insurance

What you can't see can hurt you.

A house is the largest purchase most people make. Title insurance is the policy that defends that purchase against claims you'd never know to look for. Bought once, kept forever.

First, the basics

Title is your ownership right.

When you buy a home, your right to own it depends on the chain of title — every deed, mortgage, and transfer in the property's history being legally clean. A title search reviews public records to confirm that chain is intact and free of claims.

But searches can't catch everything. Forged signatures from decades ago, missing heirs, recording errors, or undisclosed liens can surface long after you close. Title insurance is what protects you when they do.

Title search
A standard part of every closing. We review public records to surface anything that could affect your ownership: prior liens, easements, judgments, and chain-of-title gaps.
CLEAR
Title clearance
The work that gets a deal to the closing table. We resolve what the search uncovered: paying off old mortgages, recording lien releases, fixing chain-of-title gaps, and securing easement consents.
Title insurance
Backstops the work. If a claim surfaces after closing — even years later — your insurer pays defense costs and covered losses up to policy limits.

Two policies, two purposes

Owner's vs lender's policy.

Most closings issue both. Each covers different parties for different reasons.

Owner's policy
Protects the buyer
One-time premium at closing. Coverage lasts for as long as you or your heirs own the property.
Defends your title if a claim is made against your ownership.
Pays legal costs plus financial loss up to policy limits.
Optional in most states. Strongly recommended in all of them.
Lender's policy
Protects the bank
Required by every lender when financing a home purchase.
Coverage decreases as you pay down the mortgage.
Ends when the loan is paid off or refinanced.
Does not protect you. The lender holds the policy on its own interest, not yours.

A lender's policy alone leaves you exposed. If a defect surfaces and reduces your equity, only an owner's policy reimburses you. Skipping it to save a few hundred dollars at closing is the most expensive coin flip in the transaction.

What we actually find

Real claims. Real protection.

A small sample of what title insurance defends against.

Hidden liens
Unpaid taxes, contractor liens, or HOA dues from a prior owner that surface after closing.
Forged or fraudulent deeds
Someone in the chain of title transferred ownership they did not legally have.
Missing heirs
A previously unknown heir surfaces and claims an interest in the property.
Boundary or survey errors
Encroachments, easements, or recorded errors that limit how you use the land.
Errors in public records
Mistakes by clerks or recorders that create gaps in the chain of title.
Legal defense
Even if a claim is meritless, your insurer pays to defend your title in court.

The cost

Paid once. Coverage forever.

Owner's title insurance is a one-time premium paid at closing. The policy stays in force for as long as you or your heirs hold title to the property.

~0.5%
of purchase price

A typical owner's policy runs around half a percent of the home's purchase price. Rates vary by state and are filed publicly. We'll quote you the exact number when your file opens.

Free Guide
Title Insurance: A Plain-English Guide
Owner vs. lender policy, what each covers, and the most common claims. PDF, one page.
Download

FAQ

Common questions.

Do I really need owner's title insurance?

Legally, no. Practically, yes. Lenders require their own policy because they understand the risk. That risk applies to you too — and only an owner's policy reimburses you if a defect surfaces. The premium is paid once. The protection is for as long as you own the home.

How is the premium calculated?

In most states, title insurance rates are filed publicly with the state department of insurance and don't vary much from one company to another. The premium is a percentage of the purchase price. We can quote you the exact number once we know the property and price.

What does it actually cover?

Defects in the chain of title — including forged signatures, missing heirs, recording errors, undisclosed liens, boundary disputes, and fraud. Standard policies cover the legal defense costs as well as financial loss up to the policy amount.

How long does coverage last?

An owner's policy lasts as long as you or your heirs hold title to the property. There are no monthly or annual premiums.

Will I get a refund if I sell or refinance?

The original owner's policy stays in force as long as you own the property. If you refinance, you'll typically pay for a new lender's policy (often at a discount). The original owner's policy continues to protect you.

Ready to close confidently?

Open an order in under two minutes. Or run the numbers on a closing before anyone signs.