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CLOSING SERVICES
We have the resources to
handle closings anywhere in the State of
Florida, day or night, seven days a week.
Please give us a call today to handle your
closing! Closing any real estate transaction
involves a considerable degree of skill and
training. Deeds must be properly prepared and
executed. Existing mortgages must be satisfied
or properly assumed. New mortgages must be prepared
and recorded. Title defects must be identified
and corrected. Money must be collected, properly
accounted for, and disbursed in accordance with
the intent of the parties. All of these chores,
and many more, are provided by most title insurance
companies in Florida as part of the normal process
of closing. Atlantic Coastal takes pride in
its many years of experience building lot to
multi-million dollar federal housing projects,
to a $35 million resort complex.
How
To Prepare For Your Closing So There Are No
Surprises
The buyer and the seller sign a purchase agreement
or sales contract. Usually, at this point, the
buyer is asked to make a small initial payment,
often called an “earnest money deposit,”
as evidence of intention to buy the property.
Then the buyer will apply to a lender for a
loan.
The sales agreement the buyer signed described
the property, states the purchase price, sets
forth the method of payment and may name the
date and place where the “closing”
or actual transfer of the property will occur.
This meeting or transaction is sometimes called
“settlement” or “passing of papers.”
A new deed will be prepared transferring ownership
of the property to the buyer. The lender will
require the buyer’s signature on a document,
usually a promissory note, as evidence that
they are personally responsible for repaying
the loan. Also, the buyer will sign a mortgage
on the property as security to the lender of
the loan. The mortgage gives the lender the
right to have the property sold if the buyer
fails to make the payments. Sometimes a “deed
of trust” or “security deed”
is used instead of a mortgage, but the legal
effect is virtually the same. Before the buyer
exchanges these papers, the property may be
surveyed, appraised and inspected for termites
or other structural problems, and the ownership
of title will be checked in county and court
records.
Although closing practices
vary from state to state and within some states,
at the closing of title, the seller should be
prepared with at least the following:
At the
closing of title, the purchaser should do at
least the following:
Many mortgage lenders insist
on mortgage title insurance. This is understandable.
Realtors® and attorneys tend to advise the
owners to request owner’s title insurance
at the same time. The added premium is certainly
minimal when both are ordered together.
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