person putting coin in a piggy bank How Much Does It Cost to Sell a House
Home Selling8 min read

How Much Does It Cost to Sell a House in Florida? 2026 Seller Closing Cost Guide

By Releve Real Estate··Updated May 31, 2026

Selling a Florida home in 2026 is not just about the contract price. The number that matters most is your net proceeds: what you actually keep after commissions, closing costs, mortgage payoff, taxes, repairs, concessions, and moving expenses.

How much does it cost to sell a house in Florida? Most Florida home sellers should budget about 7% to 10% of the sale price for total selling costs, depending on commission strategy, title and closing fees, repairs, seller concessions, HOA costs, and moving expenses. On a $450,000 home, that can mean roughly $31,500 to $45,000 before your mortgage payoff.

The exact number varies by county, contract terms, property condition, and whether the seller offers buyer-agent compensation or closing cost credits. But the framework below will help you estimate the big line items before you list.

Florida Seller Costs at a Glance

Cost Typical Range Who Usually Pays in Florida?
Real estate commission Negotiable, often around 5% to 6% total when both sides are included Seller, buyer, or both depending on the negotiated contract
Florida documentary stamp tax on deed $0.70 per $100 of sale price outside Miami-Dade Usually seller
Owner’s title insurance policy State-regulated rate, starting at $5.75 per $1,000 on the first $100,000 Custom varies, but seller commonly pays in many Florida counties
Title, settlement, recording, and lien search fees Often a few hundred to over $1,000 Negotiable by contract and local custom
Property tax prorations Depends on annual tax bill and closing date Seller credits buyer for seller’s ownership period
Seller concessions Often 0% to 3% of price when used Seller, if negotiated
Repairs, prep, staging, and moving Highly variable Seller

Example: Estimated Cost to Sell a $450,000 Florida Home

Here is a practical seller-net example for a typical Tampa Bay-area home. These are estimates, not a closing statement.

Line Item Example Estimate
Sale price $450,000
5.5% total commission or negotiated broker compensation $24,750
Florida doc stamps on deed outside Miami-Dade $3,150
Owner’s title insurance estimate About $2,325 before endorsements and possible reissue credits
Title, settlement, lien search, HOA, recording, and courier-type fees $800 to $1,500+
Property tax proration Depends on annual tax bill and closing date
Seller credit or repair negotiation 0% to 3%+ if negotiated

Before mortgage payoff, a seller in this example could easily see $31,000 to $40,000+ in transaction costs, and more if the property needs repairs, the buyer negotiates credits, or the seller contributes toward buyer closing costs.

1. Real Estate Commission Is Usually the Biggest Cost

Commission is still the largest selling expense for most homeowners, but the way people talk about it changed after the 2024 NAR settlement practice changes.

Here is the plain-English version for 2026:

  • Real estate commissions are negotiable. They are not set by law.
  • Buyer-agent compensation is no longer displayed as an offer of compensation in the MLS. Sellers can still choose to offer compensation or concessions, but the structure is negotiated outside the old MLS field.
  • Buyers working with an MLS participant must generally sign a written buyer agreement before touring homes. That agreement explains how the buyer’s representative may be paid.
  • Sellers should think in terms of net proceeds, not just commission percentage. A smart compensation strategy can affect buyer demand, offer strength, and days on market.

For many transactions, sellers still evaluate a total broker compensation range around 5% to 6%, but every listing is different. Luxury homes, high-demand properties, flat-fee MLS strategies, limited-service arrangements, and off-market sales can all change the math.

2. Florida Documentary Stamp Tax on the Deed

Florida charges a documentary stamp tax when real property changes hands. For most Florida counties, the rate is $0.70 per $100 of the sale price, or $7 per $1,000. The Florida Department of Revenue notes that deeds and other documents transferring an interest in Florida real property are subject to this tax.

Example:

  • $300,000 sale price x 0.007 = $2,100
  • $450,000 sale price x 0.007 = $3,150
  • $700,000 sale price x 0.007 = $4,900

Miami-Dade has a different structure, so sellers there should confirm the exact calculation with their title company or closing attorney.

3. Owner’s Title Insurance in Florida

Title insurance protects against covered ownership defects, liens, and title issues. In Florida, title insurance rates are regulated, so the base risk premium is not simply whatever a title company feels like charging.

Under Florida’s title insurance rate schedule, the owner’s policy rate starts at $5.75 per $1,000 of coverage on the first $100,000, then steps down at higher price tiers. On a $450,000 sale, a rough owner’s title policy estimate is about:

  • $100,000 x $5.75 per $1,000 = $575
  • $350,000 x $5.00 per $1,000 = $1,750
  • Estimated base premium = $2,325

Who pays can vary by county and contract. In many Tampa Bay transactions, sellers commonly pay for the owner’s title policy, but the purchase contract controls. Ask your agent and title company what is customary for your county and what is negotiable in your specific deal.

4. Title Company, Settlement, HOA, and Recording Fees

Beyond title insurance, sellers may see several smaller line items on the closing statement:

  • settlement or closing fee;
  • title search and municipal lien search;
  • recording fees for documents such as mortgage satisfaction;
  • HOA estoppel fees or condo association fees;
  • wire, courier, notary, or document preparation fees.

Individually, these may look small. Together, they can add up quickly, especially in HOA and condo transactions.

5. Property Tax Prorations

Florida property taxes are typically paid in arrears, meaning the tax bill covers the year that has already been lived in. At closing, the seller usually credits the buyer for the portion of the year the seller owned the property.

Example: if your annual tax bill is $6,000 and you close around midyear, the seller-side tax proration may be roughly half the annual bill, adjusted to the exact closing date and local tax calendar.

This is not a penalty. It is simply a fair split of the year, so the buyer is not stuck paying taxes for months when the seller owned the home.

6. Seller Concessions and Buyer Credits

A seller concession is money the seller agrees to contribute toward the buyer’s closing costs, prepaid expenses, rate buydown, or other allowed costs. In a competitive seller’s market, concessions may be rare. In a balanced or buyer-friendly market, they can help a deal close.

Common concession structures include:

  • closing cost credit: a set dollar amount or percentage toward buyer costs;
  • rate buydown: seller funds help reduce the buyer’s mortgage payment for a period of time;
  • repair credit: negotiated after inspection instead of the seller completing repairs before closing;
  • buyer-agent compensation credit: negotiated in the offer or related contract documents, where allowed.

The right move depends on your net, the buyer pool, the property’s condition, and lender rules. A $10,000 seller credit can sometimes produce a stronger result than a $10,000 price cut because it solves the buyer’s cash-to-close problem.

7. Repairs, Pre-Listing Prep, and Staging

Not every seller needs a full renovation before listing. In fact, over-improving right before a sale can waste money. But most homes benefit from a targeted prep plan.

High-impact seller prep often includes:

  • deep cleaning and decluttering;
  • landscaping cleanup and pressure washing;
  • fresh neutral paint where needed;
  • minor handyman repairs;
  • light staging or furniture editing;
  • pre-listing inspection for older homes or homes with known issues.

The goal is not perfection. The goal is reducing buyer objections, improving photography, and preventing inspection surprises from becoming expensive negotiations.

8. Mortgage Payoff Is Not a Closing Cost, But It Changes Your Net

Your mortgage payoff is not technically a selling cost, but it is usually the biggest deduction from your proceeds. Your title company will request a payoff from your lender, including principal, interest through the payoff date, and any required fees.

Seller net formula:

Sale price – mortgage payoff – selling costs – credits/concessions = estimated net proceeds.

This is why two sellers can sell for the same price and walk away with very different amounts.

How to Reduce the Cost of Selling a House

You do not control every fee, but you do control your strategy. To protect your net:

  • Get a seller net sheet before listing. Do not wait until you are under contract to understand the math.
  • Price correctly from the start. Overpricing can lead to price cuts, longer carrying costs, and weaker negotiating leverage.
  • Fix the right things, not everything. Focus on repairs buyers will notice or lenders may care about.
  • Compare offer net, not just offer price. A lower offer with fewer credits can beat a higher offer with heavy concessions.
  • Discuss compensation strategy up front. After the NAR changes, sellers need a clear plan for buyer-agent compensation requests and buyer closing cost credits.
  • Ask about title reissue credits. If you have a prior owner’s title policy and qualify, it may reduce the title premium.

FAQ: Cost to Sell a House in Florida

What is the average cost to sell a house in Florida?

Most sellers should budget about 7% to 10% of the sale price for total selling costs before mortgage payoff. The exact amount depends on commission, title costs, doc stamps, property taxes, repairs, concessions, HOA fees, and moving expenses.

Who pays closing costs when selling a house in Florida?

The seller commonly pays real estate commission, deed documentary stamp tax, property tax prorations, mortgage payoff costs, and, in many counties, the owner’s title insurance policy. The contract controls, so these items can be negotiated.

How much are Florida doc stamps for sellers?

Outside Miami-Dade County, Florida documentary stamp tax on deeds is generally $0.70 per $100 of the sale price. That equals $7 per $1,000.

Do sellers still pay buyer-agent commission after the NAR settlement?

Sometimes, but it is negotiated. Offers of compensation are no longer made through the MLS compensation field, and buyers generally sign written buyer agreements before touring homes. Sellers can still choose to offer compensation or concessions when it supports their sale strategy.

How much will I net from selling my house?

Your net depends on the sale price, mortgage payoff, commission, closing costs, tax prorations, repair credits, and moving expenses. The cleanest way to know is to request a seller net sheet using your home’s likely price range and your actual loan payoff.

Bottom Line

The cost to sell a house in Florida is usually much higher than one line item. Commission is the largest expense for many sellers, but doc stamps, owner’s title insurance, tax prorations, HOA fees, repairs, concessions, and moving costs all affect your real take-home number.

If you are thinking about selling in Tampa Bay, Relevé Real Estate can prepare a customized seller net sheet before you list. We will help you compare pricing scenarios, commission and concession strategies, likely closing costs, and the improvements most likely to protect your bottom line.

Request a free home valuation and seller net estimate from Relevé Real Estate.

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