Title Insurance in Real Estate Transactions

Title insurance protects property buyers and mortgage lenders against financial losses arising from defects in a property's ownership history that were not discovered — or not discoverable — during the title search and examination process. This page covers the two primary policy types, the mechanics of how coverage is issued and activated, the scenarios where title defects most commonly arise, and the boundaries that determine when a title insurance policy applies. Understanding title insurance is essential to navigating the real estate closing process without exposing buyers or lenders to unresolved ownership risks.


Definition and scope

Title insurance is a form of indemnity insurance that covers losses resulting from defects in the title to real property. Unlike most insurance products, which protect against future events, title insurance is retrospective — it protects against past events, specifically ownership defects that predate the issuance of the policy.

The two primary policy types are:

The American Land Title Association (ALTA) establishes standardized policy forms used across the United States. ALTA's Owner's Policy (2021 version) and ALTA Loan Policy (2021 version) define the baseline coverage terms recognized by lenders, underwriters, and regulators (ALTA Policy Forms).

State insurance commissioners regulate title insurance rates and underwriting practices at the state level. In states such as Texas and Florida, filed rates are mandatory — the Texas Department of Insurance, for example, sets promulgated rates that all title insurers must charge (Texas Department of Insurance, Title Insurance).


How it works

Title insurance is issued through a structured process that begins at the time a purchase agreement is executed and concludes at or shortly after closing.

  1. Title Order Placed — A title company or settlement agent receives an order, typically initiated by the parties to the transaction or the real estate escrow officer. The order identifies the property by legal description and the parties involved.

  2. Title Search Conducted — The title company examines public records — deeds, mortgages, liens, judgments, tax records, and court records — typically going back 40 to 60 years, depending on state standards.

  3. Title Commitment Issued — The title insurer issues a commitment (also called a binder) listing the conditions that must be met before the policy will be issued, along with Schedule A (proposed coverage) and Schedule B (exceptions to coverage).

  4. Title Defects Cleared — Any clouds on title — such as outstanding liens, unreleased mortgages, or gaps in the chain of ownership — must be resolved before closing. The real estate attorney role in transactions often includes negotiating and resolving these defects.

  5. Policy Issued at Closing — Upon satisfaction of all conditions, the title policy is issued. The lender's policy is effective as of the closing date; the owner's policy is typically dated as of the recording date.

  6. Claims Process — If a covered defect surfaces post-closing, the insured notifies the title insurer. The insurer then either defends the insured's title in court, negotiates a resolution, or pays the covered loss up to the policy limit.

The one-time premium for an owner's policy is typically calculated as a percentage of the purchase price and varies by state. Lender's policy premiums are calculated as a percentage of the loan amount.


Common scenarios

Title defects that give rise to claims fall into identifiable categories. The ALTA reports that title professionals resolve or insure against title defects in approximately one-third of all residential transactions before closing (ALTA, "Why Title Insurance").

Forgery and fraud — A prior deed in the chain of title was executed by someone forging the owner's signature. The forged deed and all subsequent conveyances may be voidable.

Undisclosed heirs — A prior owner died without a properly probated estate. An heir who was not identified during probate may assert a legal claim to the property years later.

Unpaid liens — Mechanic's liens, IRS tax liens, or state tax liens that were not identified during the title search attach to the property rather than the prior owner personally, potentially surviving a sale.

Boundary and survey disputes — An encroachment by a neighboring structure, or a recorded easement that was not identified in the search, can cloud the buyer's right to full use of the property.

Errors in public records — A clerical error in recording a deed or release — such as a misspelled name or an incorrect legal description — can interrupt the chain of title and create ambiguity about ownership.

RESPA implications — The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), administered by the CFPB, governs how title insurance is disclosed and how affiliated business arrangements between real estate professionals and title companies must be handled. Undisclosed referral arrangements violate RESPA's Section 8 prohibitions (RESPA, 12 U.S.C. § 2607). An overview of these restrictions is covered at RESPA kickback and fee-splitting rules.


Decision boundaries

Understanding what title insurance covers — and what it does not — determines whether additional protective measures are needed.

Covered vs. not covered

Covered (standard ALTA policy) Not covered (standard exclusions)
Forgery, fraud, or impersonation Defects the buyer created or knew about
Undisclosed liens or encumbrances Matters disclosed in Schedule B exceptions
Defects in prior conveyances Zoning ordinances and land use regulations
Lack of legal access to property Environmental hazards
Forged releases of mortgages Rights of parties in physical possession

Owner's Policy vs. Lender's Policy — The lender's policy protects only the lender's security interest and declines with the outstanding loan balance. When a loan is paid off, the lender's policy terminates. An owner's policy, by contrast, remains in effect for as long as the insured or their heirs retain an interest. A buyer who waives the owner's policy in a cash transaction retains no insurance protection if a title defect surfaces after closing.

Extended Coverage Endorsements — ALTA offers endorsements that expand coverage beyond the standard policy. ALTA Endorsement 9 (Restrictions, Encroachments, Minerals), for example, broadens coverage to include certain survey-related issues. Commercial transactions routinely require a suite of endorsements negotiated between the buyer, lender, and title insurer.

Cash Transactions — In a cash purchase, no lender's policy is required, and the owner's policy is optional. The decision to waive an owner's policy in a cash transaction exposes the buyer to the full cost of defending or losing title without indemnification.

Title Insurance vs. Title Examination — A title examination without insurance identifies known defects but provides no financial protection against defects that were not discoverable in the public record. Title insurance covers both discovered and undiscovered risks within policy terms.

Transactions involving real estate disclosure requirements and real estate purchase agreement components should address title insurance obligations explicitly in the contract to avoid ambiguity about which party bears the cost and what coverage standard applies.


References

📜 3 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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