Recording Fee
The charge a county or local government collects to record a real estate document — such as a deed, mortgage, or assignment — in the public land records.
A recording fee is the charge a county recorder, register of deeds, or clerk's office collects to enter a real estate document into the public land records. Documents commonly recorded include deeds, mortgages and deeds of trust, assignments of mortgage, releases, and lien notices. Recording fees are usually modest and are charged per document or per page, sometimes with small additional surcharges. They are distinct from a transfer tax or documentary stamp tax, which are value-based taxes rather than administrative filing fees.
Why recording matters
Recording a document does two important things:
- Public notice (constructive notice): It tells the world that the document exists, protecting the recording party against later claims. A recorded mortgage puts subsequent buyers and lenders on notice of the lien.
- Lien priority: In most states, priority among competing liens is determined largely by recording order — first to record generally has priority. Recording promptly protects the holder's position.
Because of these effects, paying the recording fee and getting documents on record is not just a formality — it directly affects enforceability and value.
Recording fees in note transactions
For mortgage notes, recording fees show up at two points:
- At origination: When a seller-financed sale closes, the deed and the mortgage or deed of trust are recorded, each incurring a recording fee.
- When the note is sold: The buyer typically records an assignment of mortgage (or assignment of deed of trust) to put their ownership of the lien on record. This incurs a recording fee, usually small. Recording the assignment is what keeps the chain of title clean and the new holder's lien enforceable.
Unlike percentage-based transfer or documentary taxes, recording fees are typically a small, fixed administrative cost — making them one of the minor closing costs in a note sale rather than a major expense.
Why it matters when you sell a note
When you sell a note, expect the buyer to record an assignment of the security instrument and pay the recording fee. Ensuring prior assignments were properly recorded is also part of confirming a clean chain of title; unrecorded assignments in the history are a defect that can stall a sale or a future foreclosure. Keeping recorded documents organized in the collateral file and confirming each assignment was recorded streamlines due diligence and protects value.
Example
A note buyer purchases a $150,000 note secured by a deed of trust. To perfect its position, the buyer records an assignment of the deed of trust with the county, paying a recording fee of perhaps a few dozen dollars. That small fee secures public notice of the buyer's lien and locks in its priority — cheap insurance compared with the value of the note.
This entry is general information, not legal or tax advice. Recording fees, surcharges, and recording requirements vary by county and state; consult a qualified attorney or title professional.