What Title Insurance Actually Is
Title insurance is not like homeowners insurance. It's a one-time premium that covers a one-time event: someone coming out of the woodwork to claim they have a legal interest in your property.
Here's the scenario: You buy a house. Two years later, a contractor who worked on an addition five years ago (before you owned it) sues because the previous owner never paid them. They file a lien on the property. Now you're in a lawsuit defending your ownership. Or someone claims they have a deed to the property that predates yours. Or there's a boundary dispute based on an old survey.
Title insurance covers the legal cost of defending your ownership against these kinds of claims and pays the claim if the claimant wins. It's protecting you against defects in title—problems with ownership history that could affect your ability to own, sell, or refinance the property.
The premium is a one-time cost, usually paid at closing. There are no annual premiums, no deductibles (in most cases), and the policy lasts as long as you own the property. In California, title insurance is relatively affordable—typically $600-$2,000 depending on the purchase price and location.
Owner's Policy vs. Lender's Policy
There are two types of title insurance: a lender's policy (also called a loan policy) and an owner's policy.
Lender's Policy (Loan Policy)
If you're getting a mortgage, your lender requires a lender's policy. This is mandatory. The lender isn't doing this to protect you; they're protecting themselves. The lender wants assurance that if someone comes forward claiming they own the property, the property can actually be sold to pay off the loan.
The lender's policy covers the amount of your loan. If you borrowed $500,000, the lender's policy covers $500,000. The lender is the beneficiary—not you.
Cost: Usually $1,000-$2,000 for a typical California purchase. This is often negotiable, and in some markets, sellers pay it as a concession.
Owner's Policy (Owner's Title Policy)
An owner's policy protects you, the buyer. It covers the full purchase price of the property. If someone successfully claims an ownership interest in your home, the owner's policy pays for the legal defense and, if you lose, covers the financial loss (up to the purchase price).
Here's the key difference: the lender's policy disappears when you pay off your loan. Once the mortgage is gone, the lender's policy is worthless. The owner's policy stays with you forever—it protects you today and in perpetuity if an old claim surfaces.
Cost: Usually $200-$400 more than the lender's policy. So if a lender's policy is $1,200, an owner's policy might be $1,600. It's a small incremental cost for permanent protection.
Pro tip: The lender's policy is required; the owner's policy is optional. But the incremental cost is small. Most savvy buyers get both because the owner's policy provides long-term protection at minimal additional cost.
What Title Insurance Covers
Title insurance covers defects that existed before you bought the property but may not have been discovered:
- Liens: A contractor's lien, tax lien, or judgment lien filed against the property by the previous owner's creditor.
- Forged or fraudulent documents: If a previous deed was forged or the seller wasn't who they claimed to be.
- Undisclosed heirs or family members: Someone claiming they inherited an interest in the property from a previous owner.
- Unpaid debts affecting the property: Unpaid property taxes, HOA assessments, or other obligations that weren't disclosed.
- Boundary disputes: If a survey reveals the property line is different from what the deed says.
- Previous owner's marital issues: If a previous owner was in a divorce and the ex-spouse claims a community property interest.
- Encroachments: If a neighbor's fence or building encroaches on your property or yours encroaches on theirs.
- Missing or improper transfers: If a previous deed wasn't properly recorded or recorded incorrectly.
What Title Insurance Does NOT Cover
Title insurance has significant limitations. It doesn't cover:
- Problems that appear in the title search before you buy: If the title company finds a lien during their search, it's disclosed, and you can address it before closing. Title insurance doesn't cover problems you knew about.
- Survey issues that you already knew about: If a survey done at your request shows an encroachment and you close anyway, insurance won't cover it.
- Zoning violations or building code issues: If the house was built without permits or violates zoning, title insurance doesn't cover it. (This is what homeowners insurance or home inspection is for.)
- Issues discovered after you've already sold the property: Title insurance protects you while you own the property. If you sell and the buyer discovers a title issue, your owner's policy can help, but insurers sometimes deny claims involving past sales.
- Homeowners association issues: If the HOA assesses you for deferred maintenance or special assessments, title insurance doesn't cover it.
- Easements or utility rights that appear on the original title policy: These are exceptions noted on the policy itself, and insurance doesn't cover them.
How Title Insurance Actually Works: The Title Search and Underwriting
Before the title company issues a policy, they do two things: they search the title history and they underwrite the risk.
The Title Search
The title company searches public records going back 40+ years (sometimes longer, depending on California county rules). They look for:
- All deeds transferring ownership
- Mortgages and liens filed against the property
- Property tax records
- Court judgments or lawsuits involving the property
- HOA documents and assessments
- Boundary disputes or easements
The title search produces a preliminary title report showing everything they found. Any issues (unpaid liens, outstanding mortgages, easements) are listed as "exceptions" on the policy. These exceptions are things title insurance won't cover because they're already known.
The Underwriting Process
The title company assesses the risk. Are there any red flags? Has ownership changed hands recently multiple times (a sign of a "flip" or problem property)? Are there contractors' liens that weren't properly released? Are there family law judgments against the previous owner?
If the underwriter has concerns, they might require the previous owner to provide proof that liens have been paid, that property taxes are current, or that other issues have been resolved. This is called "clearing title."
In my experience as an escrow founder, the title company's underwriting catches 80-90% of real problems before they become your problem. The remaining 10-20% of title issues—the ones that slip through—are what title insurance actually protects against.
How Much Does Title Insurance Cost in California?
California has a standardized title insurance rate, set by the state. It's not negotiable by individual title companies (though some offer discounts in certain situations).
Approximate costs:
- $500,000 property: Lender's policy ~$1,000-$1,200; owner's policy ~$1,400-$1,600 (total)
- $750,000 property: Lender's policy ~$1,500-$1,700; owner's policy ~$1,900-$2,100 (total)
- $1,000,000 property: Lender's policy ~$2,000-$2,200; owner's policy ~$2,400-$2,600 (total)
These are ball-park figures; exact costs vary by county. The incremental cost to add an owner's policy is usually $200-$400, making it a relatively inexpensive add-on.
Watch out: Some title companies overcharge for services beyond title insurance—what they call "title and escrow services." Make sure you understand what you're paying for. Title insurance is the policy itself; escrow, recording fees, and other services should be itemized separately on your closing statement (the ALTA statement).
Who Pays for Title Insurance?
In California, it varies by market and negotiation:
- In many areas, the seller traditionally pays for the lender's policy.
- The buyer typically pays for an optional owner's policy (if they choose to buy one).
- In hot seller's markets, buyers often pay both as a sign of good faith.
- In buyer's markets, sellers might pay both as a concession.
This is negotiable. If you want the seller to pay for the owner's policy as a closing cost concession, you can ask for it. It's an unusual request and sellers might refuse, but it doesn't hurt to ask, especially in a buyer's market.
Do You Actually Need Title Insurance?
The lender's policy? Non-negotiable. You must have it if you're getting a mortgage.
The owner's policy? Technically optional, but I'd recommend it for almost everyone. Here's why:
The case for buying an owner's policy:
- The incremental cost is tiny (often $200-$400 for a property purchase).
- It protects you long-term, even after you've paid off your mortgage.
- Title defects can surface years or decades later (think: an old contractor's lien from 1998 suddenly being enforced, or an heir claiming rights to the property).
- If you ever sell, an owner's policy you bought protects you if a claim surfaces involving your period of ownership.
- It costs almost nothing relative to your home purchase price (0.02-0.05% of the purchase price).
The case against buying an owner's policy:
- The vast majority of properties never have a title claim. You might pay $300 and never use it.
- Title searches are so thorough now that problems are usually caught before closing.
- It doesn't cover future issues, only issues that existed before you bought.
My recommendation: Buy the owner's policy. It's cheap insurance against a small but catastrophic risk. In 35 years, I've seen title claims happen at least a dozen times—contractor's liens surfacing, boundary disputes, family law complications from previous owners. Each time, the owner's policy saved thousands in legal fees and potential loss.
Red Flags in Title Reports
When you get a preliminary title report, watch for:
- Recent judgment liens: If someone sued the previous owner and got a judgment, it might still attach to the property.
- Unpaid property taxes or HOA assessments: These typically get paid at closing from the seller's proceeds, but verify they're being cleared.
- Multiple ownership transfers in short time: If the property changed hands three times in two years, that can signal problems.
- Contractors' liens: If a contractor filed a lien for unpaid work, it needs to be cleared before closing.
- Easements or rights-of-way: Some easements (utilities, access rights) are normal, but unusual ones should be discussed.
Your title company will explain any issues in the preliminary report. Don't close without understanding and being comfortable with all exceptions.
Bottom line: The lender's policy is mandatory and non-negotiable. The owner's policy is optional but highly recommended—it's cheap insurance against title defects that surface later. A thorough title search by a competent title company catches most problems before closing, and title insurance covers the 10-20% that slip through. For $200-$400, it's worth having.