
Reviewed June 2026 by the FrontierAcre team
The part most owners worry about is the part that protects them. Title search, escrow, title insurance and the recorded deed exist so you do not have to take a buyer's word for anything.
A land closing is the process that legally transfers a parcel from you to a buyer and gets you paid. On a cash land sale there is no lender, so it is simpler than a house closing, but the protections are the same. The key thing to understand is that the protection sits in the process, not in trusting the other side.
You never have to trust a stranger with your land or your money. A licensed, independent title company sits in the middle as a neutral third party. It confirms you own the land free and clear, holds the buyer's funds in escrow, pays off anything the parcel owes, and only moves money once the deed is recorded in your county. The recorded deed is the public proof the sale happened on the agreed terms.
1. A written purchase agreement. The price, the parcel, who pays which closing items, and the timeline are all set in writing before anything moves. Nothing should be verbal.
2. Title search and examination. The title company traces the chain of ownership back through the county records and checks for liens, judgments, easements, back taxes and anything else attached to the parcel. This is what confirms you can convey clean title.
3. Clearing title. If the search turns up a lien, unpaid taxes or an old mortgage, those are resolved as part of closing, normally paid out of the sale proceeds rather than from your pocket up front.
4. The settlement statement. A line by line statement shows the sale price, any payoffs, the closing costs and exactly what you net. You see the math before you sign.
5. Signing. You sign the deed and the closing documents. For an out of state owner this is usually done remotely, with a mobile or online notary, so you do not have to travel.
6. Funding and disbursement. The buyer funds the escrow. The title company pays off any liens or back taxes, then sends you your net proceeds by check or by a wire that comes to you. Money flows to you, never from you.
7. Recording the deed. The signed deed is recorded at the county recorder or clerk. At that point the transfer is official and part of the public record.
On vacant land, total closing costs are usually modest, commonly around one to three percent of the price, covering items like the title search, title insurance, transfer tax and recording fees. Who pays each item is not fixed by law. It is set in the purchase agreement and varies by state and local custom. On a direct cash sale it is simply agreed up front and written into the contract, so there are no surprises at the table.
Because a cash sale has no lender, no loan underwriting and no appraisal contingency, the main clock is the title work. Most clean parcels close in about one to four weeks. A messy chain of title, heirs' property or unresolved liens can add time, which is exactly what the title company is there to sort out.
A title company, or in some states a closing attorney, is the neutral party that makes the sale safe for both sides. It runs the title search, issues title insurance that protects against old claims surfacing later, holds the funds in escrow, prepares the settlement statement, records the deed, and disburses the money. It is licensed and regulated, and it answers to neither the buyer nor the seller.
The full process, the safe route, and the terms.
What owners ask us most on this.
In most states a licensed title company or closing attorney runs the closing, and it is in your interest to use one. They confirm clean title, hold the funds in escrow, and record the deed, which protects you. Be wary of any buyer who wants to avoid a licensed, independent closing.
A cash land sale usually closes in about one to four weeks. With no lender involved, the main thing setting the pace is the title search and clearing anything the parcel owes. A tangled chain of title or unresolved liens can add time.
It is set in the purchase agreement and varies by state and local custom. Total closing costs on vacant land are usually modest, often around one to three percent of the price, covering title, transfer tax and recording. On a direct cash sale the split is agreed in writing before closing.
The title company holds the buyer's funds in escrow, settles any liens or back taxes from the proceeds, then pays you your net amount by check or by a wire that comes to you. You never wire money out to receive your proceeds.
Yes. Most land closings can be done remotely with a mobile notary or online notarization, and documents sent by mail or secure upload. Many owners sell parcels in states they no longer live in without ever traveling.
Answer a few quick questions, add a photo or plat if you have one, and we come back with a written, no obligation cash offer, usually within one working day.
A few quick steps. Parcel, size, location, a photo if you have one, then where to send the offer.