Timeshare Closing Companies in 2026: How They Work, What They Cost, and How to Pick One

TimeShare Deals editorial team·Updated May 2026·10 min read

Timeshare Closing Companies in 2026: How They Work, What They Cost, and How to Pick One

The closing company is the unsung hero of every timeshare resale transaction. They handle the legal mechanics — estoppel letter, ROFR submission, deed preparation, county recording, fund escrow — that turn a purchase agreement into actual ownership. Doing this without a licensed closing company is the single most expensive mistake a buyer or seller can make. Doing it with the wrong company is the second most expensive. This guide explains what closing companies do, what they cost, and how to pick one in 2026.

What a closing company actually does

The closing company is a licensed third party who:

  1. Holds the buyer’s funds in escrow until the transaction is complete
  2. Orders the estoppel letter from the developer or HOA
  3. Submits ROFR review to the developer where applicable
  4. Performs a title search at the county courthouse to confirm clean ownership
  5. Prepares the deed transfer document
  6. Coordinates signing by buyer and seller (mail-in, electronic, or in-person)
  7. Collects all fees: developer transfer fee, county recording fee, their own service fee
  8. Records the deed at the county clerk’s office
  9. Releases funds from escrow to the seller after recording
  10. Sends final ownership documents to the buyer

That’s 10 separate functions. Doing it without a professional means doing all 10 yourself, which is impossible to do correctly without expertise.

What they cost in 2026

ServiceTypical 2026 feeWho pays
Standard US deeded transfer$350–$650Buyer (typically)
Hawaii / Caribbean transfer$500–$900Buyer
Mexico cross-border transfer$700–$1,500Buyer
Title search (US)$50–$150Included in service fee usually
Estoppel letter fee (passes through to brand)$100–$300Buyer
Developer transfer fee (passes through)$150–$2,500 depending on brandBuyer
County recording fee$25–$100Buyer (included in service fee)
Wire transfer fees$30–$50Both sides typically share

Total all-in for a typical US deeded transaction: $500–$1,200 paid by the buyer at closing, of which $350–$650 is the closing company’s service fee and the rest is pass-through.

How to verify a closing company is legitimate

  1. State licensing: in Florida, the closing company must be licensed as a title company or run by a Florida-licensed attorney. Verify through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. Similar verification in other US states.
  2. BBB profile: a real closing company has a Better Business Bureau record — not perfect (everyone has occasional complaints), but the absence of a BBB record is concerning.
  3. Years in business: 5+ years is a strong signal. Brand-new closing companies are higher risk.
  4. Escrow account: the closing company must hold buyer funds in a regulated escrow account, not in an operating account. Ask which bank holds the escrow.
  5. Errors & Omissions insurance: legitimate closing companies carry E&O insurance protecting against mistakes. Ask for proof.
  6. References: ask for two recent transaction references — both buyer and seller, ideally.

4 red flags to walk away from

1. They want full payment before estoppel is received

Legitimate closing companies hold funds in escrow and don’t release until the developer’s estoppel arrives. If they want full payment upfront and promise to “take care of everything” without escrow, walk away.

2. They’re recommended exclusively by the seller

If a seller insists on using a specific closing company and pushes back when you suggest your own, the closing company is probably affiliated with the seller in a way that compromises buyer protection. Use an independent licensed firm.

3. They charge unusual fees in addition to the standard service

$350–$650 is the standard. If a closing company quotes $1,800 “processing” or $499 “listing fee” on top of the service charge, they’re running upfront-fee fraud disguised as a closing company.

4. No physical address, no phone, just email

Real closing companies have offices, phones, and verifiable physical locations. Email-only with no other contact information is a major red flag.

The full closing process step-by-step

DayActivity
Day 0Purchase agreement signed by buyer and seller
Day 1–3Closing company opens escrow, orders estoppel letter, requests ROFR review
Day 5–15Title search at county; preliminary check of seller’s ownership
Day 15–30Estoppel + ROFR waiver received from developer
Day 25–40Deed prepared based on estoppel info; signing coordinated
Day 35–50Deed signed (electronic notarization or mail-in); funds confirmed in escrow
Day 45–55Deed recorded at county clerk’s office
Day 55–65Funds released from escrow to seller; final docs sent to buyer

Total: 60–120 days for typical US transactions, depending on brand response time and any complications.

Cross-border closings (Mexico, Caribbean)

For international transactions (Mexico, Caribbean), the closing company coordinates with foreign jurisdictions:

  • Mexico: closing company works with Mexican notario público for fideicomiso transfers, or directly with the resort for right-to-use contracts
  • Caribbean: each island has its own legal mechanism (Aruba long-term lease, Bahamas leasehold, etc.) — closing companies specializing in Caribbean handle the local requirements
  • Cost: 30–100% premium over standard US closing
  • Time: 75–120 days typical

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FAQ

Can I use my own real-estate attorney?
Yes — for high-value transactions ($25,000+), a real-estate attorney is reasonable. For typical $1,500–$10,000 timeshare deals, a licensed timeshare closing company is faster and 70–80% cheaper. Both work.
Are some closing companies cheaper than others?
Yes — range $350–$650 for standard US transactions. Don’t pick purely on price; verify licensing first.
What if a closing company makes a mistake?
Their E&O insurance is supposed to cover it. The actual recovery depends on the specific error and the policy. Always verify E&O coverage before signing on.
How do I find a reputable closing company?
Major resale marketplaces (TUG, Redweek, our own platform) typically vet closing companies they recommend. Owner forums also share recommendations. Verify state licensing independently.
Should the buyer or seller pay closing?
Most US timeshare resales: buyer pays. Some negotiations split costs or have seller pay. Whatever is agreed, document in the purchase agreement.
How long does the deed recording take?
5–30 days at most US county clerks once the closing company submits. Florida counties (Orange, Osceola) are typically fast (5–10 days). Hawaii counties slower (15–25 days). Mexican notarial processes 25–45 days.
What if I’m the seller and don’t want to deal with closing?
The buyer’s closing company handles most steps for the seller too. You sign the deed (typically by mail with notary), provide a few documents, and receive funds via wire when recording is complete.
Can I close a timeshare sale entirely online?
Mostly yes — electronic notarization is now standard in most US states. Buyer and seller can complete almost everything remotely. Some states still require physical signatures on the deed itself but allow remote notarization.

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About this guideThe TimeShare Deals editorial team works with US-licensed timeshare closing companies. Pricing reflects 2026 industry rates. Last updated May 2026.