NYC vs Miami Closing Costs

NYC vs. Miami Closing Costs: A Complete Comparison

NYC buyers can save $50,000 to $150,000+ in closing costs by purchasing in Miami instead of Manhattan. No mansion tax, no mortgage recording tax, and no state income tax — here is the full breakdown.

Updated March 2026
At a Glance

NYC vs. Miami: Closing Costs at a Glance

How do NYC and Miami closing costs compare? Here is a quick side-by-side overview of what buyers typically pay in each market.

New York City
Buyer Closing Costs
Condos, financed, over $1M
1.5–5%
of purchase price
Miami
Buyer Closing Costs
Condos, financed, all price points
1.2–3.5%
of purchase price
Your Savings
Miami Advantage
On luxury purchases ($2M+)
$50K–$150K+
estimated closing cost savings
Why the difference? NYC imposes a progressive mansion tax (1%–3.9%) and a mortgage recording tax (1.8%–1.925%) that have no equivalent in Miami. These two taxes alone account for the majority of the closing cost gap between the two markets. The savings grow with purchase price — the higher the price, the greater the advantage in Miami.
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NYC & Miami — Accurate to 2026 Tax Rates

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Loan-to-Value 80%
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Every Cost Category

NYC vs. Miami Closing Costs: Complete Side-by-Side Comparison

A comprehensive breakdown of every buyer closing cost category, showing what you pay in each market and where the key differences lie.

Cost Category NYC (Condo, Financed) Miami (Condo, Financed)
Mansion Tax 1% – 3.9% (9 brackets, $1M+) None
Mortgage Recording Tax 1.8% (under $500K loan) / 1.925% ($500K+) None
Transfer Tax (Buyer) Seller pays on resale; buyer pays on new dev: NYC 1%/1.425% + NYS 0.4%/0.65% Seller pays doc stamps (1.05%) on resale; buyer may pay on new dev
Title Insurance Owner's ~0.45% + Lender's ~0.35% of loan Owner's ~0.5% + Lender's ~0.35% of loan
Attorney Fees $3,000 – $5,000 (required in NY) $2,000 – $4,000 (optional but recommended)
Intangible Tax None 0.2% of loan amount
Doc Stamps on Note None $0.35 per $100 of loan (0.35%)
Loan Origination ~0.5% of loan (varies by lender) ~0.5% of loan (varies by lender)
Building / HOA Fees $500 – $2,500 $500 – $1,500
State Income Tax Up to 10.9% (NY State + NYC) 0% (no state income tax)
Typical Buyer Total (Resale, Financed, $2M+) 3% – 5% 1.2% – 2.5%

Where NYC Costs More

The two biggest cost drivers that make NYC closing costs significantly higher than Miami are the mansion tax and the mortgage recording tax. Together, these can add 3%–5.8% to the purchase price on a financed condo above $1 million. Miami has neither tax.

Where Miami Costs More

Miami has two buyer costs that NYC does not: the intangible tax (0.2% of the loan amount) and documentary stamps on the note (0.35% of the loan amount). Combined, these total 0.55% of the loan amount — a fraction of NYC’s mortgage recording tax at 1.8%–1.925%. Miami’s title insurance rates are also marginally higher than NYC’s, though the difference is minimal.

The mansion tax is the game-changer. On a $5 million purchase, the NYC mansion tax alone costs $112,500 (2.25%). On a $10 million purchase, it costs $325,000 (3.25%). Miami has no equivalent tax at any price point. This single tax is responsible for the bulk of the savings when comparing NYC vs. Miami closing costs.

NYC Mansion Tax Rates vs. Miami

NYC’s mansion tax uses a progressive rate structure with 9 brackets. Miami and the state of Florida impose no mansion tax whatsoever. Here is the full NYC mansion tax schedule for reference:

Purchase Price NYC Mansion Tax Rate Tax Amount on Max Price Miami Equivalent
Under $1,000,000 0% $0 $0
$1,000,000 – $1,999,999 1.00% $10,000 – $19,999 $0
$2,000,000 – $2,999,999 1.25% $25,000 – $37,499 $0
$3,000,000 – $4,999,999 1.50% $45,000 – $74,999 $0
$5,000,000 – $9,999,999 2.25% $112,500 – $224,999 $0
$10,000,000 – $14,999,999 3.25% $325,000 – $487,499 $0
$15,000,000 – $19,999,999 3.50% $525,000 – $699,999 $0
$20,000,000 – $24,999,999 3.75% $750,000 – $937,499 $0
$25,000,000+ 3.90% $975,000+ $0
Real-World Scenarios

NYC vs. Miami: Side-by-Side Cost Examples

Three realistic purchase scenarios comparing total buyer closing costs in each market. Every dollar amount is calculated using 2026 rates.

Scenario 1: $2,000,000 Condo Resale — 80% Financing

New York City

$2M Resale Condo (NYC)

Mansion Tax (1.25%)$25,000
Mortgage Recording Tax (1.925%)$30,800
Title Insurance (Owner's + Lender's)$14,600
Attorney Fees$4,000
Bank / Lender Fees$3,000
Building & Application Fees$2,500
Estimated Total~$79,900 (4.0%)
Miami

$2M Resale Condo (Miami)

Documentary Stamp Tax$0 (seller pays)
Title Insurance (Owner's + Lender's)$15,600
Intangible Tax (0.2%)$3,200
Doc Stamps on Note (0.35%)$5,600
Attorney Fees$2,500
HOA & Transfer Fees$1,500
Recording & Misc$500
Estimated Total~$28,900 (1.4%)
Savings vs. NYC~$51,000

Scenario 2: $5,000,000 New Development Condo — 75% Financing

New York City

$5M New Dev Condo (NYC)

Mansion Tax (2.25%)$112,500
NYC Transfer Tax (1.425%)$71,250
NYS Transfer Tax (0.4%)$20,000
Mortgage Recording Tax (1.925%)$72,188
Title Insurance (Owner's + Lender's)$35,625
Attorney Fees$5,000
Bank / Lender Fees$4,000
Building Fees + Working Capital$8,000
Estimated Total~$328,563 (6.6%)
Miami

$5M New Dev Condo (Miami)

Documentary Stamp Tax (1.05%)$52,500
Developer Fee (~1.5%)$75,000
Title Insurance (Owner's + Lender's)$38,125
Intangible Tax (0.2%)$7,500
Doc Stamps on Note (0.35%)$13,125
Loan Origination (~0.5%)$18,750
Attorney Fees$4,000
HOA + Working Capital$5,000
Recording & Misc$500
Estimated Total~$214,500 (4.3%)
Savings vs. NYC~$114,063

Scenario 3: $10,000,000 Luxury Condo — Cash Purchase

New York City

$10M Resale Condo (NYC, Cash)

Mansion Tax (3.25%)$325,000
Mortgage Recording Tax$0 (cash)
Title Insurance (Owner's)$45,000
Attorney Fees$5,000
Building & Application Fees$2,500
Estimated Total~$377,500 (3.8%)
Miami

$10M Resale Condo (Miami, Cash)

Documentary Stamp Tax$0 (seller pays)
Title Insurance (Owner's)$50,000
Attorney Fees$4,000
HOA & Transfer Fees$1,500
Recording & Misc$500
Estimated Total~$56,000 (0.6%)
Savings vs. NYC~$321,500
$51,000 – $321,500+ in Savings
Estimated buyer closing cost advantage of purchasing in Miami vs. NYC across typical luxury price points
Beyond Closing Costs

Why NYC Buyers Are Moving to Miami

Lower closing costs are just the beginning. NYC buyers relocating to Miami benefit from a comprehensive financial advantage that extends well beyond the closing table.

No State Income Tax

Florida has no state income tax, compared to New York’s combined state and city income tax of up to 10.9%. For a household earning $1 million annually, this represents $100,000+ in annual savings — a benefit that compounds year after year and far exceeds the one-time closing cost difference.

No Mansion Tax

Miami has no mansion tax at any price point. NYC’s mansion tax ranges from 1% to 3.9%, costing buyers $10,000 on a $1M purchase up to $975,000+ on a $25M purchase. On luxury properties, this single tax often represents the largest individual closing cost for NYC buyers.

No Mortgage Recording Tax

NYC charges 1.8%–1.925% on the loan amount when recording a mortgage. On a $4M mortgage, that is $77,000 in tax. Florida has no mortgage recording tax — buyers pay only the intangible tax (0.2%) and doc stamps on the note (0.35%), totaling 0.55% of the loan, or $22,000 on that same $4M loan.

Lower Overall Cost of Entry

When you combine the absence of mansion tax, lower mortgage-related taxes, and competitive title insurance rates, Miami buyers save 2%–4% of the purchase price in closing costs alone. On a $5M property, that’s $100,000–$200,000 that stays in your pocket — or goes toward a higher-value property.

The financial advantages of buying in Miami vs. NYC extend far beyond closing costs. Florida’s tax-friendly environment, combined with a thriving luxury real estate market, world-class new development inventory, and an increasingly robust cultural and business infrastructure, has made it the top destination for New York transplants. According to IRS migration data, New York has lost more residents to Florida than to any other state for each of the past five years.

NYC Co-op Consideration

NYC Co-ops: Lower Closing Costs, but Miami Still Wins

NYC co-ops have lower closing costs than NYC condos because they are exempt from mortgage recording tax and title insurance. But how do co-op closing costs compare to Miami?

It is true that NYC co-op purchases have a closing cost advantage over NYC condos. Because co-op transactions involve the purchase of corporate shares rather than real property, buyers are exempt from mortgage recording tax (saving 1.8%–1.925% of the loan amount) and do not require title insurance (saving $5,000–$15,000+). A financed co-op purchase over $1M typically costs 2%–3% in closing costs, compared to 3%–5% for an equivalent condo.

However, even with these savings, Miami closing costs are still lower in most scenarios — and here is why:

Cost Component NYC Co-op ($2M, 80% LTV) Miami Condo ($2M, 80% LTV)
Mansion Tax $25,000 (1.25%) $0
Mortgage Recording Tax $0 (exempt) $0 (N/A)
Title Insurance $0 (not applicable) $15,600
Intangible Tax + Doc Stamps $0 $8,800
Attorney Fees $3,500 $2,500
Application / HOA Fees $1,500 $1,500
Misc / Recording $2,500 $500
Estimated Total ~$32,500 (1.6%) ~$28,900 (1.4%)

At the $2M price point, the gap between a NYC co-op and a Miami condo is modest (~$3,600). But the difference grows dramatically at higher price points because the NYC mansion tax increases progressively. At $5M, the mansion tax alone is $112,500 — a cost that exists for both NYC co-ops and condos but has no equivalent in Miami.

Beyond closing costs: Co-ops come with significant lifestyle restrictions — stricter board approval, limited subletting, higher financial reserve requirements, and restrictions on LLC ownership. For buyers who value flexibility, a Miami condo offers lower closing costs and fewer restrictions. Read our full co-op vs. condo comparison.
Frequently Asked Questions

NYC vs. Miami Closing Costs FAQ

Expert answers to the most common questions buyers ask when comparing closing costs between New York City and Miami.

How much cheaper are Miami closing costs vs NYC?

Miami closing costs for buyers typically range from 1.2%–3.5% of the purchase price, while NYC closing costs range from 1.5%–5% or higher. On a $2 million condo purchase with financing, a NYC buyer can expect to pay approximately $75,000–$85,000 in closing costs, while a Miami buyer would pay approximately $28,000–$40,000 — a savings of roughly $35,000–$55,000. The savings grow significantly at higher price points because NYC’s mansion tax (1%–3.9%) does not exist in Miami, and NYC’s mortgage recording tax (1.8%–1.925%) has no equivalent in Florida.

Does Miami have a mansion tax?

No. Miami and the state of Florida do not impose a mansion tax or any equivalent progressive transfer tax on buyers. In contrast, NYC charges a mansion tax ranging from 1% to 3.9% on all residential purchases of $1 million or more. This single tax alone can cost a NYC buyer $10,000 on a $1M purchase, $25,000 on a $2M purchase, $112,500 on a $5M purchase, or $325,000 on a $10M purchase. The absence of a mansion tax is one of the most significant cost advantages of buying in Miami.

Who pays closing costs in Miami vs NYC?

In both markets, closing costs are split between buyer and seller, but the allocation differs. In NYC, buyers pay mansion tax, mortgage recording tax, title insurance, and attorney fees (totaling 1.5%–5%+), while sellers pay transfer taxes and commission. In Miami resale transactions, sellers typically pay the documentary stamp tax (1.05%) and commission, while buyers pay title insurance, intangible tax (0.2%), doc stamps on the note (0.35%), and attorney fees. In Miami new development purchases, the buyer often pays the documentary stamp tax and a developer fee, which increases buyer costs to 2.5%–3.5%.

Is title insurance required in both cities?

Title insurance is standard in both NYC and Miami condo purchases. In NYC, the buyer typically pays for both the owner’s title policy and the lender’s policy (if financing). In Miami-Dade County, the seller customarily pays for the owner’s title policy on resale transactions, though the buyer pays for the lender’s policy. In new development purchases in both markets, the buyer typically pays for title insurance. Title insurance rates are regulated by each state and are generally comparable, though NYC rates tend to be slightly higher. Note that NYC co-op purchases do not require title insurance since they involve corporate shares, not real property.

What is FIRPTA and does it affect foreign buyers?

FIRPTA (Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act) is a federal law that applies equally in both NYC and Miami. It requires that when a foreign person sells U.S. real property, the buyer must withhold 15% of the gross sale price and remit it to the IRS. FIRPTA does not add to the buyer’s closing costs at the time of purchase — it applies when the foreign owner eventually sells. However, foreign buyers in both markets should budget for additional legal and tax structuring costs ($5,000–$15,000) and should be aware that FIRPTA withholding will apply upon resale. The withholding is refundable after filing a U.S. tax return.

Can I use a CEMA in NYC to reduce costs?

Yes. A CEMA (Consolidation, Extension, and Modification Agreement) allows NYC condo buyers to “assume” the seller’s existing mortgage balance for calculating the mortgage recording tax. Instead of paying 1.925% on the full loan amount, you pay only on the difference between your new loan and the seller’s remaining balance. For example, on a $1.5M mortgage where the seller has a $1M existing loan, the savings are approximately $19,250. However, CEMA is only available for condos (not co-ops), takes 60–90 days, and requires lender cooperation. Even with a CEMA, NYC closing costs still typically exceed Miami closing costs because the mansion tax — the largest single cost — cannot be reduced.

Are there any closing costs unique to Miami?

Yes. Miami has two buyer closing costs that NYC does not: the intangible tax (0.2% of the loan amount) and documentary stamps on the note ($0.35 per $100 of the loan amount, or 0.35%). These are taxes imposed by the state of Florida on new mortgages. However, these costs are significantly less than NYC’s mortgage recording tax (1.8%–1.925%). For example, on a $1.6M mortgage, Miami’s combined intangible tax and doc stamps on note total $8,800, while NYC’s mortgage recording tax would be $30,800 — a difference of $22,000. Cash buyers in Miami face virtually no unique buyer taxes.

Should I buy a condo or co-op to minimize NYC closing costs?

Co-ops have lower closing costs in NYC because buyers are exempt from mortgage recording tax (saving 1.8%–1.925% of the loan amount) and do not need title insurance. A financed co-op purchase over $1M typically costs 2%–3% in closing costs vs. 3%–5% for an equivalent condo. However, even with a co-op’s lower closing costs, Miami closing costs are still generally lower because Miami has no mansion tax (which applies to both co-ops and condos in NYC). Additionally, co-ops have significant lifestyle restrictions including stricter subletting policies, board approval requirements, and limitations on LLC ownership.

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