
Who pays closing costs in Massachusetts?
The Bay State’s high home prices can result in high closing costs, too.
Kacie Goff is a personal finance and insurance writer with over five years of experience covering personal and commercial coverage options. She's also dedicated to besting her brother, a financial advisor, with insider insight into the personal finance industry and spends hours researching the latest rates and regulations.
Goff founded Jot Content, a full-service content agency, in 2018. Through Jot, she contributes web content, blogs, case studies, press releases and more to brands in the finance, insurance, health and wellness, continuing education, healthcare and marketing industries.
She lives in Ventura, CA, with her husband and dingo-lookalike dog, Babou. When she’s not writing, you can find Kacie practicing yoga, working in her garden or scoping out a new happy hour.
The Bay State’s high home prices can result in high closing costs, too.
Buyers making $140K should be able to afford a home in most any market.
An all-cash offer on a house doesn’t mean you can’t still get a mortgage. It just means changing the underwriting timeline.
Both buyers and sellers have some form of closing costs to cover in the Prairie State.
Median home prices here are more than $100,000 less than the nationwide median.
This shows the struggle minority business owners face to gain access to capital.
Home prices in Washington are much higher than the national median.
Your location and existing financial commitments may limit your options.