Why you need Title Insurance?
Title Insurance : Mortgage Insurance
Other types of insurance coverage focus on possible future
events and charge an annual premium – such as flood insurance or
hazard insurance that safeguard against loss from wind damage.
Title insurance protects against loss from hazards and defects
already existing in the title and is purchased with a one-time
premium.
Title search and examination is the first step.
Insuring a home’s title begins with a search of public land
records affecting the property. The title agent or attorney
working on behalf of the underwriter examines pertinent
documents to determine whether the property is insurable. Those
documents include deeds, wills, trusts, outstanding mortgages
and judgments, property liens, highway or utility line
easements, pending legal actions and notary acknowledgements.
When title problems are disclosed during the search process,
they are corrected whenever possible to avoid future claims.
According to surveys done by the American Land Title Association
(ALTA), title problems consistently arise in one out of three
real estate transactions (36%).
A corrective process is vital to curing title problems.
The process of performing title searches and curing title
problems does not come cheap. Industry studies find that title
insurers spend an average of 92 cents out of every premium
dollar as their cost of doing business.
The most common
actions to cure title defects include:
- Releases/pay-offs for liens - 33%
- Releases/pay-offs for deeds/mortgages - 19%
- Typographical corrections (names, addresses, legal
descriptions) - 17%
- Clearing estate/family issue - 11%
- Clearing physical property issues - 7%
What if a problem is hidden or missed?
After all this searching and examination, a title problem may
still be hidden or missed, such as:
- A forged signature on a deed
- An unknown heir who steps forward to claim ownership of
the property
- An expired or forged power of attorney used during a
property transfer
- An incorrect public record
In each of these cases and many more, when there is
appropriate title insurance coverage, a policy will offer
financial protection. The title insurer defends the title
and either perfects the title or pays valid claims.
Why do lenders need it?
Lenders require the homeowner to purchase title insurance,
just as they call for fire insurance and other types of coverage
to protect their financial investment in the property. A
lender’s policy insures that the mortgage is valid and the lien
priority is correct. In addition, title insurance is required
for lenders who package and sell their loans in the secondary
mortgage market.
For the homeowner to be covered, he or she must purchase an
owner’s policy in addition to the required lender or mortgagee
policy.
A separate owner’s policy is the best policy.
Owner’s title insurance lasts as long as the policyholder or his or her heirs have an interest in the property
- maybe even after the homeowner has sold the property. It is either purchased for an additional premium or an owner may pay a simultaneous issue charge (usually a smaller amount) for the separate lender coverage.
Why title insurance?
Title insurance was first issued in 1871 to enable speed and
efficiency when property is conveyed, or legally transferred
from one owner to another. Because of title insurance, real
estate is more marketable and thus more valuable. It has worked
so well to protect buyers and lenders against defects in legal
ownership that it is spreading around the world, with Valmer
Title as a primary stimulus of that global growth.
Therefore, while the title industry in many states closes the
transaction, handles the escrow and records the documents, it
also works to make the title searches even faster, better and
more cost-effective. The role of title insurance to fix problems
and pay claims is crucial to the marketability of real estate.
Contact us for more
information on title insurance and to find out why we’re the
right title company for you.
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