

Closing costs in Arizona typically run 2% to 5% of the purchase price for buyers. On a $460,000 home -- close to the Phoenix Metro median as of late 2025 -- that translates to $9,200 to $23,000 due at or before closing. Rocket Mortgage data from November 2025 put Phoenix-area estimated closing costs at $13,980 to $27,960 on a $466,000 median home.
Beyond closing, 2025 research found that Arizona homeowners with an HOA spend approximately $27,600 annually on total ownership costs. An Axios analysis found Arizona homeowners averaging $2,268 per year on homeowners insurance, $4,581 on utilities, and $9,424 on maintenance -- all above the national average.
The two most common budget surprises: property taxes and maintenance costs. 81% of homeowners said the true costs were higher than they anticipated. Phoenix buyers are not the exception. They are the rule.
The mortgage pre-approval letter shows principal, interest, taxes, and insurance -- a single monthly number. What it does not show is the $400 home inspection, the $250 termite report required by most lenders, the $3,200 HOA capital improvement fee due at closing, the $1,200 prepaid homeowners insurance premium, or the $350 appraisal the lender orders before a closing disclosure is ever issued.
Buyers who budget to the penny of their pre-approval number hit the closing table short. In the West Valley -- Goodyear, Surprise, Peoria, Anthem -- master-planned communities with layered HOA structures can add several thousand dollars to the at-closing cash requirement. The honest assessment is this: the lender's job is to qualify buyers for the mortgage. The buyer's job -- with their agent -- is to map the full cash requirement from offer acceptance through the first year of ownership. Those are two different numbers.
Origination fees typically run 0.5% to 1% of the loan amount. On a $368,000 loan (20% down on a $460,000 purchase), that is $1,840 to $3,680. Add application fees, credit checks, and underwriting charges, and lender-side costs can reach $3,000 to $5,000. Federal law requires a Loan Estimate within three business days of application -- compare at least three lenders line by line, not just by rate.
Lenders order an appraisal to confirm the property value supports the loan. Phoenix Metro appraisal fees typically run $300 to $500. This is paid upfront, before closing, and is non-refundable if the deal falls apart. A low appraisal requires price renegotiation, additional buyer cash, or contract termination.
A general home inspection runs $300 to $500. Specialty inspections carry asymmetric value in Arizona's climate:
In Arizona, the seller traditionally pays the owner's title insurance policy. The buyer pays the lender's title insurance policy -- typically 0.3% to 0.5% of the loan amount. Combined title and escrow costs for a buyer on a $460,000 Phoenix purchase typically run $1,500 to $3,000.
Maricopa County's effective property tax rate runs approximately 0.7% to 0.9% of assessed value. On a $460,000 home, annual property taxes run $3,220 to $4,140 -- paid in two installments due in October and March. Arizona has no statewide real estate transfer tax. Buyers who set up a non-escrow loan must track installment deadlines independently.
At closing, buyers in HOA communities pay:
Ongoing dues for West Valley single-family communities run $50 to $150 per month for standard master-planned neighborhoods; $200 to $400 per month for resort-style or gated communities. Review the HOA's reserve fund status during the inspection period. Underfunded reserves signal pending special assessments that land on the new owner.
Arizona homeowners insurance averages $2,268 per year -- above the national average. Phoenix-specific cost drivers: monsoon and wind coverage, hail endorsements for tile roofs, pool liability riders, and wildfire adjacency for homes near Anthem, New River, and outer Buckeye. Get at least three quotes before closing. Premium differences of $600 to $1,200 annually are common between carriers for identical coverage.
Arizona homeowners average $4,581 annually on utilities, above the national average, heavily weighted toward summer. A 2,200-square-foot home in Goodyear or Surprise can generate electric bills of $400 to $700 per month during June through September. Ask the seller for 12 months of utility bills during due diligence.
Arizona Phoenix-area homeowners average $9,424 per year in maintenance costs -- above the national average. Extreme UV degrades roof coatings, exterior paint, and window seals. Monsoon season drives dust and water into any gap. A realistic first-year maintenance budget for a resale home in the $400,000 to $500,000 range in Goodyear or Peoria is $3,000 to $6,000, assuming no major systems fail on schedule.
Build this estimate before submitting an offer -- not after:
In the current West Valley market with days on market stretching to 75-89 days in Goodyear and Surprise, sellers are offering concessions. A well-structured offer requesting $5,000 to $10,000 in closing cost credits is viable on a reasonably priced home. That negotiation starts with knowing exactly what you need and what specific line items you want covered.
What are total closing costs for a buyer in Phoenix?
Expect 2% to 5% of the purchase price. On a $460,000 home that is $9,200 to $23,000. Loan Estimates itemize all lender fees and are required within three business days of mortgage application.
Does Arizona charge a real estate transfer tax?
No. Arizona voters eliminated the statewide real estate transfer tax in 2008. There is a nominal $2 transfer fee. This is an advantage relative to most states.
How much are HOA fees in Goodyear, Surprise, and Peoria?
Standard master-planned single-family HOA dues run $50 to $150 per month. Resort-style or gated communities run $200 to $400 per month. At closing, plan for a transfer fee of $100 to $1,000 and potentially a capital improvement fee up to 0.5% of purchase price.
What are typical summer electric bills for a Phoenix-area home?
A 2,000 to 2,500 square-foot home in Goodyear or Surprise typically generates $400 to $700 per month during June through September. Always request 12 months of utility bills from the seller during due diligence.
Can I negotiate seller concessions to offset closing costs?
Yes. In the current West Valley market with elevated inventory and days on market past 75 days in Goodyear and Surprise, a $5,000 to $10,000 closing cost credit is viable. Your agent structures this as a seller concession in the purchase contract.
What is the biggest maintenance cost surprise for Phoenix homeowners?
HVAC replacement. A standard two-system setup for a 2,000+ square-foot Phoenix home costs $8,000 to $20,000. Any AC unit over 10 years old should be treated as a near-term capital expense.
Are specialty inspections worth the cost in Phoenix?
The termite inspection alone justifies the cost. Arizona ranks among the highest-termite-density states. A $150 inspection can save $5,000 to $15,000 in post-close remediation costs.
A pre-offer consultation with Ron and Jill covers every cost category specific to the home being targeted -- not generic ranges. You leave knowing your full cash requirement, the current seller concession landscape in your target submarket, and which inspections are mandatory for that property type.
📅 Agent ReferralRon Guzman | Sold By Ron & Jill Group | Licensed with Keller Williams Arizona Realty | 4236 N Verrado Way, Suite 102, Buckeye AZ 85396 | Equal Housing Opportunity | Each Keller Williams office is independently owned and operated.