The Complete Cost of Selling a Home in Seattle
Every line item a Seattle seller pays at closing — commissions, excise tax, escrow, staging, concessions — with real numbers at $700K, $1M, $1.5M, and $2M.
Selling a home in Seattle is expensive before the proceeds hit your bank account. The listing-agent commission gets most of the attention, but it’s only one of six or seven line items that stack up at closing. This guide lays out the complete cost picture — with real numbers at the price points most Seattle sellers actually encounter — so nothing surprises you on the settlement statement.
The full seller closing cost stack
1. Listing-agent commission
The most variable cost. Under a traditional percentage model, listing agents in Seattle typically charge 2.5–3% of the sale price. On a $1M home, that’s $25,000–$30,000 — for work that doesn’t take proportionally more effort than selling a $600K home.
WA Homes Full is $4,495 flat. More on the comparison below.
2. Buyer’s-agent commission (post-NAR settlement)
After the 2024 NAR settlement, sellers are no longer required to offer a buyer’s-agent commission via the MLS. In practice, offering one is still common in competitive Seattle markets — buyers without representation are harder to negotiate with, and well-represented buyers close more reliably.
The market rate has settled in the 2–2.5% range [VERIFY] for most King County transactions. Sellers who offer nothing are not penalized in the MLS, but buyer’s agents will disclose to their clients. Expect some friction if you offer 0%.
Budget 2–2.5% of sale price as the realistic cost to attract buyer representation.
3. Washington Real Estate Excise Tax (REET)
REET is a graduated state tax that sellers pay. The rate structure:
| Sale price bracket | REET rate |
|---|---|
| Up to $525,000 | 1.1% |
| $525,001–$1,525,000 | 1.28% |
| $1,525,001–$3,025,000 | 2.75% |
| Above $3,025,000 | 3.0% |
For a $1M sale, you pay 1.1% on the first $525K ($5,775) plus 1.28% on the remaining $475K ($6,080) — total REET of $11,855. This surprises sellers who assume it’s a flat rate.
Some cities and counties layer on a local REET surcharge on top of the state rate. Seattle and Bellevue do not currently have local REET, but check with your escrow officer for your specific jurisdiction.
4. Title and escrow fees
In Washington, the seller typically pays for the owner’s title insurance policy (which protects the buyer). The buyer pays for lender’s title insurance. Escrow is typically split, though this is negotiable.
Combined title insurance and escrow fees run $2,000–$4,000 on a typical King County transaction. Luxury homes above $1.5M may run higher due to premium scaling.
5. Pre-listing repairs and preparation
Sellers who prepare their home appropriately — fresh paint, professional photography, minor repairs — typically see faster sales and better final prices. What this costs varies widely:
- Professional photography: $400–$800 (mandatory for any MLS listing we handle)
- Basic landscaping and deep clean: $300–$1,000
- Interior paint (partial): $1,500–$4,000
- Deferred maintenance items (rotted trim, broken fixtures): $500–$5,000+
- Professional staging (vacant home): $2,000–$6,000/month
Realistically budget $2,000–$8,000 for a well-prepared listing. Over-improving relative to your neighborhood — putting a $15,000 kitchen remodel into a Renton starter home — rarely returns dollar-for-dollar.
6. Seller concessions
Especially in slower markets or on homes with known issues, buyers will request concessions — credits toward closing costs, rate buydowns, or repair credits. These are not guaranteed, but budget 1–2% of sale price as a possibility in a negotiation.
Total closing costs at a glance
The table below compares two models: a traditional listing with a 3% listing commission plus 2.5% buyer’s-agent commission, and a WA Homes Full listing at $4,495 plus the same 2.5% buyer’s-agent offer. REET, title, and escrow are held constant. Prep costs assumed at $4,000 for all scenarios; concessions excluded.
| Sale price | REET | Title/escrow | Prep | Traditional listing (3%) | Buyer agent (2.5%) | Total (traditional) | WA Homes Full ($4,495) | Buyer agent (2.5%) | Total (WA Homes) | WA Homes savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $700,000 | $8,330 | $3,000 | $4,000 | $21,000 | $17,500 | $53,830 | $4,495 | $17,500 | $37,325 | $16,505 |
| $1,000,000 | $11,855 | $3,200 | $4,000 | $30,000 | $25,000 | $74,055 | $4,495 | $25,000 | $48,550 | $25,505 |
| $1,500,000 | $17,975 | $3,800 | $4,000 | $45,000 | $37,500 | $108,275 | $4,495 | $37,500 | $67,770 | $40,505 |
| $2,000,000 | $32,100 | $4,200 | $4,000 | $60,000 | $50,000 | $150,300 | $4,495 | $50,000 | $94,795 | $55,505 |
REET figures assume King County with no local surcharge. Title/escrow estimates. Actual figures vary.
The WA Homes savings column is purely the listing-agent commission gap. At $1.5M, that’s more than $40,000 in proceeds that stay with the seller rather than flowing to a listing agent.
Why percentage commissions create misaligned incentives
The misalignment isn’t theoretical. Economists Steven Levitt and Chad Syverson studied agent behavior and found that agents selling their own homes kept them on the market longer and sold for 3.7% more than homes they listed for clients — behavior consistent with an agent taking the first acceptable offer on a client’s home while being more patient with their own. The percentage commission creates an incentive to close, not necessarily to maximize.
The marginal math explains why. On a $1M listing at 3%, a listing agent earns $30,000 at closing. If they could push the final price to $1,030,000 — a strong 3% improvement over the original offer — they make an additional $900. For that $900, they must decline the existing offer, manage two more weeks of showings, run another round of negotiations, and risk the deal falling apart entirely.
No rational person takes that trade. And yet the agent’s job, in theory, is to maximize your proceeds.
Flat fees remove this distortion. When a listing agent charges a fixed fee regardless of sale price, their financial interest is identical whether the home closes at $980,000 or $1,050,000. The incentive to push for the highest offer is no longer undercut by a marginal-return problem.
What changes with a flat-fee listing
Switching to a flat-fee model doesn’t mean less service — it means the fee is no longer percentage-based. Our full comparison of flat-fee vs. percentage commission walks through what’s included at each tier.
At WA Homes Full ($4,495), sellers receive:
- Comparative market analysis and pricing consultation
- Professional photography (included, not add-on)
- MLS listing with full syndication to Zillow, Redfin, and Realtor.com
- Offer review and negotiation support
- Transaction coordination through closing
At WA Homes Concierge (1% of sale, minimum $7,995), the model shifts slightly — the variable percentage applies — but the incentive problem is still attenuated because the fee is disclosed and the seller understands what they’re paying.
What doesn’t change: the buyer’s-agent commission structure. Whatever you offer to the buyer’s agent is the same whether you list with us or with a traditional broker.
How to read your settlement statement
At closing in Washington, you’ll receive a HUD-1 or Closing Disclosure that itemizes every credit and debit. The seller’s column typically shows:
- Credits: sale price, any deposits already paid
- Debits: payoff of existing mortgage(s), REET, prorated property taxes, title insurance premium, escrow fee, recording fees, commissions, any credits given to buyer
The bottom line is your net proceeds. Work backward from this number, not forward from the list price.
A good listing agent or transaction coordinator will prepare a seller net sheet before you accept an offer — an estimate of your net proceeds after all deductions. Don’t sign a purchase agreement without seeing one. If your agent doesn’t offer one proactively, ask for it.
What sellers most often get wrong
Ignoring REET until closing. At a $1.5M sale, REET alone is nearly $18,000. Many sellers budget vaguely for “taxes” and are surprised.
Assuming staging is optional. On vacant homes above $900K, professional staging consistently shortens market time. The $3,000–$5,000 cost is almost always recovered in a faster sale or higher offer.
Over-repairing before listing. Replacing a functional but dated kitchen at $30,000 in a neighborhood where buyers are purchasing $850K homes to remodel themselves rarely returns dollar-for-dollar. Repair what’s broken; don’t renovate what’s dated unless your neighborhood price tier demands it.
Treating all buyer concession requests as non-negotiable. A buyer asking for $15,000 in closing cost credits is offering you a data point, not a mandate. Counter, reduce, or redirect the request into a price adjustment that has the same net effect but reads differently on the comps.
The seller cost checklist
Before you list, run through this stack:
- Estimated REET (use the graduated rate table above)
- Title insurance and escrow estimate from your escrow officer
- Listing-agent fee (flat or percentage — know what it is)
- Buyer’s-agent commission offer (your decision post-NAR settlement)
- Prep budget (photography, repairs, cleaning, staging if vacant)
- Concession budget (1–2% buffer if the home is in a slower price tier)
- Mortgage payoff (call your servicer for a payoff quote)
- Prorated property taxes (your escrow officer calculates this)
Add those up and subtract from your expected sale price. That’s your real number.