Average Recording Fee in Louisiana (2026 Data)

Last updated: 2026-04-04

Louisiana recording fee benchmark

RangeLowTypicalHighFlag Above
Recording Fee$100$200$335$502.5

Based on Louisiana closing cost data. Median home price: $210,000.

What the recording fee covers

Recording fees are charged by the county recorder's office to officially record the deed, mortgage (deed of trust), and other documents in public records. This makes your ownership and lender's lien a matter of public record. Recording fees appear in Section E of your Closing Disclosure.

Fees vary by county and are typically charged per document or per page. A typical closing involves recording two main documents — the deed and the deed of trust — for a combined cost of $50 to $400 depending on the county and document length.

This fee appears in Section E — Taxes and Other Government Fees of your Closing Disclosure.

Is the recording fee negotiable in Louisiana?

Not negotiable

Recording fees are set by county governments and are not negotiable. However, verify the amounts on your Closing Disclosure match the actual county fee schedule — overcharges do occur, particularly when title companies estimate rather than quote exact amounts.

Louisiana note

Recording fees are set by La. R.S. 13:844 and are uniform statewide via the Louisiana Legislature. Each parish Clerk of Court serves as ex-officio Recorder of Mortgages and Register of Conveyances. Orleans Parish (2024 fee schedule): 1–5 pages $100; 6–25 pages $200; 26–50 pages $300; over 50 pages $300 + $5/page. Mortgage certificate: $20 base + $10 per additional name. Conveyance certificate: $35 base + $30 per additional name. Jefferson Parish: 1–5 pages $105; 6–25 pages $205; 26–50 pages $305; 51+ pages $305 + $5/page; plus $5 LCRAA fee per instrument. East Baton Rouge Parish: 1–5 pages $135 (includes $35 Judicial/LCRAA surcharges); 6–25 pages $235; 26–50 pages $335; over 50 pages $335 + $5/page. A buyer typically pays to record the deed and mortgage; seller pays to record releases of encumbrances.

Upload your Closing Disclosure to see if your recording fee is fair

Every fee is cross-referenced against Louisiana benchmarks. Results in 60 seconds.

Red flags: signs your recording fee is inflated

  • Recording fees exceed $400 for a standard residential purchase

  • Separate 'e-recording fee' or 'recording service fee' charged by the title company on top of the county fee

  • Fee is rounded to a suspiciously even number ($500, $750) rather than matching the county schedule

  • Recording fees changed significantly from the Loan Estimate without explanation

Is your recording fee overpriced?

Upload your Closing Disclosure and every line item is audited against Louisiana benchmarks — in 60 seconds.

From $29 · Results in 60 seconds

Recording Fee questions

What are typical recording fees?

Recording fees range from $50 to $400 for a standard residential purchase, depending on the county. Most closings require recording a deed and a deed of trust — each document is charged separately.

Can I negotiate recording fees?

No — recording fees are set by county government and are non-negotiable. But you should verify the amount on your Closing Disclosure matches the county's published fee schedule.

Why do recording fees vary so much by county?

Each county sets its own fee schedule. Some charge per document, others per page. Some counties add surcharges for affordable housing funds or technology upgrades. The difference between a $75 county and a $350 county comes down to local ordinances.

Related pages

You have 3 days to review your Closing Disclosure.

Federal law gives you 72 hours to push back before you sign. Every fee is cross-referenced against Louisiana benchmarks and the negotiation email is drafted for you.

Most buyers find $1,500–$3,000 in negotiable fees.

From $29· Results in 60 seconds