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Refinancing in Montana? Here's what you'll actually pay.

Refinancing in Montana is one of the simpler closings in the country. No state mortgage recording tax, no transfer tax on refis, and no attorney requirement. Where Montana borrowers leave money behind: the title insurance reissue rate, which can discount the lender's policy by 30 percent if requested.

Overview

Closing a refinance in Montana follows a straightforward path. No state mortgage recording tax. No transfer tax on refis. No attorney requirement. The closing is handled by a title company and the bulk of the cost is the standard lender and title charges that apply in most states.

The largest underused savings opportunity is the title insurance reissue rate. Montana title underwriters generally offer roughly 30 percent off the lender's policy on refinances within a few years of the prior title work — but it has to be requested. Closing agents do not apply it on their own.

Below: where the lender fees can be pushed back on, the reissue discount to claim, and the patterns worth flagging on the Loan Estimate.

Worth knowing: Montana has NO mortgage tax and NO transfer tax. Low-cost refi state. Title underwriters active in the state include First American, Fidelity, Stewart, Old Republic, Chicago Title.

Where the audit fits

On a typical Montana refinance, lender fees in Section A are where the most negotiable money lives — origination, processing, underwriting. Fair Loan Check Full Analysis ($39) benchmarks each line item against current market data, drafts a counter-offer email, and flags the Montana-specific patterns most likely to be inflated. Most borrowers save 3x to 5x what the audit costs.

Mortgage recording tax

Montana does not levy a mortgage recording tax. The new loan amount on a refinance does not trigger any state or county tax in Montana.

Transfer tax on refinance

Montana exempts refinances from transfer tax. Transfer tax applies when property changes hands, not when the loan changes.

Exemption statute: Montana is one of 16 states with no real estate transfer tax. Both purchases and refinances are unaffected.

Title insurance reissue rate

MT title insurance rates filed individually by underwriters with MT CSI. Refinance rate available; typical 25–40% off lender's policy.

Typical discount on the lender's policy: 2050% off (typical 30%).

Lookback period: Varies by underwriter. Documentation required: Prior policy.

Sources

  • Montana Code — no state real estate transfer tax
  • PropertyShark cross-reference

Ready to apply this to a real Loan Estimate? Audit your refinance LE for padded lender fees and get a counter-offer email drafted from your specific numbers.

Audit my Montana refinance Loan Estimate ($39)

Frequently asked

What are the main closing costs when refinancing in Montana?

Refinance closing costs in Montana fall into four standard categories: lender charges in Section A (origination, application, processing, underwriting), third-party services in Sections B and C (appraisal, credit report, title), prepaids in Sections F and G (taxes, insurance, prepaid interest), and government recording fees in Section E. The state has no mortgage recording tax and no transfer tax on refinances, which keeps the bill closer to the national average than in higher-tax states.

Do I pay transfer tax on a refinance in Montana?

No — Montana exempts refinances from transfer tax. Transfer tax applies when property changes hands, not when the loan changes. The closing agent should not include any transfer tax line on a refinance LE in Montana; if one appears, push back.

Is title insurance discounted on a refinance in Montana?

Yes — title insurance reissue rates are generally available on refinances in Montana. The discount is typically 30 to 70 percent off the standard lender's policy premium when the prior title work is recent enough to qualify. The catch: the borrower usually has to ask. Closing agents do not always apply the reissue rate automatically — request it in writing before closing.

How much can I save by negotiating refinance closing costs in Montana?

Most Montana refinance borrowers save $500 to $2,500 by actively negotiating lender fees and shopping title — and often more on larger loans. The largest single source is the origination charge in Section A, which is typically negotiable by 25 to 50 percent against a competing Loan Estimate. Title and settlement services in Section C can usually be shopped for additional savings.

Most refinance Loan Estimates include $500 to $2,000 of negotiable lender fees. Run yours through the audit before signing.

Audit my Loan Estimate ($39)
Informational only. Not financial, tax, or legal advice. Refinance decisions depend on your specific loan terms, tax situation, and timeline. Verify all figures with a licensed mortgage professional before signing.