

How to Estimate Your Sale Proceeds
When sellers think about what they will walk away with at closing, it is easy to focus on the sale price alone. What really matters is the amount left after the costs of selling are paid.
Understanding sale proceeds early can help you plan your move, budget for your next purchase, and avoid surprises near closing.
Start with the sale price
The sale price is the starting point, but it is not the amount you receive. A number of expenses are usually paid out of the seller's side of the transaction.
Subtract mortgage payoff
If you still owe money on your mortgage, that payoff amount is one of the biggest deductions from the sale proceeds. This may include principal and any outstanding interest due at closing.
Account for selling costs
Seller costs may include items such as:
- Closing or settlement fees
- Title-related charges
- Attorney fees where applicable
- Transfer taxes or recording fees
- Inspection or repair costs
- Prorated taxes, dues, or utilities
- Broker compensation if included in the transaction terms
The exact list varies by area and by deal structure.
Watch the prorations
Prorations adjust shared costs based on the closing date. This can affect taxes, utilities, or association dues. These items can move the final number more than some sellers expect.
Use proceeds planning in your next move
Proceeds are not just a nice number to know. They affect how much cash you may have for a down payment on your next home, moving expenses, debt payoff, or repairs before a purchase. Looking at that estimate early can help you decide whether you need a stronger sale price, a different timing plan, or a more flexible next-home budget.
Use an estimate, then refine it
Early proceeds estimates are useful for planning, but the final number may still shift as the transaction moves forward. Repairs, credits, payoff statements, and timing can all affect the final total.
Ask for a net sheet
A local real estate agent can often help sellers review a rough net proceeds estimate before listing or before accepting an offer. That can be helpful when deciding whether a particular offer truly meets your needs.
The sale price tells only part of the story. Your estimated proceeds give you the number that matters most for planning your next step.
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