Arizona title insurance protects buyers and lenders from financial loss due to title defects, liens, fraud, or boundary disputes that existed before the policy date.
Published May 8, 2026
## Title insurance in Arizona
**Title insurance** is a one-time-premium insurance product that protects you against financial loss from title defects existing BEFORE the policy date. Different from most insurance: it covers PAST events that may surface later.
## Two types of title insurance
**1. Owner's policy.** Protects the BUYER:
- Covers full purchase price (often plus inflation rider)
- Lasts as long as you or your heirs own the property
- One-time premium paid at closing (~0.5%-1% of purchase price)
- OPTIONAL in most states (but strongly recommended)
**2. Lender's / mortgagee's policy.** Protects the LENDER:
- Covers loan amount only
- Decreases as loan is paid down
- REQUIRED for almost every mortgage
- New policy needed when refinancing
- One-time premium
## What title insurance covers
**Standard coverage typically includes:**
- Forged deeds in the chain of title
- Undisclosed heirs claiming the property
- Fraudulent transactions
- Errors in public records / surveys / indexing
- Liens not discovered in title search
- Tax liens
- Unrecorded mechanic's liens
- Easements / rights-of-way not disclosed
- Boundary disputes
- Defective execution of prior deeds
- Mistakes in recording
- Spousal claims (community property states)
- Notice / service defects in foreclosures
- Improper handling of probate transfers
## Standard exclusions
Title insurance does NOT typically cover:
- Environmental issues (asbestos, lead, contamination)
- Zoning / land-use violations
- Eminent domain (unless filed before policy)
- Issues you knew about but didn't disclose
- Issues created after policy date
- Mineral rights (varies)
- Riparian rights
- Fence / boundary disputes (without survey endorsement)
- Government surveys / Indian land claims
## Endorsements (additional coverage)
Common endorsements that broaden coverage:
- **Survey endorsement** — covers boundary issues
- **Zoning endorsement** — limited zoning coverage
- **Restrictive covenant violations**
- **Mineral rights**
- **Solar panels / improvements**
- **PUD / condominium coverage**
- **Inflation protection** (auto-increases policy limit)
- **Future advance** (for lenders with HELOCs)
- **Environmental** (limited)
Endorsements add to the premium.
## Cost
Title insurance premiums vary by state:
- **Promulgated rates** in some states (FL, NM, TX) — same rate from any insurer
- **Filed rates** elsewhere — insurers compete
- Typical owner's policy: 0.5%-1% of purchase price
- Lender's policy: $250-$500 + ~0.05%-0.1%
- One-time premium
Some states allow **simultaneous-issue** discounts when buying both owner's + lender's at same time.
## How claims work
When a title defect surfaces:
1. **Notify the title insurer** immediately
2. **Insurer investigates**
3. **Insurer decides:**
- Defend the title (legal action against claimant)
- Cure the defect (pay off lien, quiet title, etc.)
- Pay the loss
- Combination
4. **Insured cooperates** with investigation
Insurer pays for legal defense AND any covered losses.
## When title insurance pays off
Real-world examples:
- Forged deed in chain shows up; insurer pays purchase price
- Old mortgage never released; insurer pays to clear
- Surveyor error reveals boundary problems; insurer covers diminution in value
- Disinherited heir surfaces; insurer pays settlement
- Mechanic's lien from prior owner's contractor; insurer pays it
- Identity-theft real-estate fraud; insurer covers loss
- Old easement allowing utility to run pipes through property; insurer covers loss in value
## Title search vs title insurance
**Title search** — examination of public records by attorney or title company before closing. Finds known defects.
**Title insurance** — protects against UNKNOWN defects that title search missed.
Most defects ARE caught in title search. Title insurance is for the unknowables.
## Title commitment
Before closing, you receive a **title commitment** showing:
- Schedule A — basics (legal description, parties, premium)
- Schedule B-I — requirements (what must be done before policy issues)
- Schedule B-II — exceptions (what's NOT covered)
**Read Schedule B-II carefully.** Standard exceptions might include things you'd want covered (encroachments, easements). Negotiate to have them removed if possible.
## Who pays — buyer or seller
Varies by state custom:
- **Buyer pays** in most states (CA, AZ, FL, MO, others)
- **Seller pays** in NM, TX (typically), parts of OH, parts of NY
- **Negotiable** — counties have customs but anything is negotiable
Lender's policy is almost always paid by buyer (rolled into closing costs).
## Title insurance fraud
Some title insurance "alternatives" or schemes are scams:
- "Discount" policies that don't have proper underwriting
- "Self-insurance" warranties from realtors
- One-time "warranty" with no actual claims process
Use ALTA-member insurers (American Land Title Association) — established companies with real claims-paying ability.
## What you should do
When buying Arizona real estate: get a full title search + an owner's title insurance policy. Don't skip the owner's policy — even though it's optional, the cost is small relative to the protection. Read the title commitment carefully, especially the Schedule B-II exceptions. Most Arizona real-estate attorneys can review title issues for a flat fee.
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*This guide is general information about Arizona law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Title insurance is technical. Talk to a licensed Arizona real-estate attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.