Closings blow up when you miss eight repeat title traps. These include unpaid liens and judgments, and unreleased mortgages with bad payoffs.
Public-record or legal-description errors can also misindex owners. That can create confusion over who actually holds title.
You may also face forged deeds and fraud flags. Odd notaries or sudden satisfactions often force insurer-backed cures.
Other common delays come from unknown heirs and probate gaps. If the chain of ownership isn’t clean, the deal can stall fast.
Boundary or survey mismatches can derail underwriting. Easements may also steal access or reduce buildable area.
Open permits or unpaid assessments can stop lender funding. Keep going and you’ll see how to pre-clear each one before closing.
Title Issues From Unpaid Liens and Judgments
Because a lien or judgment attaches to the property—not the person—you can have a clean-looking deal on paper and still watch your closing stall at the eleventh hour.
In one ALTA survey, title problems surfaced in 36% of transactions, underscoring how often hidden issues have to be found and fixed before closing.
You might buy a flip, then discover a judgment lien from old credit-card litigation or support arrears that a name-similarity filing hid from the search. Additionally, unauthorized transfer of property titles is a potential risk, as seen in fraudulent schemes that authorities have intercepted.
Tax, mechanic’s, HOA, and municipal utility liens can also ride with the parcel, even when the seller swears they’re “paid.”
Your strategy is to confirm releases, demand payoff letters, and map creditor priorities so you know who gets paid first from proceeds.
If you can’t clear it pre-close, negotiate lien redemption or escrow holdbacks with deadlines.
Title insurance can backstop some surprises, but you still want cures before you wire funds.
Unreleased Mortgages That Cloud Title
Studies and industry data routinely put missing or defective releases in the 15%–20% range on payoffs.
In hotter markets, the volume of transactions makes these mistakes easier to miss until you’re days from closing.
If a prior lender fails to record a satisfaction, your sale or refi stalls while you prove the payoff.
In one build-to-rent deal I handled, payoff processing misapplied funds.
Recording delays then killed the buyer’s rate lock.
Zombie foreclosures contribute significantly to community instability, leading to safety hazards and rising crime rates.
Fix it strategically: get a written payoff and confirm who owns the note.
Track the lender’s statutory release deadline.
Use an escrow holdback until the release records.
Have your title agent order an early update and demand confirmation of release submission.
Secondary lenders will flag any first-lien gap.
Title Issues Caused by Public Record Errors
If your borrower’s name is misspelled on a recorded deed, you can’t rely on a clean search. An unreleased interest may sit in plain sight but outside the index. You may have to correct and re-record the deed before you can close. When the legal description is off—even one lot number, boundary call, or parcel ID—your lender may balk. The collateral no longer matches the appraisal or survey. Financing can stall until you cure the record. Who’s paying for that delay? Deed theft is becoming a critical concern, as forged ownership documents can complicate verifying the legitimate property owner and pose additional challenges in the closing process.
Misspelled Names On Deeds
Although a misspelled name on a recorded deed or mortgage can look like a harmless clerical hiccup, it can quietly blow up your chain of title and stall a closing at the worst possible time.
County indexes run alphabetically, so “Jonson” won’t show up when you search “Johnson,” and you can miss a lien.
You can reduce risk by running phonetic searches and doing index audits when you’re dealing with common names.
Even in counties with search tools, bad data slips through.
If that hidden mortgage resurfaces, priority can flip under recording statutes.
*Astoria Federal v. June* shows you may lose if a diligent search should’ve found it.
Cure it fast with an affidavit for a typo, or re-execute the deed and record releases.
Incorrect Legal Descriptions
Misspelled names can hide a lien in the index.
Incorrect legal descriptions can hide the land itself.
If your deed lists the wrong lot or block, cites the wrong subdivision, or mangles metes-and-bounds, you may not be buying what you think.
I’ve seen a refinance stall when a copied description omitted a 10‑foot strip.
This happened after an adjacent sale shifted a boundary.
During a title search, the chain-of-title review and survey comparison flag gaps or overlaps.
One study found errors in 36% of 2005 residential deals.
To clear it, you’ll record corrective deeds or curative affidavits.
You may also order a new survey or seek a court order.
Title insurance may cover claim costs, but it won’t save your closing date.
Audit public records early with counsel.
Fraud and Forged Deeds in the Chain of Title
When a forged deed slips into your chain of title, it can’t pass good title. Your “clean” closing can turn into a legal mess overnight. Spot the red flags early—odd transfers, mismatched signatures, or an out-of-character seller. Once fraud is recorded, you’re fighting to unwind it through affidavits, court orders, and insurer-backed cures. The Home Equity Theft Protection Act (HETPA) provides a crucial legal framework to challenge fraudulent property transfers, helping safeguard homeowners against deed theft.
Red Flags In Deeds
Because a deed sits at the foundation of ownership, one forged signature can collapse the entire chain of title.
It can turn a “clean” closing into a legal brawl you didn’t budget for.
When you review the record, watch for notary anomalies.
Look for expired stamps, missing seals, or the same notary repeatedly “witnessing” signings.
Next, flag conflicting vestings.
For example, a seller who took title as “John Smith, Trustee” but now conveys as “John Smith, unmarried.”
Also treat sudden lien payoffs, repeated satisfactions, or re-recorded mortgages as smoke, not paperwork.
FundingShield found nearly half of Q1 2025 files showed fraud indicators.
Forged documents drive 21% of claim costs.
If the deed history feels rushed, backdated, or misfiled in the wrong county, assume there’s a missing link.
How Fraud Gets Resolved
Although a forged deed can look “recorded and done,” you can unwind it if you move fast and document everything.
Call your lender, freeze credit, and alert all three bureaus so no new loans slip in.
File an FTC report at IdentityTheft.gov, then a police report with dates, ID, and proof of address.
Next, trigger insurer intervention: open a claim under your owner’s policy and notify the underwriter and recorder.
Your carrier can fund counsel to challenge the deed, strip fraudulent liens, and restore marketable title.
Your attorney typically files a quiet title action, serves all claimants, and records the judgment.
Want leverage? Push criminal prosecution by reporting to the DA; I’ve seen charges convince scammers to quit and settle faster before closing day.
Unknown Heirs and Probate-Related Title Issues
If a property’s ownership hasn’t changed hands in decades, assume “unknown heirs” and probate issues may be hiding in the chain of title. When an owner dies without a will or trust, intestate succession can split title among many heirs—compounding each generation. On a Florida rehab, a 30-year hold meant 11 potential heirs. One surfaced post-contract and froze financing. Protect yourself by ordering heir tracing early and pulling probate files. Require recorded deeds or court orders before you spend money on plans. If probate never opened, you may need an heirship affidavit, a formal probate, or a quiet title action to deliver marketable title. In areas like East Village, historic and economic complexities can further entangle ownership disputes. Budget time and legal fees into underwriting. These deals often cluster in rural and persistent-poverty counties across the South.
Boundary and Survey Disputes That Block Closing
When a surveyor’s stakes don’t match the deed’s legal description, a clean deal can turn into a title problem overnight. You’ll see survey discrepancies when two surveys disagree, a metes-and-bounds call is vague, or an older lot has odd angles. Next, look for red flags: a new driveway hugging the line, a fence installed “by handshake,” or shoreline erosion that shifts markers. Those conditions fuel encroachment disputes, adverse possession claims, and lender anxiety, so closing pauses until the boundary is certain. Community vigilance in cases like the North Carolina Marketable Title Act dispute reflects the importance of clear property boundaries. Fix it fast: order a current boundary survey, have your title team pull plats and prior conveyances, and negotiate a written boundary line agreement. If talks fail, you may need a declaratory judgment—costly, but it protects resale value and keeps your project financeable.
Easements and Access Restrictions in Title Reports
Because title reports don’t just confirm ownership—they also disclose who else holds legal rights to use the land. Easements and access restrictions can quietly derail an otherwise financeable closing. Read the commitment like a site plan. Easements redraw your usable footprint.
- Utility easements for lines and pipes running under your slab
- A neighbor’s driveway access cutting across your frontage
- An appurtenant right serving a landlocked parcel behind you
- An in-gross right letting a utility crew enter with trucks
- A shed or fence encroaching into the easement strip
Zoning amendments(facilitate ‘as-of-right’ housing units) compliant with local laws can sometimes impact the ease of obtaining necessary easements or access adjustments.
Order a current survey. Demand survey verification against the legal description. If an access restriction kills your business plan, act before closing. Get a release, document an agreement, or reprice before you wire funds today.
Open Permits and Assessments That Delay Closing
Although the title commitment may look clean, an open building permit or unpaid assessment can still freeze your closing at the eleventh hour. In commercial deals, a tenant’s contractor may pull permits you never see, and COVID-era office shutdowns left many permits stuck open. Lenders often won’t fund until you complete Permit Reconciliation—inspection, signoff, and filing—because an open permit can be a code violation and can block new permits. If codes changed since the work, you may have to redo it to pass, which can blow loan maturities and invite price chips. For assessments, demand payoff proof or set an Assessment Escrow at closing. Run permit and assessment searches early, and build lease clauses requiring closure within 30 days, backed by tight security-deposit holdbacks. A decline in permit activity in areas like Oakland can complicate new developments and exacerbate housing shortages, affecting both residential and commercial transactions.
Assessment
You don’t have to lose a deal to a “minor” title glitch.
I’ve watched investors burn weeks because they assumed title insurance would fix everything at closing. It won’t when underwriting flags liens, unreleased mortgages, or open permits.
Order the title search early and demand recorded releases.
Cure probate, survey, and access issues before you schedule crews.
If something looks off, get counsel and the recorder involved fast.
Why let a preventable cloud kill your ROI?












