United States Real Estate Investor

United States Real Estate Investor

United States Real Estate Investor

United States Real Estate Investor

United States Real Estate Investor

United States Real Estate Investor

Maryland Transfer Tax Debate Intensifies

Article Context

This article is published by United States Real Estate Investor®, an educational media platform that helps beginners learn how to achieve financial freedom through real estate investing while keeping advanced investors informed with high-value industry insight.

  • Topic: Beginner-focused real estate investing education
  • Audience: New and aspiring United States investors
  • Purpose: Explain market conditions, risks, and strategies in clear, practical terms
  • Geographic focus: United States housing and investment markets
  • Content type: Educational analysis and investor guidance
  • Update relevance: Reflects conditions and data current as of publication date

This article provides factual explanations, definitions, and strategy insights designed to help readers understand how investing works and how decisions impact long-term financial outcomes.

Last updated: March 4, 2026

PLATFORM DISCLAIMER: To support our mission to provide valuable resources and insights, United States Real Estate Investor may earn affiliate commissions from links or advertising featured in our content. Images are for informational and entertainment purposes only and may not be fully representative of people or places.

United States Real Estate Investor®
maryland transfer tax debate
Uncertainty grows as Maryland’s transfer tax debate intensifies, with first-time buyer breaks and looming 2026 changes raising questions about who pays next.
United States Real Estate Investor®
United States Real Estate Investor®

United States Real Estate Investor® News

What Is the Maryland Transfer Tax (0.5%) and Who Pays?

Transfer Tax Shock at the Closing Table

Maryland levies a statewide transfer tax of 0.5 percent of actual consideration on instruments conveying real property interests.

These instruments can include deeds, leases, easements, and contracts.

The tax is flat, not marginal. Because transfer taxes can provide consistent revenue, governments often treat them as a stabilizer for general funds during budget shortfalls.

A 497,000 dollar sale yields 2,485 dollars in state transfer tax.

In many transactions, the cost is typically split between buyer and seller, though it can be negotiated.

Who Collects and Who Typically Pays

The 0.5 percent state charge is paid to the Clerk of Court.

It is separate from county transfer taxes and county recordation taxes, which often push total burdens near 2 to 3 percent.

Custom commonly splits transfer and recordation costs between buyer and seller.

However, escrow responsibilities must follow the contract and any legal exceptions.

First-Time Buyer Maryland Transfer Tax: Do You Qualify for 0.25%?

Maryland’s 0.5% state transfer tax can shift at the recording counter.

The first-time buyer exemption is often where deals stall.

Eligibility generally requires that you have never owned a Maryland principal residence.

The savings is a 0.25% reduction.

Eligibility Rules Under Pressure

Owning property out of state or owning an investment property does not automatically disqualify you.

The home you’re buying must become your principal residence.

Maryland does not have a three-year lookback rule for this exemption.

That detail matters if you owned property long ago.

Recording Risks at Closing

Title Requirements and Affidavit Process

The exemption applies only to individuals on title.

It does not apply when title is held by an LLC, corporation, partnership, or trust.

State reviewers can deny the exemption at recording if the property is titled in an entity’s name.

They can also deny it if the required affidavits are missing or incomplete.

If the deal is a short sale, confirm your contract includes earnest money protections in case lender approval is delayed or denied.

  1. On a $400,000 purchase, the savings is about $1,000.
  2. A parent co-signer may still fit, but only if the affidavits are prepared correctly.
  3. A last-minute title mistake can erase the 0.25% reduction.

Maryland County Transfer Tax Rates: What Your County Charges

Where a property sits can change the transfer tax bill from a routine fee into a major closing-cost shock. County rates run 0.5 percent in eight jurisdictions and rise to 1.5 percent in Baltimore City and Baltimore County.

County-level rate disruption

Allegany, Caroline, Cecil, Charles, Kent, Queen Anne’s, Washington, and Worcester stay at 0.5 percent through fiscal 2026.

Talbot, Anne Arundel, and Montgomery often sit near 1.0 percent. Prince George’s reaches 1.4 percent for a 1.9 percent combined bill.

Historical trends and municipal differences in exemptions widen closing-day uncertainty. Talbot’s first $50,000 break is one example.

The customary split is 50-50, but agreements can shift the burden quickly.

Five-county snapshot

County example Local rate
Allegany 0.5%
Talbot 1.0%
Prince George’s 1.4%
Baltimore City 1.5%

Maryland Recordation Tax vs. Transfer Tax: How Both Add Up

Although transfer tax and recordation tax often appear as one closing line item, they are triggered by different documents and calculated on different bases.

Transfer tax applies to recorded deeds and other title conveyances and is based on consideration at a 0.5 percent state rate plus county rates.

Two Taxes, One Recording Window

Recordation tax is charged when a mortgage or deed of trust is recorded and is based on the debt secured.

Rates are set locally at the recording desk.

Prince George’s County also applies county transfer tax to certain security instruments.

Where confusion erupts

  1. Settlement statement splits that fuel allocation disputes.
  2. Loan amount changes that trigger escrow complications.
  3. Exemptions that hinge on document type and term length.

Maryland Transfer Tax Totals: Sample Costs and 2026 Changes to Watch

As county rates diverge and state law shifts toward mid-2026, Maryland transfer tax totals are becoming harder to predict at the settlement table.

The state charge is 0.5 percent, or $2,138 on a $420,793 sale, split 0.25 percent each.

Totals That Can Spike

Sample costs

– $250,000 sale: $1,250 state tax.

County rates run from 0 percent in Frederick to 1.25 percent in Howard and about 1.5 percent in Baltimore City.

Those local rates can lift combined totals beyond 2 percent at closing.

First-time buyers may face only 0.25 percent state tax, paid by the seller, under sworn-statement Exemption Details.

2026 Law Shock

HB1213 adjusts the state rate for instruments recorded July 1, 2026.

SB33 expands related-entity exemptions, including some trusts, creating Revenue Impact risk.

Assessment

Maryland’s transfer tax rules remain a fast moving cost driver in 2026 transactions.

Buyers and sellers face county-by-county variability that can shift closing totals by thousands.

First-time buyer eligibility for the reduced 0.25 percent rate is narrowly defined and frequently misunderstood.

Recordation tax layering compounds the burden, especially on higher loan balances.

With lawmakers signaling renewed scrutiny, settlement estimates require tighter verification, and timing risks around effective dates are rising.

Disclosures are being updated daily.

United States Real Estate Investor®

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Thank you for visiting United States Real Estate Investor.

United States Real Estate Investor®

Information Disclaimer

The information, opinions, and insights presented on United States Real Estate Investor are intended to educate and inform our readers about the dynamic world of real estate investing in the United States.

While we strive to provide accurate, up-to-date, and reliable information, we encourage readers to consult with professional real estate advisors, financial experts, or legal counsel before making any investment decisions.

Our team of expert writers, researchers, and contributors work diligently to gather information from credible sources. However, the real estate market is subject to fluctuations, changes, and unforeseen events.

United States Real Estate Investor cannot guarantee the completeness or accuracy of the information presented, nor can we be held responsible for any actions taken based on the content found on our website.

We may include links to third-party websites, products, or services.

These links are provided for convenience and do not constitute an endorsement or approval by United States Real Estate Investor.

We are not responsible for the content, privacy policies, or practices of any third-party sites.

Opinions expressed by contributors are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of United States Real Estate Investor.

We welcome diverse perspectives and encourage healthy debate and discussion.

By accessing and using the content on United States Real Estate Investor, you agree to this disclaimer and acknowledge that the information provided is for informational and educational purposes only.

If you have any questions, concerns, or feedback, please feel free to visit our contact page.

United States Real Estate Investor.

United States Real Estate Investor®
Picture of United States Real Estate Investor®
United States Real Estate Investor®

Helping you learn how to achieve financial freedom through real estate investing.

Don't miss out on the value

Join our thousands of subscribers

Subscribe to our newsletter to learn how to attract clients, close deals faster, and a lot more!

United States Real Estate Investor logo
United States Real Estate Investor®
United States Real Estate Investor®

This is the easiest way to know the industry.
The Ultimate Real Estate Investing Glossary

United States Real Estate Investor®

More content

United States Real Estate Investor®

notice!

Web & Social yearly Package

Please, have ad set files ready before purchase.

Please, be aware that after your purchase on the Stripe payment portal, keep your browser open; You will be automatically redirected to the ad set submission page.

notice!

Web & Social Monthly Package

Please, have ad set files ready before purchase.

Please, be aware that after your purchase on the Stripe payment portal, keep your browser open; You will be automatically redirected to the ad set submission page.