How Much Does It Cost to Sell a House in Berea, KY?

How Much Does It Cost to Sell a House in Berea, KY?

Selling a home in Berea typically costs 7–10% of the sale price in combined commissions, closing fees, and pre-listing expenses. On a $300,000 home — close to the current Berea median — you can expect to net approximately $271,000–$280,000 if you own the home free and clear. The biggest cost is agent commission (around 5–6%), followed by title and settlement fees, Kentucky’s transfer tax, prorated property taxes, and whatever you invest getting the home ready to list.

By Devin Todd Azbill, REALTOR® | May 27, 2026

“What am I actually going to walk away with?” It’s one of the first things I hear from sellers when we sit down — and it’s exactly the right question to start with. Because the number that matters isn’t your sale price. It’s what you keep after everything comes out.

Berea’s market is strong right now. Homes are averaging just 18 days on market, prices are up more than 7% year-over-year, and sellers are fielding competitive offers. But a “strong offer” and a “strong net” aren’t the same thing. Before you decide to list — or before you accept the first offer that comes in — you need to know exactly what’s coming off the top.

Here’s a plain-English breakdown of what sellers actually pay in this market.

What Sellers Pay at Closing in Kentucky

When you close on a home in Kentucky, the title company collects your proceeds, pays out every lien and fee, and wires or cuts you a check for what’s left. Here’s every line item you’ll see on a seller’s closing disclosure:

Real Estate Commission
This is the largest expense for almost every seller. In the Berea market, total commission typically runs 5–6%, split between your listing agent and the buyer’s agent. At the current median of around 5.66%, you’re paying approximately $2,830 per $50,000 in sale price — or about $16,980 on a $300,000 sale.

One thing worth understanding: since the 2024 NAR settlement, sellers are no longer required to offer buyer’s agent compensation. But in practice, the vast majority of Berea sellers still do — typically 2.5–3% — because it influences how many buyers will actually tour your home. Whether to offer it, and how much, is a real conversation to have with your agent before you price.

Kentucky Transfer Tax
The state charges $0.50 per $500 of the sale price. On a $300,000 sale, that’s $300. Not a major line item, but it shows up on every Kentucky closing disclosure.

Recording Fees
Madison County charges fees to record the deed transfer. Budget around $50 for this.

Owner’s Title Insurance
A one-time policy that protects the buyer against any title defects that surface after closing. Whether the seller pays for this is negotiable in Kentucky, but it often comes up in the contract. On a $300,000 sale, expect $500–$800.

Settlement and Closing Fees
The title company charges for coordinating the closing — preparing documents, processing the payoff, facilitating the wire. This typically runs $300–$600 in the Berea market.

Prorated Property Taxes
You’ll owe property taxes for the portion of the year you owned the home. If taxes haven’t been paid yet for the year, your share gets deducted at closing. Madison County’s effective property tax rate runs approximately 0.75–0.85% annually. On a $300,000 home, your annual bill is roughly $2,250–$2,550 — so the prorated portion depends on what time of year you close.

Seller Concessions (if negotiated)
Some buyers — especially first-time buyers using FHA or USDA financing — ask sellers to cover a portion of their closing costs. This is a negotiated item, not a fixed cost, but it’s worth budgeting for. A typical concession in this market runs 1–3% of the purchase price. You don’t have to offer them, but they often come up in offers on homes under $300,000.

Running the Numbers: What You’ll Net on a $300K Berea Home

Here’s a realistic scenario based on current Berea market conditions, with no seller concessions and a modest pre-listing investment:

Sale Price$300,000
Listing Agent Commission (2.82%)— $8,460
Buyer’s Agent Commission (2.84%)— $8,520
Kentucky Transfer Tax— $300
Recording Fees— $50
Owner’s Title Insurance— $650
Settlement / Closing Fees— $450
Prorated Property Taxes (est.)— $600
Pre-Listing Prep (est.)— $1,500
Estimated Net Proceeds~ $279,470

If you still have a mortgage balance — say $120,000 — subtract that from your net. In that example, you’d walk away with approximately $159,000.

If you agree to cover buyer concessions (say 2%), subtract another $6,000. The variables add up quickly, which is why running your specific numbers before you list matters more than people realize.

The homes in Madison County that consistently sell the fastest also tend to net the most — not because speed is the goal, but because a well-prepared, well-priced home generates multiple offers, which drives the final sale price higher. In Berea’s current market, homes priced right are routinely closing above asking. A higher sale price lifts your net even if your closing costs stay the same.

Don’t Forget What You Spend Before You List

Closing costs are what you pay at the end. But smart sellers also budget for what happens before the sign goes in the yard.

Pre-listing costs vary widely based on your home’s condition, but here’s what I typically see Berea sellers invest:

  • Deep cleaning: $200–$500
  • Interior paint or touch-ups: $500–$2,000
  • Minor repairs (fixtures, caulking, hardware): $300–$1,000
  • Landscaping and curb appeal: $200–$800
  • Professional photography: Usually covered by your listing agent
  • Pre-listing inspection (optional but recommended): $350–$500

Total pre-listing investment: $1,500–$4,800 on average, depending on what the home needs.

Buyers in the $250K–$400K range in Berea are making careful decisions. A home that shows up clean, updated, and move-in ready doesn’t just sell faster — it often commands a better price, which offsets the prep cost many times over. A $1,500 investment that keeps your list price firm beats a $5,000 price reduction every time.

It’s also worth understanding where the current market stands before you set your expectations. Madison County prices are up significantly from two years ago. For most sellers who’ve owned their home for several years, the equity gain easily absorbs the selling costs — and then some.

Your net is real money, and you deserve to know what it is before you commit to anything. Whether you’re thinking about listing this spring, timing a move to something larger, or trying to understand whether now makes sense for your situation, the numbers are the place to start.

Ready to see what you’d actually walk away with? I’ll put together a no-pressure net sheet based on your home’s specific value in today’s Berea market. Start here: toddky.com/selling


Frequently Asked Questions

What are typical closing costs for home sellers in Kentucky?

Sellers in Kentucky typically pay 7–10% of the sale price in total selling costs, including real estate commissions (5–6%), Kentucky’s transfer tax ($0.50 per $500), recording fees, title insurance, settlement fees, and prorated property taxes. On a $300,000 home, that’s roughly $19,000–$28,000 depending on your commission structure and whether you offer buyer concessions.

Do sellers in Kentucky have to pay the buyer’s agent commission?

Sellers are no longer legally required to offer buyer’s agent compensation after the 2024 NAR settlement. That said, the majority of Berea sellers still negotiate some form of buyer’s agent compensation — typically 2.5–3% — because it affects buyer traffic and offer volume. Whether and how much to offer is a strategic decision best made with your listing agent based on current market conditions.

How much is the Kentucky transfer tax on a home sale?

Kentucky’s transfer tax is $0.50 per $500 of the sale price, paid by the seller at closing. On a $300,000 sale, that works out to $300. Madison County recording fees add approximately $50, for a combined total of roughly $350.

How much will I net if I sell my $300,000 house in Berea, KY?

On a $300,000 home with no mortgage, most Berea sellers net approximately $271,000–$280,000 after commissions, transfer tax, title insurance, settlement fees, prorated taxes, and typical pre-listing prep. If you have a mortgage balance or agree to cover buyer concessions, those amounts reduce your net further. Your actual number depends on your specific commission structure and what the market conditions look like when you list.

Is there capital gains tax when selling a home in Kentucky?

Most sellers who have lived in their home as a primary residence for at least 2 of the last 5 years qualify for the federal capital gains exclusion — $250,000 for single filers, $500,000 for married couples filing jointly — which typically eliminates capital gains tax on the sale entirely. Kentucky taxes gains as ordinary income at a flat 4.5% state rate, but the federal exclusion usually covers the taxable gain for primary residence sellers. If you haven’t lived in the home for two of the last five years, or if you’re selling investment property, consult a CPA before closing.


About Devin Todd Azbill, REALTOR®

Devin Todd Azbill is a licensed REALTOR® with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Foster Realtors and a lifelong Berea, Kentucky resident with over 100 closed transactions and $21M+ in career sales volume. She holds the ABR, SRES, PSA, e-PRO, and AHWD designations, was named a Top 2 BHHS agent in Kentucky (Q2 2025), and has earned 175 five-star reviews across Google, Zillow, Realtor.com, and FastExpert. Whether you’re buying, selling, downsizing, or relocating to Madison County, Devin brings local expertise, data-driven insights, and a proven track record to every transaction.

Leave a Reply