Owner's policy, lender's policy, promulgated rates, simultaneous-issue discount, reissue credit — every option explained so you understand exactly what you are paying for and why.
Florida title insurance is two products in one transaction. The owner's policy protects the buyer's equity in the property — typically for the purchase price and any subsequent appreciation up to the policy amount, for as long as the buyer or the buyer's heirs hold any interest in the property. The lender's policy protects the lender's mortgage lien — only up to the outstanding loan balance, only for the life of the loan.
The two policies cover different things, are paid for separately, and are governed by Florida's promulgated rate framework. We help every buyer and every lender understand both policies before signing anything.
Standard or enhanced owner's coverage for the buyer — issued in the amount of the purchase price, providing protection against title defects, undisclosed liens, and forgery in the chain of title.
Required by virtually every Florida residential lender — protects the lender's lien position up to the loan amount, with standard secondary-market endorsements.
When owner's and lender's policies are issued at the same closing, the lender's policy is issued at a reduced simultaneous-issue rate set by Florida regulation.
If a qualifying prior owner's policy exists on the property within the eligible time window, the new owner's premium is reduced through Florida's reissue credit.
Expanded coverage endorsements — Florida Form 9, survey, condo, PUD, environmental, access — added to broaden the policy beyond the standard coverage.
Investor and construction loan policies — including ALTA construction loan policies for builders and short-form residential policies for portfolio holders.
Florida is one of a handful of US states where title insurance premium rates are promulgated — meaning the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation publishes a uniform rate schedule that every licensed title insurance agent and underwriter must follow. The premium for a $500,000 owner's policy is the same whether you use Atlantic Title Firm or any other Florida title agency. The differentiator is not price; it is the quality of the search, the underwriter relationships, the closing service, and the speed of issuance.
The Florida promulgated owner's premium is a tiered schedule that starts higher per thousand on the first tier of policy amount and decreases per thousand as the policy amount rises. For most Florida residential transactions, the basic owner's premium is a function of the purchase price and falls within a predictable range. Atlantic Title Firm provides a written premium quote for every transaction we handle — see our closing cost estimator for a baseline figure on your specific deal.
When an owner's policy and a lender's policy are issued on the same closing — the typical configuration for any purchase with financing — the lender's policy is issued at a reduced simultaneous-issue rate. This is one of the most underappreciated savings in Florida title insurance: a borrower who orders the owner's and lender's policies through the same title agent at the same closing pays significantly less than if they were issued separately.
Florida's reissue credit is a regulated discount that applies when a prior owner's title insurance policy was issued on the same property within an eligible time window. The new owner's premium is reduced by a credit reflecting the recent prior insurance. For sellers, providing the prior policy to the new title company is often the single most concrete thing they can do to lower the buyer's closing costs and make the deal feel friendlier at the closing table.
The Florida Form 9 endorsement is the gold-standard owner's policy endorsement in the state. It expands the standard owner's coverage to insure against several risks that are excluded from the base policy — most notably violations of restrictive covenants, encroachments by improvements onto easements or setbacks disclosed by an accurate survey, and certain post-policy events. The Form 9 is available when the property qualifies (typically single-family residential improved property with an acceptable survey) and is a standard recommendation for most Atlantic Title Firm buyers.
Florida residential lenders require a lender's policy on every financed purchase. The owner's policy is technically optional for the buyer, but skipping it is one of the riskiest false economies in real estate. The lender's policy protects only the lender; if a title defect surfaces five years after closing — an unrecorded heir, a forged signature in the chain, a missing satisfaction — the lender is whole and the homeowner is not. The owner's policy is the buyer's protection, and it lasts as long as they hold any interest in the property.
Florida buyers and lenders should also confirm that a closing protection letter (CPL) is issued by the underwriter for the transaction. The CPL provides additional underwriter-backed protection against settlement agent fraud, misappropriation of escrow funds, and certain closing errors. CPLs are standard on Atlantic Title Firm closings and are coordinated through our underwriter at no separate charge to the consumer.
Compare policy options on your specific transaction by reviewing our title insurance overview, our title commitment page, or by contacting our order desk for a tailored quote on a Florida deal. For investor portfolios, see investor closing.
After the 30-year search, we issue a written title commitment from a major Florida underwriter with Schedule A, B-I, and B-II.
We calculate the promulgated owner's premium, apply any reissue credit, and present the simultaneous-issue lender's premium for closing disclosure.
At closing, the deed and mortgage record, premium is collected on the settlement statement, and the commitment is marked up to policy.
Owner's and lender's policies issue from the underwriter, typically within 30 days of recording, and are delivered to the buyer and the lender.
Get a written premium quote with simultaneous-issue and reissue credit applied — straight from a senior Florida title officer.
Questions first? Contact our title team for a no-obligation consultation.