The FinCEN Residential Real Estate Rule is coming — and by March 1, title agents will be responsible for identifying, collecting, and reporting data on FinCEN-reportable transactions.
You’ve already read about FinCEN Regulatory Compliance and how the AccuTitle FinCEN Portal will help.
Now the real question is: What should title agents be doing right now to be ready?
Below is a practical, operations-first checklist to help agencies prepare confidently, without disrupting closings or creating unnecessary risk.
Here is our checklist:
- Confirm Who Owns FinCEN Compliance Internally
- Understand the Criteria Used to Identify FinCEN Transactions
- Update Internal Policies & Procedures
- Add FinCEN Data Collection as an Exception on the Title Report / Commitment
- Add FinCEN Review to the Pre-Closing Checklist
- Update the Title Application Review Process
- Decide How FinCEN Fees Will Be Handled
- Add FinCEN Reporting to Month-End Processes
- Train Staff — Even Briefly
Confirm Who Owns FinCEN Compliance Internally
A transfer that does NOT involve an extension of credit to all transferees that is both (1) secured by the property and (2) extended by a financial institution with AML program and SAR obligations.
If credit is extended by a lender without those obligations, the transfer is treated as non-financed and may be reportable.
Prep Tip:
Designate both a primary owner and a backup to account for PTO, turnover, or high-volume periods.
Understand the Criteria Used to Identify FinCEN Transactions
Agents should not rely on memory or “we’ll know it when we see it.”
Between now and March 1, agencies should formally document the criteria used to determine whether a transaction is FinCEN-reportable, including:
- What triggers a review
- When the review occurs in the workflow
- Who makes the determination
- How the decision is documented
All AccuTitle Title Management Platforms will flag FinCEN transactions, but if you are not using a software that does this, you will need to be able to identify transactions yourself.
Learn more about the criteria here: FinCEN Regulatory Compliance
This creates consistency across files, staff, and offices — and reduces the risk of missed reporting.
Prep Tip:
Apply this review during New Transaction Creation, not at the closing table.
Update Internal Policies & Procedures
Every agency should create or update a FinCEN-specific policy and procedure that answers:
- When a FinCEN review occurs
- How data is collected and verified
- Where information is stored
- How deadlines are tracked
- What happens if data is incomplete or delayed
This does not need to be overly complex — but it does need to be written, repeatable, and trainable.
Prep Tip:
If an auditor or regulator asked, “Show us how you handle FinCEN,” could you hand them a document?
Add FinCEN Data Collection as an Exception on the Title Report / Commitment
Many agencies are planning to add FinCEN Data Collection as an exception on the title report or commitment.
Why?
- It documents that additional federally required information is being collected
- It sets expectations early with buyers, attorneys, and lenders
- It creates transparency around compliance-driven requirements
This small addition can prevent friction and confusion later in the transaction.
Add FinCEN Review to the Pre-Closing Checklist
FinCEN should not be a post-closing scramble. Between now and February 28th, agencies should update their Pre-Closing Checklist to include:
- Confirmation that FinCEN reportability was reviewed
- Confirmation that required data has been collected
- Confirmation that responsibility for reporting is clear
This ensures compliance before documents are finalized — not after keys are handed over.
Update the Title Application Review Process
FinCEN reportability should be evaluated as part of New Transaction Creation, not discovered late in the file.
Agents should update intake and review procedures to:
- Identify entity or trust buyers early
- Confirm financing structure
- Flag potential reportable transactions upfront
Early identification reduces delays, client frustration, and rushed data collection.
Decide How FinCEN Fees Will Be Handled
FinCEN reporting introduces real operational work and real costs. Be sure to consider these costs for any closings occurring after March 1, 2026.
Between now and March 1, agencies need to decide:
- Whether to add a FinCEN service charge- do this now!
- How that fee will be disclosed
- Where it appears on the settlement statement
The AccuTitle FinCEN Portal costs $119 per submission.
Many agencies are planning to pass this cost through as a service fee associated with the reporting process or portal usage. Some anticipate charging $400 or more, though fee amounts are ultimately determined by each agency.
FinCEN estimates the report should take between 1.5 hours (for simple reports) and up to 10 hours (for more complex reports) to ultimately collect the information and submit.
This service is separate from title insurance and, in most states, falls outside standard insurance rate regulation. Generally, agencies may pass along and markup costs incurred to provide FinCEN reporting, subject to any state-specific filing or rate requirements.
Prep Tip:
If you plan to add FinCEN as a service fee, you should do this NOW for transactions closing after March 1, 2026.
Add FinCEN Reporting to Month-End Processes
FinCEN compliance doesn’t end at closing. Agencies should incorporate FinCEN Data Reporting into month-end processes, including:
- Confirming all reportable transactions were filed
- Tracking submission deadlines
- Maintaining records for audit purposes
This transforms FinCEN from an ad-hoc task into a controlled, auditable process.
Train Staff — Even Briefly
Even a short internal training goes a long way.
Before March 1, agencies should:
- Explain what FinCEN is (at a high level)
- Show staff where FinCEN reviews occur in the workflow
- Clarify who to escalate questions to
Prepared staff = fewer errors and smoother closings.
Final Thought: Prepared Beats Perfect
FinCEN compliance isn’t about doing everything at once — it’s about having a defined, repeatable process in place by March 1.
Agencies that prepare now will:
- Reduce compliance risk
- Avoid last-minute disruptions
- Protect staff time and client relationships
And most importantly, they’ll be ready — not reactive.