FROM OUR BLOG

The 15-minute compliance check: what every title office should run at mid-year

June 26, 2026

Halfway through the year is a good moment to pause. This title office compliance checklist is designed to help your team quickly identify small process gaps before they become costly problems. Not for a full audit, not for a policy overhaul, but for a quick, honest look at whether your compliance habits have kept up with your closing volume. 

The four areas below are where most title offices tend to accumulate quiet risk. Not because teams are careless, but because everyone is busy and nobody owns these things explicitly. This checklist is designed to take about 15 minutes.  

1. Wire and client communication 

Wire fraud is the top risk for title and escrow operations. The good news is that most of the prevention comes down to consistent habits, not expensive technology. 

Ask yourself: 

  • Are wire instructions delivered through a secure portal or direct contact, never over email? 
  • Do clients receive a verbal confirmation before transferring funds? 
  • Have clients been told, in writing, that wire instructions will never change once provided? 
  • Does every team member follow the same verification steps, or does the process vary depending on who is handling the file? 

If any of those answers are uncertain, that is where to start. Write down each step, find the gap, and put a name to it. 

2. Post-closing documentation 

Post-closing is where loose ends become liability. Files that are not properly closed out, disbursements that are not documented, records that exist somewhere but nobody can find them quickly, these are the gaps that surface during an audit or a dispute. 

Ask yourself: 

  • Can you pull a closed file and confirm that all disbursements are accounted for? 
  • Are post-closing tasks completed consistently, or do they depend on who closed the file? 
  • Is there a clear process for how long files are retained and where they live? 
  • When a lender or underwriter requests documentation, how long does it take to find it? 

Consistency is the goal here. The standard does not have to be perfect. It has to be repeatable. 

3. Access and team readiness 

This one is easy to overlook because it does not feel like compliance. It feels like IT. But who has access to what in your system, and whether that list is current, is a real exposure. 

Ask yourself: 

  • Do former team members still have active credentials in your title software or email systems? 
  • Does everyone on the current team have access to what they need, and only what they need? 
  • If someone called out sick today, could another team member step in and follow the right process for a closing? 
  • When did you last review user permissions across your platforms? 

A quick access audit twice a year takes minimal effort yet can close critical security gaps and maintain accessibility in the event of unexpected availability of a team member. 

4. Internal procedures and training 

The clearest sign that a title office is well-run is not the software it uses. It is whether a new team member can sit down and know what to do. If your procedures live in one person’s head, that is a risk. 

Ask yourself: 

  • Are your wire verification, closing, and post-closing procedures written down and accessible to everyone? 
  • Has every team member reviewed those procedures in the past six months? 
  • When you onboard someone new, is there a clear process they follow from day one? 
  • If your most experienced closer left tomorrow, would the rest of the team know how to handle their files? 

Documented procedures are also what protect you when something goes wrong. They show that your team acted according to a standard, not just instinct. 

Make the Title Office Compliance Checklist a Habit

Offices that stay ahead of compliance risk are the ones that make it an ongoing practice instead of a once-a-year event. Mid-year marks an ideal time to review this checklist, and it only takes about 15 minutes to prevent future problems. 

The right software supports the consistency of these habits. If your platform makes it easy to retrieve documentation, track communication, manage permissions, and keep procedures visible to your whole team, compliance becomes a byproduct of how you already work. If it does not, compliance becomes a separate project nobody has time for. 

AccuAir was built to make that first version the default. See what that looks like inside your operation. Pick a time, and we’ll walk you through it. 

AccuTitle | The Friendly Company

support@accutitle.com


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