Transaction Management

The Complete Real Estate Transaction Coordinator Checklist [2025]

CT
CloseTrac Team
·March 2025·8 min read

The average real estate agent spends more than 15 hours per transaction on administrative work — scheduling inspections, chasing down documents, sending deadline reminders, and manually coordinating between lenders, title companies, and clients. Multiply that across a full year of closings and you've spent hundreds of hours on tasks that a good system could handle for you. The agents who scale their business don't work harder on the admin — they build better systems.

A detailed real estate transaction coordinator checklist is the foundation of that system. It is the single most effective thing you can put in place to prevent missed deadlines, dropped balls, and client frustration. Top-producing agents — the ones closing 30, 50, even 100+ deals per year — don't rely on memory. They rely on documented, repeatable processes. This guide gives you the complete checklist framework, broken down stage by stage, so you can build that system starting today.

What Is a Real Estate Transaction Coordinator?

A real estate transaction coordinator (TC) is responsible for managing the administrative side of a real estate deal from accepted offer to the closing table. While the agent focuses on negotiation, client relationships, and generating new business, the TC handles everything behind the scenes: collecting and organizing documents, tracking contingency deadlines, coordinating with title and escrow, following up with lenders, and keeping the client informed throughout the process.

Traditionally, a TC is a person — either an in-house hire or a freelance TC service. Professional TC services typically cost $300–$600 per transaction, which is significant when you're closing 20+ deals per year. Today, there's a software alternative: platforms like CloseTrac automate the TC workflow — task creation, deadline tracking, client reminders, and document collection — so agents get the same structured process without the per-transaction cost.

Why Every Agent Needs a Transaction Checklist

Human memory is not a system. You may be able to keep two or three deals organized in your head, but as soon as you're juggling six active transactions with overlapping timelines, something will fall through the cracks — and in real estate, one missed deadline can cost a client their deal. A missed inspection contingency deadline can invalidate a buyer's right to negotiate repairs. A late financing contingency removal can give the seller grounds to cancel. These aren't hypotheticals — they happen to experienced agents every year.

Here are five concrete reasons every agent should be running a standardized transaction checklist:

Consistency across every deal: Every client gets the same thorough process, regardless of which day of the week or how many other deals are active.
Faster onboarding for new agents: If you run a team, a documented checklist means a new agent can manage transactions correctly from day one — no tribal knowledge required.
Client confidence: When clients see that you have a structured process and proactively send them updates, they trust you more and refer you more often.
Legal protection: A documented paper trail of every action taken and every deadline tracked is your best defense if a deal goes sideways and a party claims negligence.
Scalability: You cannot grow a real estate business past a certain point without systematized processes. Checklists are the foundation of scale.

The Complete Buyer Transaction Checklist

A buyer transaction breaks down into five core stages, each with its own set of tasks and deadlines. Work through these in order — every item is something that can and does get missed by agents relying on memory alone.

1Stage 1 — Offer & Acceptance

Confirm fully executed purchase agreement is signed by all parties
Open escrow and confirm escrow officer contact information
Order title search and preliminary title report
Confirm earnest money deposit received by escrow within deadline
Send welcome email to buyer client with timeline overview
Set up client portal in CloseTrac and send access link
Confirm buyer has submitted mortgage pre-approval to listing agent
Enter all contract dates and deadlines into transaction management system
Send introduction email to listing agent with your contact info
Verify commission disbursement instructions on file

2Stage 2 — Inspection Period

Schedule general home inspection within the inspection contingency period
Order pest / termite inspection if required
Order sewer scope or septic inspection if applicable
Review full inspection report with buyer client within 24 hours of receipt
Draft inspection repair request or request for credit
Send inspection request to listing agent before deadline
Confirm seller's response to inspection requests in writing
Document any agreed repair credits or concessions in an addendum
Confirm buyer's decision to proceed or cancel before contingency deadline
File inspection contingency removal if buyer elects to proceed

3Stage 3 — Title & Mortgage

Confirm loan application formally submitted to lender
Verify appraisal has been ordered by lender
Receive and review preliminary title commitment for exceptions
Clear any title exceptions with title company (liens, encumbrances)
Confirm HOA documents received if property is in an HOA
Request HOA transfer documents and review for special assessments
Follow up with lender on appraisal result
If appraisal comes in low, document negotiation and any price adjustment addendum
Confirm loan approval / clear to close received from lender
File loan contingency removal once financing is secured

4Stage 4 — Closing Preparation

Schedule final walkthrough 24–48 hours before closing
Request closing disclosure from lender and review all figures
Confirm settlement statement with escrow officer
Verify wire instructions directly with escrow (never via email — call to confirm)
Confirm buyer has wired closing funds or certified check is ready
Confirm closing time and location with all parties
Prepare closing gift for buyer client
Verify all agreed repairs were completed (collect receipts if applicable)
Confirm utilities transfer is scheduled for closing day
Send buyer a closing day preparation checklist

5Stage 5 — Post-Closing

Attend closing or confirm remote signing logistics
Confirm deed has been recorded with county
Deliver keys, garage openers, and mailbox keys to buyer
Send handwritten or personalized thank-you to buyer client
Request referral or Google review within 48 hours of closing
Update CRM with closed deal status and transaction notes
Archive all deal documents in organized folder
Set 30-day, 6-month, and 1-year follow-up reminders in CRM
Calculate and confirm commission received
Add buyer to past-client nurture email sequence

The Complete Seller Transaction Checklist

Seller transactions have a different rhythm than buyer deals — the agent's role shifts from coordinator to advocate, and the timeline often begins weeks before an offer arrives. Here's how to manage it systematically from listing day to closing.

Listing & Pre-Market Stage

Confirm listing agreement signed by all sellers
Order professional photography and video tour
Coordinate staging consultation if applicable
Complete seller disclosure documents
Input listing into MLS within agreed timeframe
Verify all listing details (square footage, beds/baths, lot size) are accurate
Confirm lockbox installed and showing instructions set up
Order pre-inspection if seller has elected to disclose proactively
Schedule open house if applicable
Send seller a "your listing is live" email with MLS link

Offer & Negotiation Stage

Receive all offers and organize in a comparison document for seller review
Present offers to seller with agent recommendation
Draft and send counteroffer if seller elects to counter
Confirm final acceptance and fully executed agreement
Open escrow and confirm escrow contact
Send executed contract to all parties and lenders
Confirm earnest money deposit received by escrow
Notify seller of buyer's inspection scheduling
Enter all contingency deadlines into transaction system

Under Contract Stage

Provide access for buyer's home inspection on scheduled date
Receive and review buyer's inspection repair request
Negotiate inspection response with listing agent guidance
Confirm appraisal appointment scheduled
Prepare for and attend appraisal if needed
If low appraisal, review options (price reduction, dispute, buyer pays difference)
Track all contingency removal deadlines
Confirm buyer's loan approval received
Confirm HOA docs delivered if applicable
Review preliminary closing statement with seller

Closing Day

Confirm seller has vacated property per agreement terms
Verify all personal property removed and agreed items left
Complete final walkthrough with buyer's agent
Confirm settlement statement figures are accurate for seller
Ensure seller signing is complete (in-person or remote notary)
Confirm deed has been recorded with county
Confirm seller's net proceeds wire received
Transfer keys, garage openers, and all access items to buyer
Send seller thank-you and request referral or review
Archive all documents and close out transaction in your system

How to Automate Your Transaction Checklist

A manual checklist — whether in a spreadsheet, a Word doc, or a printed PDF — works fine when you're managing two or three deals at a time. But manual systems have a ceiling. They require you to remember to check them. They don't send reminders. They don't update clients automatically. And they definitely don't scale to 20+ active transactions without someone falling behind.

CloseTrac is built specifically to replace the manual checklist with an automated workflow. Every time you create a new deal, CloseTrac generates a full task catalog automatically — every stage, every deadline, every client-facing task — tied to your contract close date. Clients receive automated reminders 48 hours and 24 hours before each task is due, without you lifting a finger. And every client gets a personalized portal showing exactly where they are in the process, what they need to do next, and how close they are to closing. The difference between managing 5 deals and 25 deals isn't talent — it's systems.

Ready to put your transaction checklist on autopilot?

Try CloseTrac free for 14 days — set up your first deal in 5 minutes. No credit card required.

Start Your Free Trial

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a real estate transaction coordinator do?

A real estate transaction coordinator (TC) manages the administrative and logistical side of a real estate deal from the moment an offer is accepted to the day the deal closes. This includes tracking deadlines, collecting and organizing documents, communicating with lenders, title companies, escrow officers, and clients, scheduling inspections and walkthroughs, and making sure nothing falls through the cracks. The TC handles the paperwork and process so the agent can focus on relationships and new business.

How much does a transaction coordinator cost?

A professional TC service typically charges between $300 and $600 per transaction, depending on your market and the scope of work. Some TCs charge monthly retainers if you have consistent deal volume. Transaction management software like CloseTrac offers an alternative: you get the same structured workflow and automation starting at $49/month for individual agents, covering multiple deals simultaneously.

Should I hire a TC or use transaction management software?

It depends on your volume and preferences. If you're closing fewer than 10 deals per year, a part-time TC or TC software is likely more cost-effective than a full-time TC. If you're a top producer closing 40+ deals annually, you may want both — a human TC for client communication and software for systematic tracking and client portals. Many high-volume agents use CloseTrac alongside a TC to eliminate redundant administrative work and give clients a professional portal experience.

How many transactions can one agent manage?

Without a system, most agents max out around 8–12 active transactions before deals start falling through the cracks. With a proper transaction management system and checklists, a single organized agent can handle 15–20 active deals simultaneously. Teams using software like CloseTrac with automated reminders and client portals regularly manage 25–40+ active transactions without dropping the ball on any of them.

What's the most common reason real estate deals fall through?

Missed deadlines are the single biggest operational reason deals fail — particularly missed inspection contingency deadlines and financing contingency deadlines. Beyond that, poor communication (clients not knowing what to do next, documents not collected in time) and failure to manage appraisal gaps are the next most common culprits. A well-followed transaction coordinator checklist and automated client reminders address all three of these failure points directly.

Related Resources

How to Manage Multiple Real Estate TransactionsThe Real Estate Client Portal GuideCloseTrac FeaturesCloseTrac Platform Overview

© 2026 CloseTrac, Inc.

AboutCareersPrivacyTermsSecurityContact