Dallas, Texas
Transaction coordination in Dallas.
Dallas coordination built around Texas forms, Dallas County closing customs, and local market pace.
What does a transaction coordinator do in Dallas?
A transaction coordinator in Dallas manages the paperwork, deadlines, and communication between all parties from contract to close. Dallas sits in Dallas County, Texas, within a metro area of roughly 8.1 million people. Every file follows Texas rules, Dallas County recording customs, and the pace of the local market.
For a full breakdown of Texas closing conventions, contract forms, and regulatory details, see the Texas state hub.
How does the Dallas real estate market look?
- Median home price: $400,000
- Average days on market: 45
- Metro population: 8.1 million
Second-largest Texas metro spanning 13 counties. Corporate relocations from California continue to fuel demand, and the DFW metroplex was the third-fastest-growing U.S. metro by numeric population gain in 2025.
How do closings work in Dallas, Texas?
Title companies run closings in this market, not attorneys. Quill manages the entire transaction from contract to close, coordinating directly with the title company on commitment review, settlement statements, and closing logistics.
- Closing convention: Category D
- Standard contract form: TREC 20-18 (One to Four Family Residential)
- State regulator: Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC)
What does Quill do on a Dallas file?
From the moment you forward the executed contract until after the close package is in your broker file, Quill runs the deal end-to-end. $350 per file, billed at close.
- Contract timeline built and shared with all parties (cooperating agent, lender, title company, and inspectors)
- Deadline tracking for every contingency in the TREC 20-18
- Earnest money delivery confirmed and receipt chased until it clears escrow
- Inspection scheduling coordinated with the buyer's vendors; objection and resolution deadlines tracked
- Weekly lender updates pulled with direct confirmation before contingency expirations
- Title commitment reviewed for exceptions that need cure or waiver
- Closing disclosure reviewed against commission demand and broker file requirements before signing
- Final broker-file package assembled to Texas regulatory standards
Frequently asked questions
- How much does a transaction coordinator cost in Dallas?
- Quill charges $350 flat per file for transaction coordination in Dallas, Texas. The fee is billed at close, so there's no upfront cost.
- What's the median home price in Dallas?
- The median home price in the Dallas metro is approximately $400,000, with an average of 45 days on market.
- Who holds earnest money in Dallas County?
- In Dallas County, earnest money is typically held by the title company, not the buyer's brokerage.
- Does Dallas require a closing attorney?
- No. This market uses title companies or escrow officers for closings rather than attorneys. Quill coordinates directly with the title or escrow company throughout.
Your Dallas files, coordinated.
$350 per file, billed when the deal closes. First file is free for Dallas agents trying the service.