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How Much Does a Reverse Mortgage Cost in South Dakota?

How much does a reverse mortgage cost in South Dakota? It is a fair question and one of the more important ones to answer before making a decision. Reverse mortgages carry higher upfront costs than a typical conforming mortgage, and the ongoing interest and mortgage insurance accrue to your loan balance over time rather than being paid monthly. Understanding the numbers is the difference between a reverse mortgage that supports your retirement plan and one that surprises you later.

Our team at the Heartland Branch of Fairway Independent Mortgage walks retirees across Sioux Falls, Rapid City, Brookings, Watertown, and smaller South Dakota communities through these numbers regularly. This guide breaks down every cost component, how the balance grows, and what your equity typically looks like after 5, 10, and 20 years. For background, see our complete guide to reverse mortgages in South Dakota.

Step 1: Understand the Cost Categories

A HECM reverse mortgage has three buckets of cost: upfront closing costs (paid once, mostly financed into the loan), ongoing interest and insurance (accrued monthly to the balance), and third-party fees (counseling, appraisal, title). Each one behaves differently over time, and that behavior is what shapes your final equity position.

Unlike a traditional mortgage where you pay interest and insurance each month and your balance goes down, a reverse mortgage is a growing-balance loan. Your balance grows because interest and mortgage insurance accrue to the loan rather than being paid as you go. That is the core trade-off, and it is why careful cost planning matters.

Step 2: Upfront Costs

The upfront costs on a HECM are regulated by HUD, which caps the most important fees. Here is the breakdown for a typical South Dakota home.

Cost Amount Paid When
Origination Fee 2% of first $200,000 + 1% above; capped at $6,000 Financed into loan
Upfront MIP 2% of appraised home value Financed into loan
HUD Counseling Fee $125 – $200 Out of pocket (sometimes waived)
Appraisal $500 – $800 (typical SD ranges) Out of pocket
Title Insurance and Recording $1,500 – $3,000 (varies by county and loan size) Financed into loan
Flood Certification and Other Misc. $100 – $300 Financed into loan

On a $325,000 Sioux Falls home, typical upfront costs add up to roughly $12,000 to $14,500. On a $500,000 home in Rapid City or a higher-end Sioux Falls address, closing costs range closer to $15,000 to $18,000 because the upfront MIP (2% of home value) scales with home value.

Why it matters: Most upfront costs are financed into the loan rather than paid out of pocket at closing. That means you typically need only a few hundred to a few thousand dollars of actual cash at closing for the counseling and appraisal fees. The rest becomes part of your starting loan balance.

Step 3: Ongoing Costs That Accrue to Your Balance

Once the loan closes, two ongoing costs accrue to your loan balance each month. You do not write a check for either of them, but they affect your equity over time.

Interest accrues daily on whatever portion of your principal limit you have drawn. If you take a lump sum, interest accrues on the full amount from day one. If you use a line of credit, interest accrues only on funds you have actually drawn, not on the available credit line. Interest rates on HECMs are either fixed (lump sum only) or adjustable (LOC, tenure, term products).

Annual MIP. The annual mortgage insurance premium is 0.5% of the outstanding loan balance, accrued monthly to the balance. This is the federal insurance that guarantees you and your heirs will never owe more than the home is worth.

Servicing fee. Many lenders charge a monthly servicing fee of up to $30. Some lenders waive this fee, which is worth asking about as you compare offers.

Step 4: How Much Does a Reverse Mortgage Cost in South Dakota Over Time?

The most useful way to think about cost is not the upfront number but how the balance grows over time. Here is an illustrative example using a $325,000 Sioux Falls home, a 70-year-old borrower, and a line of credit product at current rate assumptions.

Year Loan Balance Estimated Home Value (3% appreciation) Remaining Equity
At Closing ~$18,000 (upfront costs; LOC unused) $325,000 ~$307,000
Year 5 (LOC unused) ~$25,000 ~$377,000 ~$352,000
Year 5 ($75K drawn) ~$108,000 ~$377,000 ~$269,000
Year 10 ($75K drawn) ~$158,000 ~$437,000 ~$279,000
Year 20 ($75K drawn) ~$300,000 ~$587,000 ~$287,000

Two important observations. First, if you use a line of credit and draw little, the balance barely grows over time, and home appreciation can more than offset the accrued interest. Second, even with meaningful draws, home appreciation in a steady market like South Dakota can keep your equity position fairly stable over long periods.

These figures are illustrative, not guaranteed. Actual numbers depend on your age, home value, interest rate, rate of draw, and home appreciation. Our team can run a scenario specific to your home and draw pattern.

Step 5: Cost Scenarios at Different South Dakota Home Values

Home value is the biggest driver of your upfront cost total, because the upfront MIP is 2% of appraised value. Here are illustrative upfront cost ranges at three common South Dakota home value points.

Home Value Upfront MIP (2%) Origination Fee (HUD cap) Total Upfront Costs (est.)
$225,000 (Watertown / Brookings) $4,500 $4,250 $10,500 – $12,500
$325,000 (Sioux Falls median) $6,500 $5,250 $13,000 – $15,500
$500,000 (higher-end SD) $10,000 $6,000 (HUD cap) $17,500 – $20,500

The origination fee caps at $6,000 regardless of home value, so very high-value homes do not see proportionally higher origination fees. The upfront MIP is the component that continues to scale with home value.

Step 6: Ways to Reduce or Manage the Cost

Choose the line of credit over lump sum. Interest accrues only on drawn funds, so leaving the credit line partially unused keeps the balance lower. The unused portion also grows over time.

Ask about servicing fee waivers. Some lenders waive the monthly servicing fee entirely. Over 15 years, a $25/month fee adds up to $4,500, so the waiver is worth real money.

Compare lender origination fee offers. While the origination fee is capped by HUD, lenders can charge below the cap. Getting two or three quotes is a reasonable practice.

Time the loan carefully. If you plan to stay in the home for many years, the upfront costs spread out across a longer period; if you might sell within a few years, those upfront costs are a larger share of the total experience and a HELOC or other alternative may make more sense. Our reverse mortgage and HELOC comparison walks through that decision.

Step 7: Ask Our Team for a Scenario Analysis

Because reverse mortgage costs depend heavily on your age, home value, rate environment, and draw plans, the most accurate answer to “how much will this cost me?” comes from running a scenario with your actual numbers. Our team can produce a detailed cost projection that shows your upfront costs, projected balance at 5, 10, and 20 years, and projected equity based on realistic South Dakota appreciation assumptions.

To get started, reach out through fairwayheartland.com or begin a conversation at mobile.fairwaynow.com. Once we know your age and a rough home value, we can share concrete numbers within a day or two.

Before running numbers, it is worth checking whether you meet the basic qualification criteria. Our companion article on reverse mortgage qualification in South Dakota walks through every requirement. If the idea of using a reverse mortgage to buy a new primary residence (rather than tap equity in your current home) is on the table, see our guide to buying a home with a reverse mortgage in South Dakota.

Quick Facts: Reverse Mortgage Costs in South Dakota

Origination Fee Cap: $6,000

Upfront MIP: 2% of appraised home value

Annual MIP: 0.5% of loan balance per year

HUD Counseling Fee: $125 – $200

Typical Upfront Total (SD median home): $13,000 – $15,500

Out-of-Pocket at Closing: Often only counseling + appraisal fees

Frequently Asked Questions About Reverse Mortgage Costs in South Dakota

Can I finance the closing costs into the reverse mortgage?

Yes. Most closing costs (origination fee, upfront MIP, title insurance, recording fees) are financed into the loan rather than paid out of pocket. Typical out-of-pocket costs are limited to the HUD counseling fee and the appraisal, totaling roughly $625 to $1,000 for most South Dakota borrowers.

Are reverse mortgage rates higher than traditional mortgage rates?

They are often in the same range. HECM adjustable rates track market indices similar to traditional ARMs, and HECM fixed rates tend to be modestly higher than conforming 30-year fixed rates. Because reverse mortgages do not require monthly principal and interest payments, the rate impacts your accruing balance rather than a monthly bill.

How does the line of credit growth feature work?

Any portion of your HECM line of credit that you do not draw grows over time at the same rate that would accrue to a drawn balance. For example, if the effective rate is 7%, your unused credit line grows by approximately 7% per year. That growth is unique to HECM lines of credit and is one reason many retirees open the line early and leave most of it untouched.

Will I lose all my home equity with a reverse mortgage?

Not typically. In South Dakota’s steady appreciation environment, home value growth often offsets a meaningful portion of the accruing balance. With a conservative draw pattern and a line of credit, many borrowers retain substantial equity after 15 to 20 years. Aggressive lump-sum draws will reduce equity faster.

Are reverse mortgage costs tax deductible?

Interest on a reverse mortgage is not deductible as it accrues, because you are not paying it. Interest may become deductible in the year it is actually paid (typically when the loan is repaid at sale or from the estate), subject to IRS limits. Because tax treatment is individual, consult your tax advisor for specifics.

Can I pay down the balance on a reverse mortgage?

Yes. You can make voluntary payments toward the balance at any time without penalty. On a HECM with a line of credit, payments reduce your balance and restore available credit. Some retirees who have extra cash in a given year use voluntary payments to manage long-term growth of the balance.

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