
By Steven J. Thomas
You locked a payment you could live with. Twelve months later a letter shows up from your servicer and the payment is $180 higher. Nobody changed your rate. Nobody changed your loan. Your escrow account came up short, and now you are covering the gap. This is happening to a lot of Lancaster, DeSoto, and Grand Prairie homeowners right now, and almost none of them saw it coming because nobody explained escrow at the closing table.
Your mortgage payment jumped because your escrow account ran short. Escrow holds the money your lender collects each month to pay your property taxes and homeowners insurance. When either one rises faster than your lender estimated, the account runs a deficit, and your servicer spreads that shortfall across the next twelve payments while also raising the monthly collection to cover the new, higher bills. Roughly 65 percent of escrow accounts nationwide are projected short in 2026, with an average shortfall around $2,157, or about $180 a month. In Texas, where property taxes are high and insurance is climbing 10 to 25 percent, the hit is bigger than average. Get a real payment estimate before you buy by getting pre-approved.
Your monthly payment has four parts. Principal, interest, taxes, insurance. The first two are fixed on a 30-year fixed loan and will never change. The last two are estimates, and estimates get revised.
Each month your servicer takes the tax and insurance portion of your payment and parks it in an escrow account. Once a year they pay your county tax bill and your insurance premium out of that account. Then they run an escrow analysis. If the account has enough, nothing changes. If it does not, you get the letter.
The double hit is what surprises people. You do not just pay the shortage. You also pay a higher monthly amount going forward, because the new bills are bigger. That is why a $2,000 shortfall can look like a $300 monthly increase instead of $167.
North Texas is a hail alley. Insurers have priced that in, and they keep repricing it every renewal. Meanwhile appraisal districts have kept raising values. Two rising inputs, one escrow account, and a servicer who only recalculates once a year. That is the whole mechanism.
This is the part that catches first-time and new construction buyers hardest, and it is worth slowing down on.
When you buy new construction in a growing city like Lancaster, Glenn Heights, or Red Oak, your first tax bill is often based on the unimproved lot, not the finished house. The builder's lot might be assessed at $70,000. Your finished home is worth $420,000. Your lender escrows against the number they see, which is the lot.
Year two, the appraisal district catches up and bills you on the full improved value. Your tax bill triples. Your escrow account is deeply short. Your payment jumps $400 or more, and you never did anything wrong.
The fix is to ask your lender, before closing, whether the escrow estimate is based on the lot value or the finished value, and to ask them to escrow against the finished value. Not every lender will. Ask anyway. Then run the real numbers with a pre-approval that reflects what you will actually pay in year two.
Take a $400,000 Lancaster home with a 1.81 percent effective tax rate and DFW-average insurance.
Notice what is not on that list. Your rate. Your principal. The loan did exactly what the loan promised. The county and the insurer did the rest.
Texas gives you the right to protest, and most homeowners never use it. The deadline is generally May 15 or 30 days after your notice arrives, whichever is later. Even a modest reduction compounds against a 1.8 percent rate.
If this is your primary residence, file it. The Texas homestead exemption also caps how fast your assessed value can rise, which is the quiet part that protects you for years.
Renewal is not a contract. Get three quotes. Raise your wind and hail deductible if the premium savings justify it. Bundle if it helps. A $700 annual savings on insurance is a $58 monthly savings on your payment, permanently.
Most servicers let you write one check for the shortfall instead of spreading it. That kills half the increase immediately, leaving only the higher ongoing collection.
Some lenders let borrowers with 20 percent down waive escrow and pay taxes and insurance directly. That works for a few people. For most, it turns a $180 monthly surprise into an $11,000 January surprise.
Every buyer I sit down with runs the same first calculation. What is my payment? That is the wrong first question. The right question is what is my payment in year three.
Budget your true monthly cost at 8 to 12 percent above the quoted payment. If the number still works, buy. If it only works at the quoted payment, you are buying a house that will squeeze you in eighteen months, and buying at 6.43 percent in a market where four in ten sellers are already cutting price means you have room to negotiate a smaller purchase instead.
This is where being on both sides of the transaction helps. I underwrite the loan and I negotiate the contract, so I can tell you what the escrow will really be, not what makes the pre-qual look pretty. Twenty years in financial services taught me that the payment people can afford and the payment people are shown are rarely the same number.
Builders across DeSoto, Lancaster, Midlothian, and Waxahachie are still offering rate buydowns and closing cost credits in 2026 because inventory has loosened. That money is real. Use some of it on escrow.
Instead of spending the entire builder credit on a temporary 2-1 buydown that expires, ask the lender to apply part of it to fund the escrow account at the finished tax value. A buydown lowers your payment for 24 months. A fully funded escrow keeps your payment from exploding in month 13. One of those is marketing. The other is math. Buyers using our team on a new construction purchase also get up to 1 percent back at closing through the new construction rebate program, up to $10,000, which is another place that cushion can come from.
Escrow shock is not a scam and it is not a mistake. It is what happens when a fixed loan sits on top of two variable bills in a state with high property taxes and hail-priced insurance. You cannot stop taxes and premiums from rising. You can protest your value, file your homestead, shop your insurance every year, and refuse to buy a house that only pencils at the quoted payment.
Get pre-approved in minutes and see the payment you will actually make in year two, not just year one.
Download the Lone Star Living App to track live DFW listings with real tax and insurance context.
Book an appointment today and we will build the real number together.
Once a year. Your servicer runs an escrow analysis after paying your tax and insurance bills, then mails a statement showing any shortage and your new monthly payment.
Usually yes. Most servicers offer a lump-sum option. It eliminates the repayment portion of the increase, though your ongoing monthly collection still rises to match the new bills.
Protest it. In Texas the deadline is generally May 15 or 30 days after your notice arrives, whichever is later. A successful protest lowers your tax bill and, eventually, your escrow.
Because year-one taxes are often assessed on the unimproved lot. When the appraisal district reassesses the finished home, the tax bill can more than double and the escrow account goes deeply short.
Twelve months if you spread it, or immediately if you pay the lump sum. Either way, the higher ongoing collection stays until taxes or insurance actually fall.
Download the Lone Star Living App for live MLS listings across Lancaster, DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Red Oak, and the rest of southwest DFW.
Steven J. Thomas is a licensed Texas real estate broker and loan officer, NMLS #689220, based in DeSoto, TX. Call or text 972-846-9170. Payment examples are illustrative estimates, not an offer of credit or a guarantee of terms. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Site: www.stevenjthomas.com
Call :(713) 505-2280
Email: [email protected]
Office 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto TX 75115
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