Escrow Agreement
ESCROW AGREEMENT
This Escrow Agreement (the "Agreement") is entered into as of [Effective Date] (the "Effective Date"), by and among:
[Depositor Name], located at [Depositor Address] (the "Depositor");
[Beneficiary Name], located at [Beneficiary Address] (the "Beneficiary"); and
[Escrow Agent Name], located at [Escrow Agent Address] (the "Escrow Agent").
The Depositor, Beneficiary, and Escrow Agent are collectively referred to as the "Parties."
1. DEPOSIT INTO ESCROW
1.1 Escrowed Property. Depositor agrees to deliver to Escrow Agent the following property (the "Escrowed Property") no later than [Deposit Deadline]: [Escrowed Property].
1.2 Receipt. Escrow Agent shall confirm receipt of the Escrowed Property in writing to both Depositor and Beneficiary within two (2) business days of deposit.
1.3 Holding Period. Escrow Agent shall hold the Escrowed Property for a maximum period of [Escrow Term], unless the release or return conditions are triggered earlier.
2. HOLDING AND INVESTMENT OF ESCROWED FUNDS
Escrow Agent shall hold the Escrowed Property in a segregated escrow account [Investment Instructions]. Escrow Agent shall not commingle the Escrowed Property with its own funds or the funds of any other party.
3. RELEASE CONDITIONS
3.1 Release to Beneficiary. Escrow Agent shall release the Escrowed Property to Beneficiary upon satisfaction of the following conditions: [Release Conditions].
3.2 Return to Depositor. Escrow Agent shall return the Escrowed Property to Depositor upon: [Return Conditions].
3.3 Joint Instructions. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Escrow Agent shall release the Escrowed Property in accordance with any written instructions jointly signed by both Depositor and Beneficiary.
4. ESCROW AGENT DUTIES AND LIABILITY
4.1 Ministerial Role. Escrow Agent's obligations are purely ministerial. Escrow Agent shall have no duty to take any action except as expressly directed by this Agreement or by joint written instructions of the Parties.
4.2 Limitation of Liability. Escrow Agent shall not be liable for any action taken or omitted in good faith, and shall be liable only for acts of gross negligence, fraud, or willful misconduct.
4.3 Reliance. Escrow Agent may rely on any written instruction, notice, or document it believes to be genuine and signed by the appropriate party, without independent verification.
4.4 Fee. Depositor and Beneficiary shall compensate Escrow Agent as follows: [Escrow Fee]. In the event of an interpleader filing, reasonable legal costs incurred by Escrow Agent shall be paid from the Escrowed Property.
5. DISPUTES
If Depositor and Beneficiary provide conflicting instructions, or if a dispute arises regarding entitlement to the Escrowed Property, Escrow Agent shall: [Dispute Process]. The costs of any interpleader or arbitration proceeding shall be borne as determined by the court or arbitrator.
6. GENERAL PROVISIONS
6.1 Governing Law. This Agreement is governed by the laws of the State of [Governing State], without regard to conflict of law principles.
6.2 Entire Agreement. This Agreement constitutes the entire understanding of the Parties regarding the escrow arrangement. Amendments must be in writing and signed by all Parties.
6.3 Resignation. Escrow Agent may resign upon thirty (30) days written notice to both Depositor and Beneficiary. Escrow Agent shall continue to hold the Escrowed Property until a successor escrow agent is appointed by joint written direction of Depositor and Beneficiary.
6.4 Counterparts. This Agreement may be signed in counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original. Electronic signatures are valid under the E-SIGN Act.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parties have executed this Escrow Agreement as of the Effective Date.
DEPOSITOR: [Depositor Name]
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: ___________________________ Title: _______________
BENEFICIARY: [Beneficiary Name]
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: ___________________________ Title: _______________
ESCROW AGENT: [Escrow Agent Name]
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: ___________________________ Title: _______________
Depositor
________________
Signature
Beneficiary
________________
Signature
Escrow Agent
________________
Signature
What Is a Escrow Agreement?
An Escrow Agreement in the United States governs the relationship between the parties by fixing what each must do.
Escrow law in the United States is primarily a matter of state contract law, supplemented by industry-specific regulatory frameworks. In California, escrow companies that hold funds for real estate transactions must be licensed by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) under Financial Code Section 17200 et seq. Texas requires escrow officers to be licensed under the Texas Insurance Code. Most states license or regulate title companies that perform escrow functions in real estate closings. When the escrow agent is an attorney holding client funds, the Rules of Professional Conduct — including the ABA Model Rule 1.15 on safekeeping property — impose additional obligations.
The legal relationship between the escrow agent and the principal parties is that of a stakeholder — the escrow agent holds property on behalf of both parties and has no independent interest in the outcome. Courts have consistently held that an escrow agent's duties are strictly limited to those defined in the escrow agreement, and that the agent may not exercise discretion beyond the express terms of the agreement. In Blackburn v. McCoy, 1 Cal.App.2d 648 (1934), a California appellate court established the principle that an escrow agent who acts outside the terms of the escrow agreement becomes an agent of the party for whose benefit the act was performed — a result that can expose the agent to liability.
Escrow agreements are governed by the general principles of contract law applicable in the jurisdiction — typically the state specified in the governing law clause. The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) governs some aspects of escrow involving negotiable instruments or investment securities, particularly under Articles 3, 4, and 8. For real estate escrow, the Restatement (Second) of Contracts, Section 103, addresses escrow conditions and their effect on the timing of contractual obligations.
Digital asset escrow — holding cryptocurrency, NFTs, or other blockchain-based assets in escrow — represents a rapidly evolving area of law. Smart contract escrow, in which the escrow conditions are coded into a self-executing blockchain protocol, raises questions about whether the traditional legal requirements of escrow (a human escrow agent, written instructions, and the ability to resolve disputes through courts) are satisfied. US courts have not yet fully addressed these questions, and parties using digital asset escrow should consult counsel familiar with the applicable state money transmission and securities laws.
When Do You Need a Escrow Agreement?
US parties need an Escrow Agreement whenever a significant transaction involves a risk that one party will not perform their obligations after the other party has delivered their consideration — and both parties need protection from that risk.
Residential and commercial real estate transactions are the largest category of US escrow use. In a typical home purchase, the buyer deposits earnest money with a title company or escrow agent that holds the funds until closing. At closing, the escrow agent coordinates the simultaneous exchange of the purchase price for the executed deed — eliminating the risk that the buyer will pay and not receive the deed, or that the seller will deliver the deed and not receive payment. The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), 12 U.S.C. § 2601, regulates escrow accounts for federally related mortgage loans, including the permitted cushion amount that lenders may collect for tax and insurance escrow accounts.
Mergers and acquisitions transactions use post-closing escrow accounts to secure the seller's indemnification obligations for a defined period — typically 12 to 24 months after closing. A portion of the purchase price (commonly 10 to 15%) is deposited in escrow at closing and held until the indemnification survival period expires. Any valid indemnification claims are paid from escrow before the remainder is released to the seller. Without this mechanism, buyers would have to pursue sellers directly for post-closing breaches of representations and warranties.
Software source code escrow protects software licensees from the risk that a software vendor will become insolvent or cease operations, leaving the licensee unable to maintain mission-critical software. Under a source code escrow agreement, the developer deposits the source code with a specialized escrow agent (such as Iron Mountain or NCC Group) and authorizes release to the licensee if specified release conditions — including insolvency, material breach, or cessation of support — are triggered.
Domain name and intellectual property transactions use escrow services to hold domain names, trademark assignments, or patent licenses while payment is verified. Specialized escrow services such as Escrow.com and Transpact help online transaction escrow for digital assets.
Construction project escrow accounts hold retention payments — typically 5 to 10% of each contractor invoice — in trust until project completion, punch list resolution, and final acceptance by the project owner. Several states, including California (Pub. Cont. Code § 22300), permit contractors to substitute securities held in escrow for cash retention on public contracts, reducing the financing cost of large construction projects.
What to Include in Your Escrow Agreement
For corporate parties, the contract should identify the state of organization and the authorized signatory. For licensed escrow agents — title companies, escrow companies, and financial institutions — the agreement should identify the agent's license number and the name of the licensed escrow officer.
Description of escrowed property must precisely identify what is being held: the dollar amount and currency for cash escrow (including account details for the segregated escrow account), the specific documents held (deed, assignment, signed contract), or the digital assets or securities. For real estate escrow, the escrowed funds should be held in a segregated trust account, not commingled with the escrow agent's operating funds — a requirement under California Financial Code Section 17409 and equivalent state statutes.
Deposit instructions must specify the deadline for depositing funds with the escrow agent, the mechanics of deposit (wire transfer, check, or ACH), the interest treatment (whether funds earn interest and who receives it), and the escrow account information to which funds should be wired. FDIC insurance limits ($250,000 per depositor per institution) should be considered for large cash escrow deposits held at a single institution.
Release conditions are the most critical provision and must be stated with maximum specificity. Each condition should identify: the event or document that constitutes satisfaction of the condition; who determines whether the condition has been satisfied; the standard of proof or documentation required; and the deadline by which the condition must be satisfied. Vague release conditions — such as 'when the parties agree' or 'upon substantial completion' — require the escrow agent to make subjective judgments that it is not qualified to make and that expose the agent to liability.
Release mechanics must specify the procedure for initiating a release: whether joint written instructions from both parties are required, whether the occurrence of the specified release condition is self-executing, or whether the escrow agent may release upon receipt of a certification from a specified party. The agreement should also specify the delivery method for released funds — wire transfer to a specified account, delivery of documents to a specified address, or transfer to a named successor escrow agent.
Dispute resolution procedures must address what happens when the parties dispute entitlement to the escrowed funds. Standard provisions authorize the escrow agent to: continue holding funds pending resolution; follow joint written instructions if both parties can agree; or file an interpleader action under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 22 or applicable state law, depositing the funds with the court and naming both parties as defendants. The agreement should specify that the costs of interpleader proceedings are borne by the disputing parties rather than the escrow agent.
Escrow agent fees and indemnification must specify the agent's compensation — typically a flat fee, a percentage of the escrow amount, or a time-and-materials fee for complex escrow — and the allocation of fees between the parties. The agreement should include an indemnification clause protecting the escrow agent from liability for actions taken in good faith in accordance with the agreement's terms, and from liability for acts or omissions of the principal parties or their agents.
Governing law and dispute resolution clause should specify the state whose law governs and the forum — arbitration or state or federal court — for resolving disputes between the principal parties and the escrow agent.
Sources & Citations
Statutory citations link to official government sources.
- 12 U.S.C. § 2601US – Cornell LII
Cite this page
Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Escrow Agreement (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/financial/agreements/escrow-agreement
"Escrow Agreement (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/financial/agreements/escrow-agreement.
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note = {Free legal document template. Based on Uniform Commercial Code (UCC §3)}
}Frequently Asked Questions
An escrow agreement is a legal arrangement in which a neutral third party — the escrow agent — holds money, documents, or other assets on behalf of two transacting parties until specified conditions are met. The escrow mechanism provides security to both parties: the buyer knows their funds will not be released to the seller unless the agreed conditions are satisfied, and the seller knows the buyer has committed the funds and cannot unilaterally withdraw them once deposited. Escrow is most commonly used in real estate transactions, where the escrow agent holds the purchase price and closing documents until title has been cleared and all conditions of the purchase agreement have been satisfied. Escrow is also widely used in mergers and acquisitions (where a portion of the purchase price may be held in escrow to secure indemnification obligations for a defined period), software development projects, online marketplace transactions, and business acquisitions. The escrow agent's obligations are defined exclusively by the escrow agreement — the agent acts as a stakeholder rather than as an agent of either party, and typically has no discretion to release funds except as expressly authorized by the agreement or by joint instructions from both parties.
The escrow agent's duties are typically limited to: holding the escrowed property in a segregated account, investing the funds as directed by the agreement, releasing the escrowed property when the specified release conditions are satisfied, and following joint written instructions from the parties when authorized by the agreement to do so. A well-drafted escrow agreement typically limits the escrow agent's liability to acts of gross negligence, fraud, or willful misconduct — excluding ordinary negligence — because the agent is performing a ministerial function and has no independent stake in the outcome of the transaction. The agreement usually entitles the escrow agent to rely on written instructions from the parties without liability for their authenticity, and to seek interpleader relief from a court if the parties dispute the right to the escrowed property rather than being put in the middle of a dispute. Professional escrow agents — title companies, licensed escrow companies, attorneys, or financial institutions — typically carry errors and omissions insurance to cover claims arising from escrow administration. The escrow agent's fees should be specified in the agreement, along with the party responsible for paying them.
Escrow release conditions vary depending on the type of transaction and the parties' commercial objectives. In real estate transactions, typical release conditions include: completion of a satisfactory title search and delivery of clear title; satisfaction of all contingencies in the purchase agreement (financing, inspection, appraisal); execution of all closing documents; and recording of the deed. In merger and acquisition transactions, post-closing indemnification escrows are typically released to the seller at the expiration of the indemnification period — often twelve to twenty-four months — minus any amounts properly claimed by the buyer for indemnification losses. In software development escrows, source code held by the escrow agent is released to the licensee if the developer becomes insolvent, fails to maintain the software, or ceases operations — providing the licensee with business continuity protection. In earnest money transactions, the buyer's deposit is released to the seller if the buyer fails to complete the purchase without a contractual excuse, or returned to the buyer if the seller fails to perform or if the buyer exercises a contingency to cancel. The release conditions should be stated with as much specificity as possible to minimize the escrow agent's need to exercise judgment.
An escrow agent can generally be removed and replaced, but the process depends on the terms of the escrow agreement. Most well-drafted agreements give the parties the right to jointly remove and replace the escrow agent by providing written notice. The outgoing escrow agent is typically entitled to receive all fees and expenses incurred through the date of removal before transferring the escrowed property to the successor agent. Some agreements also give the escrow agent the right to resign upon notice, which protects the agent from being locked into a role it no longer wishes to serve — particularly if the underlying transaction has become contentious. If the escrow agent becomes insolvent, fails to maintain required licenses, or is found to have committed fraud, the agreement should specify that the parties can immediately demand return of the escrowed property and appoint a successor. The transfer of escrowed funds between escrow agents should be documented in writing to establish a clear chain of custody. For real estate transactions in states with licensed escrow companies, the replacement of one licensed escrow agent with another must comply with state regulatory requirements.
When parties to an escrow dispute the right to the escrowed funds — for example, both claiming entitlement to the funds or disputing whether release conditions have been satisfied — the escrow agent faces the difficult position of being unable to release funds to either party without risking liability to the other. Most escrow agreements address this situation by authorizing the escrow agent to: (1) hold the funds pending written resolution of the dispute by the parties; (2) follow a joint written instruction signed by both parties directing release; or (3) file an interpleader action in court, depositing the escrowed funds with the court and naming both parties as defendants to have the court determine entitlement. Interpleader is a powerful tool that allows the escrow agent to exit the dispute and be discharged of liability once it has deposited the funds with the court. The escrow agreement should specify who bears the escrow agent's costs and attorney's fees in an interpleader proceeding — typically the losing party or shared equally between the parties. Parties who anticipate the potential for disputes should include a binding arbitration clause in the escrow agreement as an alternative to court litigation.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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