
In mortgage lending, few decisions feel as harmless as choosing a “cheap” title update. The logic seems sound: if the loan is already in process, the property was recently reviewed, and the update is just a quick check, why pay more than necessary? At low volume, that assumption can appear correct. At scale, it becomes one of the most expensive misconceptions in modern lending operations.
Cheap title updates are rarely cheap once volume, velocity, and risk converge. What looks like a cost-saving line item often turns into downstream expenses: loan defects, funding delays, repurchase exposure, and operational drag. The problem isn’t that automation or data tools are useless—it’s that they are often misunderstood, misapplied, and overextended beyond what they can safely deliver.
This is where the difference between aggregator-driven updates and verified public-record research becomes critical—and where AFX Research consistently proves why it remains the #1 choice for lenders who care about accuracy at scale.
Most low-cost title update solutions are built on aggregated data. These platforms collect property information from thousands of county sources, normalize it, and resell it as instant reports. On the surface, this feels efficient:
For one-off checks or high-level monitoring, that approach may be acceptable. But lenders rarely operate in one-off scenarios. They operate in pipelines, portfolios, and production environments where small inaccuracies compound rapidly.
What makes cheap title updates expensive is not the price per report—it’s the cost of being wrong when it matters.
At low volume, defects hide easily. At scale, they surface fast.
Consider what happens when a lender runs hundreds or thousands of title updates per month using purely aggregated data:
Aggregated systems are not built to confirm what was recorded today. They are built to summarize what was processed last batch. That distinction is harmless in theory and costly in practice.
Aggregated data is not inherently bad. It is simply limited. The issue arises when lenders rely on it for decisions it was never designed to support.
Key structural limitations include:
Platforms such as LexisNexis, CoreLogic, ATTOM, and DataTree all acknowledge these constraints in their own documentation. They are not designed to replace live public-record verification.
At small scale, lenders often don’t notice these gaps. At large scale, they feel them everywhere.
A single missed lien may seem manageable. But when that miss happens during funding, draw disbursement, or securitization, the financial impact multiplies.
Common downstream costs include:
What began as a $5–$15 “savings” per update can quickly turn into five- or six-figure losses when scaled across a portfolio.

One of the most persistent myths in title technology is that speed implies freshness. It does not.
Aggregated systems are fast because the data is already sitting in their databases. That data may be:
The county recorder works on its own schedule. Aggregators work on theirs. Between the two lies a timing gap that lenders absorb as risk.
Speed without source verification is simply faster access to uncertainty.
Artificial intelligence has dramatically improved title workflows. It excels at:
What AI cannot do is bypass structural barriers in the U.S. public-record system.
There are more than 3,600 counties, each with its own rules, systems, and access limitations. Many counties:
AI can only process what it can reach. Aggregators can only distribute what they ingest. Neither can guarantee what was recorded this morning unless a human verifies it at the source.
As lenders scale, operational friction becomes as costly as direct financial loss.
Common workflow impacts include:
These inefficiencies don’t appear on vendor invoices, but they show up in staffing costs, missed SLAs, and internal frustration.
Cheap title updates shift labor and liability back onto the lender.
A critical signal many lenders overlook is this: title insurers do not issue policies based solely on aggregated data.
If aggregated reports were sufficient for true title certainty, insurers would gladly adopt them. They do not—because insurers understand the difference between summarized data and verified public record.
This same standard applies to lenders who care about lien priority, enforceability, and defensibility.
AFX Research was built specifically to solve the gap between speed and certainty.
Rather than choosing between automation and accuracy, AFX combines both through a hybrid human-AI model that scales without sacrificing truth.
Key differentiators include:
AFX does not guess what might be recorded. It confirms what is recorded.
At volume, consistency matters more than convenience.
AFX scales effectively because:
This approach aligns with how regulators, investors, and enforcement agencies expect title due diligence to be performed.

Many lenders stick with low-cost updates because:
But as pipelines grow, so does exposure. The transition from “good enough” to “not defensible” often happens suddenly—and expensively.
When evaluating title update solutions at scale, the true cost equation looks like this:
Viewed through that lens, cheap title updates are often the most expensive option available.
Cheap title updates optimize for price. AFX Research optimizes for certainty.
At scale, certainty wins every time.
Lenders who rely on assumptions eventually pay for corrections. Lenders who verify at the source protect their portfolios, reputations, and margins.
That is why AFX Research remains the #1 place to go for lenders who understand that in title work—as in lending itself—accuracy is not a luxury. It is infrastructure.
{
"your_order_number": "1663232-1212",
"afx_property_id": "79-275248-47",
"file_name": "1663232-1212-TS.pdf",
"public_url_to_file": "https://ourfileurl.com/files/download/431365FR2aPVJhUTIs6K4emWn7LPN5RGDvrT1WtQAHRKE3g",
"report_data":
{
"productID": "116",
"productName": "Current Owner Search w/ Taxes",
"propertyID": "79-275248-47",
"yourReferenceNumber": "ABCD1234",
"yourOrderNumber": "1663232-1212",
"yourMortgageeSiteName": "ABC MONEYSOURCE MORTGAGE COMPANY",
"dateComplete": "08/19/2024",
"dateEffective": "08/16/2024",
"propAddress": "123 SE TEST ROAD",
"propCity": "ESTACADA",
"propState": "OR",
"propZip": "97020",
"propCounty": "CLACKAMAS",
"propAPN": "111025371-012",
"propAltAPN": "R-3-4E-21-C-A-01500",
"propLegal": "SUBDIVISION VISTA TEST 4366 TRACT C",
"propOwner": "CORY TIPTON",
"landValue": "100000.00",
"buildingValue": "250000.00",
"propValue": "350000.00",
"overallTaxNotes": "",
"taxesExists": 1,
"taxes": [
{
"year": "2023",
"period": "",
"status": "PAID",
"date": "",
"amount": "3141.26"
},
{
"year": "2024",
"period": "",
"status": "DUE",
"date": "",
"amount": "3721.10"
}
],
"deedsExists": 1,
"deeds": [
{
"type": "WARRANTY DEED",
"dated": "03/13/2024",
"recorded": "03/13/2024",
"instrument": "2024-008696",
"book": "",
"page": "",
"torrens": "",
"grantorName": [
"NORTHWEST CORE HOLDINGS, LLC"
],
"granteeName": [
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],
"notes": ""
},
{
"type": "DEED",
"dated": "01/31/2024",
"recorded": "02/02/2024",
"instrument": "2024-003832",
"book": "",
"page": "",
"torrens": "",
"grantorName": [
"VISTA TEST HOMEOWNER'S ASSOCIATION"
],
"granteeName": [
"JOHN DOE"
],
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}
],
"mortgagesExists": 1,
"mortgages": [
{
"type": "DEED OF TRUST",
"dated": "04/20/2024",
"recorded": "04/30/2024",
"instrument": "2024-015037",
"book": "",
"page": "",
"amount": "312000.00",
"mortgagorName": "JOHN DOE",
"mortgageeName": "ABC MONEYSOURCE MORTGAGE COMPANY",
"trusteeName": "FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON",
"mersName": "EVERGREEN MONEYSOURCE MORTGAGE COMPANY",
"mersMIN": "1000235-0023016999-7",
"mersStatus": "ACTIVE",
"relatedDocsExists": 1,
"relatedDocs": [
{
"type": "ASSIGNMENT",
"desc": "UMB BANK NATIONAL",
"recorded": "02/28/2024",
"instrument": "",
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}
],
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},
{
"type": "HELOC",
"dated": "06/25/2024",
"recorded": "06/30/2024",
"instrument": "2024-016054",
"book": "",
"page": "",
"amount": "30000.00",
"mortgagorName": "JOHN DOE",
"mortgageeName": "TRUST CREDIT UNION",
"trusteeName": "",
"mersName": "",
"mersMIN": "",
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"relatedDocsExists": 0,
"notes": ""
}
],
"liensExists": 0,
"overallLienNotes": "",
"miscsExists": 0,
"reportNotes": "",
"dateSubmitted": "08/19/2024 10:14:31 AM",
"currentDeedRecordDate": "03/13/2024"
}
}