South Carolina is an attorney-closing state, so a Lake Keowee purchase closes through a real estate attorney rather than a title-company escrow officer. Add waterfront variables — dock-permit transfers, surveys, club membership — and the timeline has a few more moving parts than a typical home sale.
Here’s a realistic map of the process so nothing about your close is a surprise. This is general information, not legal advice; your closing attorney owns the specifics.
How long each path tends to take.
A clean cash purchase can close in roughly two to three weeks — limited mainly by title work, survey, and the attorney’s schedule. Cash-buyer strategy →
A financed close typically runs 30–60 days, gated by appraisal and lender underwriting — longer for jumbo. Financing guide →
Buying a homesite and building is a different timeline entirely — 18–36 months from contract to certificate of occupancy, driven by ARB review and the architect/builder schedule. Building a custom home →
What happens between acceptance and the closing table.
Inspections, dock-permit verification, survey, and document review all happen inside the contingency window. Due-diligence checklist →
Your attorney runs title, resolves any liens or boundary questions, and prepares closing documents. Order the survey early — it’s a frequent bottleneck on waterfront parcels.
The Duke Energy dock permit and club membership both transfer as part of closing; each has its own paperwork and timing that should start well before the closing date. HOA/POA & membership →
Where closings slip — and how to stay ahead of it.
Surveys, dock-permit transfers, and HOA estoppel letters are the items most likely to run long. Initiating them at contract — not the week before closing — protects the date.
Real-estate wire fraud is real and rising. Confirm wire instructions verbally with your attorney using a known number — never trust emailed changes. David and your attorney reinforce this at every step.
Buyer, attorney, lender, and David aligned on dates from day one is the single best predictor of an on-time close.
The questions buyers and sellers ask David first.
Roughly two to three weeks for a clean cash purchase, 30–60 days financed (longer for jumbo), and 18–36 months for a homesite-and-build.
Yes. South Carolina is an attorney-closing state, so a licensed real estate attorney handles the closing rather than a title company escrow officer.
Yes — the Duke Energy dock permit transfers as part of the sale, with its own paperwork. Start that process early so it does not hold up the closing date.
Surveys, dock-permit transfers, and HOA/estoppel paperwork. Starting them at contract rather than just before closing keeps the date on track.
A 30-minute conversation is the fastest way to get a confident next step.