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Recent Tax Liens

Newest filings from county clerk offices — updated daily

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How Tax Lien Investing Works

Tax liens offer a path to property investment at a fraction of market value

1

Property Owner Defaults

When property taxes go unpaid, the county files a tax lien against the property.

2

County Records the Lien

We work with county clerk offices to source lien data daily — amounts, parcels, filing dates.

3

Investors Find Opportunities

Search by state, county, or amount. Identify liens on properties with high equity.

4

Purchase at Auction

Tax lien certificates sell at county auctions. Earn interest or acquire the property.

Get New Tax Lien Alerts

Receive daily email alerts when new tax liens are filed in your target areas.

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About KBTaxLiens.com

KBTaxLiens.com integrates directly with county clerk recording systems across multiple U.S. states. Our database includes tax liens (LNTX), non-certified tax liens (LNTXNC), and tax affidavits (AFFTX) — updated daily with new filings. Most competitors serve data that's weeks or months old. Our proprietary data pipeline delivers fresh records every day.

Auction timing is everything in tax lien investing. Stale data means missed sales or bidding on already-redeemed certificates. Fresh daily data gives you the edge — you see new filings before the competition does.

Tax lien investing allows investors to purchase certificates representing unpaid property taxes. The property owner must pay the back taxes plus interest to the certificate holder, or risk losing the property at a tax deed sale. This creates opportunities for investors seeking high-yield returns or below-market property acquisitions.

Our data includes lien amounts, property values, filing dates, parcel numbers, and county information. Start with a free 7-day trial — no credit card required — to access full property addresses and detailed lien data.

KBTaxLiens is operated by KB Software LLC. For support, contact [email protected].

Understanding Tax Lien Types

The three types of filings we track — know what you're bidding on

📄

LNTX — Standard Tax Lien

The most common filing. County records this lien when property taxes go unpaid, then sells certificates to investors at public auction. You earn interest when the owner redeems — or acquire the property through a tax deed sale if they don't.

📝

LNTXNC — Non-Certified Tax Lien

Filed but not yet certified by the court. Earlier in the process — the owner still has time to pay. Tracking these gives you advance notice of upcoming auction opportunities before they're publicly listed. Early intel = better deals.

📋

AFFTX — Tax Affidavit

A sworn statement filed in official records about tax obligations on a property. Provides context — amounts owed, property details, filing dates. Critical for due diligence before bidding at auction.

Tax Lien Investing FAQ

Practical answers for investors at every level

What is a tax lien certificate?
A tax lien certificate is issued by the county when property taxes go unpaid. Investors purchase these at auction by paying the delinquent taxes. In return, you earn interest — typically 8-36% annually depending on the state — when the owner redeems by paying back the taxes plus interest.
How do tax deed auctions work?
If the owner fails to redeem within the redemption period (typically 1-3 years), the lien holder can apply for a tax deed. The property then sells at public auction, often for a fraction of market value. These auctions are run by the county and open to anyone.
Tax lien vs. tax deed states — what's the difference?
Tax lien states sell certificates — you earn interest when the owner redeems. Tax deed states sell the property directly at auction. Some states are hybrid. Florida is a tax lien state with a tax deed process. Knowing your target state's model determines your entire strategy.
What returns can I expect?
Interest rates are set by state law: Florida up to 18%, Arizona up to 16%, Illinois up to 36%. Most liens redeem within 1-2 years. If they don't, you may acquire the property — that's where the biggest returns come from. Always factor in due diligence costs and potential title issues.
How do I research a property before buying?
Due diligence is everything. Check assessed value vs. lien amount, verify no senior liens (federal tax liens, HOA), confirm the property exists and is buildable, and research the neighborhood. KBTaxLiens gives you lien amounts, property values, and filing dates to evaluate fast.
Which states have the best opportunities?
Florida, Arizona, Illinois, and New Jersey are popular for tax lien certificates — high rates, large volume. Texas, Georgia, and Pennsylvania are strong for tax deed sales. The best state depends on whether you want interest income (liens) or property acquisition (deeds).

Tax Lien Records by State

Browse tax lien filings across all 50 states