Tax Lien Sale
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A tax lien sale
is the sale, conducted by a governmental agency, of
tax liens for delinquent taxes on
real estate. It is one of two methodologies
used by governmental agencies to collect delinquent taxes owed on
real estate, the other being the
tax deed sale.
Sale process
In a tax lien state, the lien (consisting of
delinquent taxes, accrued interest, and costs associated with the
sale) is offered to prospective investors at public auction.
Traditionally, auctions were held in person; however, Internet-based
auctions (especially within large counties having numerous liens)
have grown in popularity as this method allows for bidders from
outside the area to participate.
In the event that more than one investor seeks the
same lien, depending on state law the winner will be determined by
one of five methods:
- Bid Down the Interest.
Under this method, the stated rate of return offered by the
government is the maximum
rate of return allowed. However, investors can accept lower
rates of return, including zero percent in some cases (though
this is rare in practice). The investor accepting the
lowest rate of
return is the winner. In the event more than one investor will
accept the same lower rate, a random or rotational method (see
below) will be used to break ties. (Florida and Arizona use this
method)
- Premium.
Under this method, the investor willing to pay the highest
"premium" (or excess above the lien amount) will be the winner.
The premium may or may not earn interest, and may or may not be
paid back to the investor upon redemption of the lien. (Colorado
uses this method)
- Random Selection.
Under this method, a bidder will be randomly selected from those
offering a bid. Usually a computer is used to make the
selection, but in smaller jurisdictions more rudimentary methods
may be used (Larry Loftis, a professional tax lien investor from
Orlando, Florida and an author on the
subject, mentions in his book of an Iowa county whose random
selection method consisted of drawing numbered ping-pong balls
from a fried chicken bucket).
- Rotational Selection.
Under this method, the first lien offered for sale will be
offered to the investor holding bidder number one, who has the
right of first refusal. If bidder number one refuses the lien,
bidder number two may then bid. However, bidder number one will
not be offered another lien until his number comes up again in
the rotation. The next lien will go to the next number in line.
Under this method, the investor has virtually no control over
which liens s/he will obtain in the bidding, except to take or
refuse what is offered.
- Bid Down the Ownership.
Used only in Iowa, the investor willing to purchase the lien for
the lowest percent of encumbrance on the property will be
awarded the lien. For example, a bidder may agree to take a lien
on only 95% of the property. If the lien is redeemed, the
investor would only receive 95% of the proceeds. In practice,
few investors will bid on liens for less than full right to the
property or sale proceeds. Therefore, with multiple owners
bidding on 100% encumbrance, the process then generally reverts
to the random selection.
Liens not sold at auction are considered "struck"
(or sold) to the entity (usually the county) conducting the auction.
Some states allow "over the counter" purchases of liens not sold at
auction. However, in most instances the unsold liens are on marginal
or worthless properties, the liens on better properties having been
purchased at auction.
Redemption process
The investor must wait a specified period of
time (referred to as the "redemption period"), during which time the
lien (plus interest and any other fees) may be repaid. Usually the
lien holder is not
permitted during this period to contact the property owner (or
anyone else having an interest in the property, such as the mortgage
holder) to demand payment or threaten foreclosure, or else the
certificate can be forfeit.
In some jurisdictions, the lienholder must agree
to pay subsequent unpaid property taxes during the redemption period
in order to protect his/her interest. If the lienholder does not pay
such taxes, a subsequent lienholder would "buy out" the prior
lienholder's interest.
Once the redemption period is over, the lien
holder may initiate foreclosure proceedings. The proceedings (the
costs of which must be paid by the lien holder, though a redeeming
property owner may be required to pay them as part of redemption)
may result in either acquiring title to the property (normally this
will be a
quitclaim deed and not insurable title), or
a
tax deed sale of the property where the
lien holder has the right of first bid (and may participate by
making additional bids if s/he so chooses). During the period
between the initiation of proceedings and actual foreclosure, the
property owner still has the opportunity to repay the lien with
interest plus the costs incurred to foreclose.
If the lien holder does not act within a specified
period of time as defined by state law, the lien is forfeit and the
holder loses his investment. Also, a lien issued in error of state
law is repaid, but usually at a far lower interest rate than had the
lien been valid.
Benefits of tax lien investing
- The maximum rate of return on a tax
lien can be far higher than other investments. For example,
Florida offers a maximum rate of 18% (1.5% per month), while
Arizona offers a maximum rate of 16%. Iowa offers a guaranteed
2% per month (or 24% annual return).
- However, as an incentive to
encourage bidding, Florida law guarantees a
5% minimum return
regardless of the rate bid (except if the bid is zero
percent) or when the lien is redeemed. Thus, if a Florida
certificate is purchased at auction on one day and redeemed
on the next, the investor will earn 5% over the certificate
price for one day's holding, or a mind-boggling 1,825%
return! [Loftis, the author mentioned above, in his book
tells another story where he went to pay for a lien, only to
find a redemption check waiting for him on the lien he
bought; thus, he states that he obtained a return rate of
infinity
(to be mathematically correct, since it involved division by
zero, the rate of return is actually not calculable).]
- In practice, the majority of tax liens are
redeemed before the property is foreclosed; thus, the risk of
loss is minimal.
Pitfalls of tax lien investing
- Payment is usually required at purchase
or within a very short time afterward (often no more than 24-72
hours). Failure to pay the full amount results in
all lien
certificates purchased by the investor being cancelled, and may
result in the investor losing his/her deposit and/or being
barred from future sales.
- In many states further actions must be taken
to protect the lien holder's rights after purchase of a lien.
Failure to comply exactly with these requirements may make the
lien worthless.
- Tax liens on "choice" properties are quickly
purchased by major institutional investors having sufficient
time and resources to research valuable properties vs. worthless
ones and who can afford the occasional poor choice; smaller
liens usually involve properties that are generally worthless
(such as odd strips of land). (In addition, Florida does not
allow auctions or sales of tax liens of less than $100 on
homesteads.) In "random" and "rotational" jurisdictions,
investors have even less control over which liens they purchase.
- In "bid down the interest" jurisdictions,
valuable properties are usually bid to the lowest rate possible
greater than zero percent. (For example, Florida permits the
interest rate to be bid down to a minuscule 0.25% – though it
guarantees a minimum 5% return – while Arizona allows the bid to
be as low as 1%.) Similarly, in "premium" states, valuable
properties are bid up above the means of an average investor.
- Unlike a
certificate of deposit, tax liens are
illiquid. They cannot be "cashed in" (resold to the taxing
authority), but must be held until either they are repaid or the
holder takes action to foreclose. (It is possible, however, to
assign one's interest in a tax lien to another party.)
- Some experts tout tax lien sales as a means
of acquiring property at highly discounted prices. In practice,
except for very rare instances all of liens of any value are
redeemed well before the property can be foreclosed (especially
where a mortgage is involved, as the mortgage holder is
secondary in line to a tax lien), and where tax deed sales are
used to foreclose, numerous bidders participate, thus making the
chances of actual acquisition remote. For example, in one
Illinois county with a population of over 500,000 the County
Clerk's office said only 3 residential properties were not
redeemed in 35 years.
- If someone is successful in attaining
the
deed to the property, the property
might have environmental problems for which the new owner will
be responsible. Depending upon the state, this could be very
disadvantageous and the investor might have to pay a large
amount of money to have the problem taken care of, or be fined
daily until the problems are fixed.
- Deeds obtained are usually
quitclaim deeds, which do not provide
insurable title. The owner would then have to file a
quiet title action to obtain marketable
title to the property, which involves additional cost.
- There may also be other governmental
liens (such as weed liens or demolition liens) that the investor
must pay off when attaining title to the property. These are
not part
of the lien sale and remain even if the lien holder acquires the
property.
- If the owner of the property declares
bankruptcy, the bankruptcy court may lower the interest rate to
be paid, or may discharge part or all of the lien, leaving the
lien holder with nothing.
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