Once you are “delinquent” on your property taxes, the forfeiture process starts. You have time to fix things, but if you don’t start, you end up with your property in forfeiture by the State. If the forfeiture process is completed, the property can be sold at auction, and you lose it.
First, you get a Notice of Delinquent Taxes and a Delinquent Tax Letter on or around March 20 in the year the taxes are considered “delinquent.” If there are any other interested parties, like a person or company with a lien on the property, they get it too. The Notice and Letter are usually on each side of a single page. The Notice tells you the basic timeline of the forfeiture process with important deadlines. The Letter tells you to read the Notice carefully, and also outlines how much is due, calculates interest, and includes payment instructions.
If you don’t agree with the tax calculations or assessments in the Notice, you have to file any objections in writing by the deadline in the Notice. The Notice tells you how to file. BE CAREFUL! The Notices in some counties are made by computer systems over 40 years old and are hard to read. Read everything carefully and call your county property tax department right away if you have questions!
If you don’t have objections, or if a court has ruled against your objection(s), the court enters a tax judgment. This means a lien is put on the property for the amount of delinquent taxes.
After a judgment is entered, the property is “bid in for the state” on the second Monday in May. This means that the title remains in your name, but the State gets a future interest. This is the start of the Redemption period. Who ends up with the property depends on what happens during the Redemption period.