After my last post on Tax Liens, I received dozens of messages from investors, entrepreneurs, and even people just starting their journey in real estate. Everyone wanted to hear more.
So today, I’m diving into a closely related — and just as powerful — strategy: Tax Deeds.
When a property owner fails to pay their property taxes, the county seizes and auctions off the property itself to recover the debt.
Unlike Tax Liens (where you buy the debt and earn interest if the owner pays it off), a Tax Deed gives you full ownership of the actual property — as-is, with all its risks and rewards.
You can acquire real property far below market value
Less competition — few investors truly understand this niche
Strong ROI potential through fix & flip, rental, or resale
No need for mortgages — most purchases are cash deals, which gives you leverage
BUT — and it’s a big “but” — you must know what you’re doing.
Some states (like Texas and Georgia) offer a hybrid method called Redeemable Deeds.
Here’s how it works:
You win the auction and receive the deed immediately
The owner has a limited redemption period (6–12 months) to pay the debt plus high interest (often 20–25%)
If they redeem — you get your money back + interest
If not — you own the property
So it’s a win-win — either you earn a solid return or gain full ownership.
But again: every state has its own rules.
Tax Lien States: New Jersey, Illinois, Arizona
Tax Deed States: California, Florida, Indiana
Redeemable Deed States: Texas, Georgia
Some auctions are online. Others happen in person.
Some counties give you detailed property data. Others? You’ll need to dig deep to know what you’re buying.
At my very first auction in Florida, I was still green.
I won what seemed like a dream property: over 100 acres of “land” for just a few thousand dollars.
Excited, I told everyone.
Then reality hit me:
I didn’t buy land — I bought the mineral rights only.
In some U.S. counties, surface rights and subsurface (mineral) rights are separated.
So what did I actually own? The rights to oil, gas, or minerals underground — but not the land itself.
Yes, sometimes mineral rights are worth millions.
But after research, calls, maps, and expert consultations — I realized my specific rights were worthless.
No oil. No gas. No minerals.
Just a shiny but empty title.
Thankfully, with help from professionals, I was able to cancel the sale and return the deed to the county — saving tens of thousands of dollars.
Tax Deeds aren’t a “get-rich” trick — they’re a serious investment strategy.
They’re perfect for those willing to learn, research, and play the long game.
Done right, the upside is enormous — but it takes real work, due diligence, and local knowledge.
If this topic speaks to you, or you’re just curious how it all works — feel free to message me privately.
I’d love to share what I’ve learned (from both wins and mistakes), and help more people step confidently into this powerful real estate niche.
