Visit your local tax assessor's office and inquire there. They should have a listing of tax title properties and may have an auction scheduled.
Visit your local tax assessor's office and inquire there. They should have a listing of tax title properties and may have an auction scheduled.
Visit your local tax assessor's office and inquire there. They should have a listing of tax title properties and may have an auction scheduled.
Visit your local tax assessor's office and inquire there. They should have a listing of tax title properties and may have an auction scheduled.
just like any other house you just hve to pay the tax lien to who evers holding it against the house Really? I would only have to pay the tax lein, no other hidden fees?
A person doesn't have a lien; only property can have a lien.
Visit your local tax assessor's office and inquire there. They should have a listing of tax title properties and may have an auction scheduled.
A tax lien is the result of not paying taxes such as income taxes and property taxes. Tax liens are imposed by the government.
The lien doesn't usually affect after-acquired property unless it's an income tax lien. You cannot mortgage, refinance or sell the property against which the lien was recorded. That is exactly the purpose of recording a lien in the land records.
The lien must be paid. The funds should come out of the seller's pocket.
If you are buying a car on payments then there will be a lien on the car. the company will release the lien once the car is paid off.
Whose responsible for the house payment= mortgagee or owner
If there is a child support lien against you it must be paid before the bank will loan you money to buy a home.If there is a child support lien against you it must be paid before the bank will loan you money to buy a home.If there is a child support lien against you it must be paid before the bank will loan you money to buy a home.If there is a child support lien against you it must be paid before the bank will loan you money to buy a home.
A lien is a security interest in the property. A lien might arise from a loan. If you buy a car with the bank's money the bank will put a lien on the car. If you don't pay the bank back, it can foreclose on its lien and take the car from you. If you have a roofer add a new roof to your house, and you don't pay him, the laws allow the roofer to put a lien on your house. The roofer now has a stake in the house. If you don't pay off the lien your house can be forcibly put up for sale in order to satisfy the lien. I believe "property and tenets" translates into modern speak as "property and belongings".
It will depend on the judgment of a lending insitution or mortage broker. The deciding point is going to be the strength of the lien holder, as well as your ability to handle repayments.
Yes. They repo and sell it for next to nothing. They sue in court and get a jugement that they use to put a lien on your house. Next time buy a cheap car just to get you there and back.
Click on the link to your right for helpful information about tax liens.
The lien is on the house. That's one of the reasons it goes through escrow, to find out if there are any outstanding liens on it. If there are outstanding liens on the house that are discovered in escrow, the buyer can make the seller pay the liens or stop the sale of the house, but if they are not found, the lien still exists and the buyer has to pay them after the house is in their name. Escrow is a good thing although it is time consuming and costly.
You can contact the lender or lien holder who foreclosed on the property and make your offer to them.
NO! BANK LIEN-PAY IT OFF. MECHANICS LIEN-PAY IT OFF. autolienservice.com