Counties/Charlotte Metro

Union County Tax Delinquent Property List

Research tax sale properties or find owners to contact directly. Union County has tax-delinquent properties tracked and scored for investors.

List Available245K populationCounty RecordsData available

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Data sourced from public county records. Refreshed regularly.

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What brings you to Union County?

Why Download the Union County Owner List?

  • Skip trace readyOwner names and mailing addresses included
  • Sorted by motivationProperties ranked by delinquency amount and opportunity signals
  • Refreshed regularlySourced from public county records

What's Included in the Union County List

Current owner names and addresses
Mailing addresses for direct mail
Tax owed and years delinquent
Assessed property values
Property type classification
Deal grades (A-D) for outreach priority

How It Works

1

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2

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Top 100 highest-scored deals with grades and owner data from Union County

3

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Use owner names and mailing addresses to contact the best prospects first

Frequently Asked Questions

How often is the Union County list updated?

We pull fresh data from County Records monthly. Each download reflects the most recent delinquency data available from Union County.

What owner data is included?

Each record includes owner name, mailing address, property address, assessed value, years delinquent, tax owed, and property type. Pro subscribers also get skip trace phone numbers, deceased owner flags, and heir indicators.

Is the download really free?

Yes. Create a free account and get the top 100 highest-scored deals with grades and full owner contact info instantly. No credit card required. Upgrade to Pro for numeric scores, all rows, map, and CRM.

Download Union County List — Free

Download 100 highest-scored deals from Union County with grades, addresses, tax owed, and full owner contact info. No credit card required.

About Union County

Region
Charlotte Metro
Population
245K
Data Source
County Records
Data Status
Available for Download

How Tax Delinquent Property Sales Work in North Carolina

North Carolina is a tax-foreclosure state, not a tax-sale or tax-certificate state. When property taxes are seriously delinquent, the county or its tax attorney files a foreclosure lawsuit in superior court. After the legal process completes, the property is sold at a public courthouse auction. There is no traditional "tax sale" calendar — auctions happen on a rolling basis as individual cases finish their court timelines, which means investors have to track each county's docket rather than a single annual sale date.

Bidding & Auctions

Auctions are held at the county courthouse, typically on weekday mornings posted in the local newspaper. The high bid at the courthouse is not final — North Carolina has a 10-day "upset bid" period where any party can raise the bid by at least 5% (and at least $750), restarting the clock. Once 10 days pass with no upset bid, the high bidder is confirmed. Successful bidders generally must put up a 5% deposit at the courthouse and pay the balance within 30 days.

Redemption & Penalties

Unlike most states, North Carolina has no post-sale redemption period for the original owner. Once the upset bid period closes and the sale is confirmed by the court, the property transfers free of the tax lien. The owner can stop the foreclosure by paying off the taxes any time before the sale is confirmed, but after confirmation the buyer has clear title (subject to any prior recorded interests not extinguished by the foreclosure judgment).

Sale type: Tax ForeclosureHeld: rolling, as foreclosure suits completeRedemption: until the upset bid period closes (10 days after the high bid)

See North Carolina General Statutes, Chapter 105, Article 26. Specific procedures vary by county — always verify with the local tax assessor/collector before bidding.

Resources for Charlotte Metro Investors

How to Buy Tax Delinquent Property in Union County

Step-by-step guide: tax sale process, redemption periods, deal types, and investor tips for Charlotte Metro.

Read the buying guide

Other Charlotte Metro Counties

Frequently Asked Questions

How often is the Union County list updated?

We pull fresh data from county records monthly. Each download reflects the most recent delinquency data available from the Union County appraisal district.

What data fields are included?

Each record includes property address, owner name, mailing address, assessed value, years delinquent, tax owed, and property type.

Is the download really free?

Yes. Create a free account and get the top 100 highest-scored deals with grades and full owner contact info instantly. No credit card required. Upgrade to Pro for numeric scores, all rows, map, and CRM.

How does the North Carolina tax foreclosure process work?

The county files a foreclosure lawsuit in superior court. After the case progresses (usually 6-18 months), the property is sold at public auction at the courthouse. Sales happen on a rolling basis as cases finish — there's no single tax sale day.

What is the upset bid period?

After the courthouse auction, anyone can raise the high bid by at least 5% (minimum $750) for the next 10 days, which restarts the 10-day clock. The auction effectively continues online until 10 full days pass without a new upset bid.

Does North Carolina have a redemption period after the sale?

No. Once the upset bid period closes and the court confirms the sale, the original owner has no right to redeem. This is one of the few states where tax foreclosure transfers clear title quickly.

How much do I need to bring to the auction?

Most counties require a 5% deposit at the courthouse (cash or certified funds), with the balance due within 30 days. Specific deposit amounts vary by county and case.