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EducationMay 7, 2026· 6 min read

Tax Delinquent Properties in Travis County: What Investors Need to Know

Properties with overdue tax bills signal motivated sellers and potential below-market acquisitions. Learn how tax delinquency works in Texas and how to find these opportunities.

What Are Tax Delinquent Properties?

A tax delinquent property is one whose owner has failed to pay property taxes by the deadline. In Travis County, property taxes are due by January 31st each year. After that date, penalties and interest begin accruing -- starting at 6% in February and increasing monthly up to 12% by July, plus an additional 20% collection penalty.

These escalating costs create enormous financial pressure on property owners, making many of them motivated to sell rather than continue accumulating penalties.

Why Tax Delinquency Signals Opportunity

Financial distress indicator -- If an owner can't pay property taxes, they may also be behind on mortgage payments, insurance, or maintenance. The property is likely to be undervalued.- Motivated sellers -- The longer taxes go unpaid, the higher the penalties. Owners facing a $50,000 tax bill that was originally $30,000 are highly motivated to sell.- Tax lien sales -- Texas allows counties to sell tax liens, and eventually the county can seize and auction the property. Owners facing this outcome will often accept below-market offers.- Absentee owners -- Many tax delinquent properties are owned by landlords or heirs who live out of state. They may not even realize the situation has become critical.

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How Texas Property Tax Foreclosure Works

Unlike mortgage foreclosure, tax foreclosure in Texas follows a judicial process:

Delinquency -- Taxes go unpaid past January 31st.- Penalty accumulation -- Penalties and interest accrue monthly.- Tax lien -- The county holds a lien superior to all other liens, including mortgages.- Lawsuit -- After typically 2-3 years of delinquency, the county or its contracted attorneys file a tax foreclosure lawsuit.- Judgment and auction -- If the owner doesn't pay, the court orders the property sold at auction. There is a right of redemption period (usually 2 years for residential).

How Austin Signals Tracks Tax Delinquency

Austin Signals monitors Travis County tax records and flags properties with outstanding balances. Each property shows the delinquent amount, years overdue, and our Intelligence Score -- which factors tax delinquency alongside other distress signals like foreclosure filings and code violations.

Properties with multiple distress signals (tax delinquent AND code violations, for example) score highest because they indicate the most motivated sellers.

Filter by "Tax Delinquent" in your dashboard sidebar to see all flagged properties in Travis County.

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