Can I Sell My House If I Owe Back Taxes in Texas?
Yes — you can sell your house in Texas even with delinquent property taxes, and you don’t have to pay them before you sell. This surprises a lot of homeowners who assume tax liens are a dealbreaker. They’re not. What they are is a lien against the property that must be satisfied before title transfers — and in a standard sale, that happens automatically at closing through the title company. You don’t write a check; it comes out of the proceeds.
That said, the longer you let delinquent taxes sit, the worse the math gets. Texas adds aggressive penalties and interest — and if taxes go unpaid long enough, the county can file a lawsuit that puts you on a much worse timeline. This guide explains exactly how it all works, when it becomes a crisis, and the fastest path to resolution. If you need to move quickly, get a cash offer from ZI Properties here — we buy tax-lien properties throughout Central Texas.
How Property Tax Liens Work in Texas
In Texas, property taxes become a lien on your property on January 1st of each tax year — before you even receive the bill. This lien is senior to almost all other liens, including your mortgage. Texas Tax Code Section 32.01 establishes this automatic lien, which means the taxing authority has a first-priority claim on the property regardless of what else is owed.
When you sell, the title company runs a title search that catches every recorded lien — including delinquent property taxes, HOA liens, and mechanic’s liens. Every lien must be paid off at closing for the title to transfer cleanly. The title company handles all of this as part of the closing process. You don’t coordinate it, you don’t pay anything upfront. The math is simply: sale price minus all liens equals what you receive.
What Delinquent Taxes Actually Cost You in Texas
Texas property taxes become delinquent February 1st if not paid by January 31st. From there, penalties compound fast:
- February 1: 6% penalty + 1% interest added immediately
- March–June: Penalty increases 1% per month, interest continues accumulating
- July 1: An additional 20% attorney collection fee is added — total penalties can exceed 42% above your original tax bill in the first year alone
- After July 1: The county’s delinquent tax attorneys can file suit in district court
In plain numbers: a $5,000 annual property tax bill left unpaid through July becomes roughly $7,100 owed — and that’s just year one. Multiply across multiple years and it grows fast. Every month you delay, more money that would have gone to you at closing goes to the county instead.
What Happens If You Don’t Sell — The Tax Lawsuit
If delinquent taxes go unresolved, the taxing unit files a delinquent tax lawsuit against you in district court. Once a judgment is entered, the court can order a tax sale of your property. This is different from a mortgage foreclosure auction — it’s court-ordered and you lose all control over price and timeline.
After a homestead tax sale in Texas, you have a 2-year right of redemption — but redemption requires paying the full amount plus a 25% penalty in the first year (50% in the second). A steep barrier that few homeowners can meet. Selling before any of this happens is clearly better. If you need to move fast on a property with back taxes in Bexar County or Travis County, call ZI Properties at (210) 864-8420. We close in 14 days and the title company handles every lien.
What If the Taxes Owe More Than the House Is Worth?
This happens — especially on inherited properties or homes neglected for years. In this scenario, a straightforward sale won’t cover what’s owed. Options:
- Negotiate with the taxing authority: Many Texas counties will negotiate a settlement for long-delinquent accounts. An offer in compromise may significantly reduce the total owed.
- Chapter 13 bankruptcy: Can restructure tax debt into a payment plan, halting collection and potentially preserving the property.
- Call us anyway: We’ve worked through situations that looked impossible. Call (210) 864-8420 and we’ll tell you honestly what’s possible.
Why Traditional Buyers Won’t Touch Tax-Lien Properties
Mortgage lenders require clear title as a condition of the loan. A property with a senior tax lien will not pass title review for conventional, FHA, or VA financing — which eliminates the vast majority of buyers immediately. Cash buyers don’t have lenders. We go under contract, the title company clears the liens at closing from the proceeds, and you walk away clean — often in 14 days.
ZI Properties buys homes with delinquent property taxes throughout Bexar County, Travis County, Williamson County, Comal County, and Hays County. We close in 14 days, pay all closing costs, and buy as-is.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to pay my property taxes before I can sell?
No. Delinquent taxes are paid by the title company at closing from the sale proceeds. You don’t need to pay anything upfront to sell.
Can a property be sold while a delinquent tax lawsuit is pending?
Yes — a sale can still happen while a lawsuit is active. The proceeds at closing pay the judgment. The title company coordinates payoff with the court.
How do I find out exactly how much I owe in Bexar County?
Go to the Bexar County Tax Assessor-Collector website at bexar.org and search by property address or account number. The balance shown includes all penalties and interest as of the lookup date.
What about Travis County delinquent taxes?
Search at traviscad.org or the Travis County Tax Office at tax.traviscountytx.gov. Same concept — full balance with penalties shown.
Have a San Antonio, Austin, or Central Texas property with delinquent taxes? ZI Properties buys it as-is — tax payoff handled at closing. Call or text (210) 864-8420 or get a no-obligation cash offer here.
ZI Properties — Cash home buyers serving Bexar County, Travis County, and all of Central Texas. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice.


