Sell Your Tax-Delinquent Property in Kansas City for Cash
Behind on property taxes? Sell before the county auction and keep your equity. We buy tax-delinquent homes across the KC metro.
Short answer: Yes, you can sell a tax-delinquent property in Kansas City before it goes to the county tax sale. As the property owner, you have the right to sell at any time before the sale is finalized. A cash sale lets you pay off the back taxes from proceeds and keep the remaining equity.
What Happens When You Fall Behind on Property Taxes in Kansas City?
When you stop paying property taxes in the Kansas City metro, the process that follows depends on whether you're on the Missouri or Kansas side. But the end result is the same: if you don't pay or sell, you lose the house.
In Missouri (Jackson, Clay, and Platte counties), the county collector adds penalties and interest to your unpaid balance. After about a year of delinquency, the county sells a tax lien certificate on your property at a public auction. Someone else buys the right to collect your debt. After they hold that certificate for one year, they can petition the court for a collector's deed, which transfers ownership of your property to them. You lose the house.
In Kansas (Wyandotte and Johnson counties), the process is slower but more final. The county waits until you're three or more years delinquent, then files a judicial foreclosure action in district court. The property is sold at auction with no redemption period. Once it's sold, it's gone.
Either way, the longer you wait, the worse it gets. Penalties, interest, and legal fees compound. A $3,000 tax bill can grow to $5,000 or more within two years. The good news: you can sell at any point before the final sale, pay off the taxes from the proceeds, and keep whatever equity remains.
Warning
Jackson County published over 4,200 properties in the delinquent tax list last year. Many of those homeowners had enough equity to sell for cash and walk away with money in their pocket. They just didn't know it was an option.
How Much Are Property Taxes in the Kansas City Metro?
Property tax rates vary across the 5 counties in the KC metro area, and those differences matter when you're trying to catch up on back taxes:
Jackson County, Missouri has some of the highest effective tax rates in the metro, averaging around 1.6-1.8% of assessed value. On a $150,000 home, that's roughly $2,400 to $2,700 per year. The recent 2023 reassessment caused a massive spike for many homeowners, with some seeing their assessed values double.
Clay County runs about 1.3-1.5% effective rate. Platte County is similar. On the Kansas side, Wyandotte County averages 1.6-1.8%, while Johnson County rates vary widely by city, from about 1.3% in Olathe to 1.6% in Shawnee.
When you fall behind, the penalties and interest stack up quickly. Missouri charges 10% annual interest on delinquent taxes plus a 2% penalty. Kansas charges 12% interest on the first year of delinquency and incrementally higher rates after that. Add in collection fees and legal costs, and a single year of unpaid taxes can grow by 30-40% within 18 months.
For homeowners on fixed incomes, especially seniors in neighborhoods like the East Side, Ivanhoe, or Quindaro, these compounding costs can spiral beyond reach. Selling the property for cash before the tax sale preserves your equity and stops the bleeding.
Key Fact
Missouri law allows homeowners to set up partial payment plans with the county collector to avoid the tax sale. Jackson County's collector office at 415 E 12th St in downtown KC can explain your options. But if you can't keep up with the plan, selling may be the better path.
Can You Sell a House with Back Taxes in Kansas City?
Yes. You can sell a house with back taxes at any point before the tax sale is finalized. You don't need to pay the back taxes before selling. The title company handles the tax payoff at closing from your sale proceeds.
Here's how it works: when you accept our cash offer, we open escrow with a local title company. The title company orders a tax certificate from the county, which shows exactly how much is owed in back taxes, penalties, and interest. At closing, the title company pays the county directly from the sale proceeds, along with your mortgage payoff (if any) and any other liens. Whatever is left is your cash.
The key is timing. If you're already behind, every month that passes adds more penalties and interest. And once the county starts the tax sale process, you may have limited time to sell before you lose the property entirely. In Missouri, the critical deadline is the annual tax lien auction in August. In Kansas, it's the judicial foreclosure filing date, which varies by county.
We buy tax-delinquent properties regularly across all 5 KC metro counties. Whether you're one year behind or three, we can close fast enough to beat the deadline and put cash in your hand.
What Is the Difference Between a Tax Lien and a Tax Sale?
These two terms get confused a lot, and the difference matters depending on which side of the state line you're on.
A tax lien is what Missouri uses. When your taxes go unpaid, the county sells a "tax lien certificate" to an investor at auction. That investor doesn't own your house. They own the right to collect the debt plus interest. You still own the property and can still sell it. But if you don't pay off the lien (called "redeeming" the property) within one year, the lien holder can petition the court for a collector's deed and take ownership.
A tax sale (also called tax foreclosure) is what Kansas uses. After three years of delinquency, the county files a foreclosure action in court and sells the property itself at auction. This is a full ownership transfer with no redemption period. Once the gavel drops, the property belongs to whoever bought it.
In both cases, selling to a cash buyer before the deadline is the smart move. The tax lien or delinquent taxes are paid from your sale proceeds, and you walk away with the remaining equity. If you wait until after the sale, you get nothing.
Good to Know
Even after a tax lien certificate is sold in Missouri, you still have a one-year redemption period. During that year, you can still sell the property. But interest and fees are growing the entire time, so earlier is always better.
How Much Equity Can You Lose at a Tax Sale?
This is the part that shocks most homeowners. At a tax sale or tax lien auction, the property often sells for a fraction of its actual value. In some cases, all that equity you've built over years of mortgage payments is wiped out.
Here's a real example of what happens: a homeowner in Independence owes $8,000 in back taxes, penalties, and interest. Their home is worth $120,000 and they have a $60,000 mortgage balance. That means they have roughly $60,000 in equity. At a Missouri tax lien auction, the lien certificate sells for $8,000 (the amount of back taxes). If the homeowner doesn't redeem within a year, the lien holder takes the entire property. The homeowner loses their $60,000 in equity over an $8,000 tax debt.
On the Kansas side, the judicial foreclosure auction might sell the property for $30,000 to $40,000, well below the $120,000 market value. After the back taxes and court costs are paid, whatever is left goes to the former owner. But "whatever is left" is often a fraction of the true equity.
Selling to us for cash before the tax sale protects your equity. If we offer $95,000 on that same property, the title company pays off the $8,000 in taxes and the $60,000 mortgage. You walk away with $27,000. Compare that to losing everything at the tax sale.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. You can sell your property at any time before the tax sale is finalized. The back taxes, penalties, and interest are paid from the sale proceeds at closing. As long as your property is worth more than what you owe in total, you walk away with cash.
You can sell at any stage of tax delinquency, whether you're one year behind or three. The key is selling before the county completes its foreclosure or tax lien process. The sooner you act, the less you owe in penalties and interest.
In Missouri, a tax lien certificate is sold and you have one year to redeem by paying the back taxes plus interest. In Kansas, the property is sold outright at a judicial foreclosure auction with no redemption period. Either way, you risk losing all your equity over a debt that's a fraction of the home's value.
Yes. We purchase properties with existing tax liens regularly. We work with the county collector and title company to clear the lien at closing. The lien amount is deducted from your sale proceeds.
A cash sale can close in as few as 7-14 days. If a tax sale deadline is approaching, we can expedite the process to beat the auction date. Time is critical with tax-delinquent properties, so contact us as soon as possible.
No. The back taxes are paid from the sale proceeds at the closing table. You don't need to come up with the tax money upfront. The title company handles the payoff to the county as part of the closing process.
If the combined debt exceeds the property value, we can discuss options. In some cases, we negotiate with the mortgage lender for a short sale. In other cases, the lien holders may agree to accept less than full payment to clear the title. We'll evaluate your specific situation.
Missouri counties do offer partial payment plans. Contact the county collector's office to discuss options. However, if you can't keep up with the payment plan (or if you're already too far behind), selling may be the more practical option to protect your remaining equity.
The 2023 Jackson County reassessment significantly increased assessed property values across the metro, causing many homeowners' tax bills to spike. Some saw their tax burden double. If the reassessment pushed your taxes beyond what you can afford, selling may be the right move before the debt grows further.
Property taxes are attached to the property, not to you personally. If you sell the property, the taxes are paid from proceeds and you're clear. If the property goes to tax sale, you lose the property but the county can't pursue you for the remaining tax debt personally.