Back property taxes in Dayton? Ohio can sell your home for unpaid taxes after 24 months of delinquency. We buy houses with tax liens — pay the taxes at closing, give you the difference in cash, save your credit.
Falling behind on property taxes in Dayton, Ohio can spiral fast. Ohio counties begin tax sale proceedings after a fixed period of property tax delinquency. BuyHousesInCash buys homes with tax liens, tax delinquency, and even properties scheduled for tax sale. We pay the back taxes from sale proceeds at closing, so you never write a check. You walk away free of the tax burden with cash in hand.
BuyHousesInCash handles tax-delinquent Dayton properties without requiring the seller to bring money to closing. The math just needs sale proceeds to exceed the tax debt, mortgage payoff, and our offer. When equity is too thin to cover all three, we work with lenders on short sale and with the county on tax-arrear negotiations.
Mortgage servicers in Ohio sometimes pay delinquent property taxes themselves and force-place the amount into the loan balance, raising the monthly payment overnight to recover the advance plus interest. Dayton borrowers occasionally find their $1,400/month mortgage jumps to $1,950 after a tax-escrow shortage. The lender treats it as a default risk; the next step is acceleration.
Tax foreclosure in Ohio (judicial in some counties, administrative in others) moves on a fixed schedule once initiated — Montgomery County's process from filing to sheriff's deed runs roughly 6-9 months. Selling at any point before final transfer pays off the lien and gives the homeowner the remaining equity. After the deed transfers, that equity belongs to the new owner.
Most Montgomery County tax sales use a certificate-auction process where investors bid on the right to collect the delinquency plus interest. The homeowner retains a redemption window (often 1-3 years in Ohio) during which they can pay off the certificate plus accumulated interest and reclaim clean title. BuyHousesInCash regularly closes during this redemption window, paying the certificate as part of the closing.
No obligation. We close at a Montgomery County title company.
Call (555) 555-CASHOhio can typically begin tax sale proceedings after 24 months of delinquency. The county or municipality issues a tax certificate to investors, and after a redemption period, the property can be sold at auction. BuyHousesInCash can typically close before tax sale in Dayton as long as you contact us before the auction date is finalized.
No. BuyHousesInCash pays all delinquent property taxes, penalties, and interest from the sale proceeds at closing. The title company in Ohio disburses funds to the county tax collector, clears the lien, and the remaining cash goes to you. You write zero checks. This is one of the biggest reasons homeowners with Dayton tax delinquency choose us.
Even after a tax certificate is sold to an investor, Ohio provides a redemption period during which you can pay off the certificate plus interest and reclaim your property. BuyHousesInCash can buy your home and redeem the certificate at closing during this window. Don't wait until the redemption period expires — call us as soon as possible.
Yes. Federal IRS tax liens against you personally do attach to Dayton real estate. The IRS has procedures (Form 14135) to discharge a property from the lien at closing in exchange for paying the lien amount or a portion. BuyHousesInCash works with title companies experienced in IRS lien discharges. Ohio state tax liens follow similar processes.
The math has to work — sale proceeds need to cover the back taxes plus our offer price. If you have $50,000 in back taxes on a $200,000 Dayton home, we have plenty of room. If back taxes are $180,000 on a $200,000 home, the offer becomes minimal. We'll run the numbers transparently and tell you what you'd net before any commitment.
Common scenario. Both get paid off at closing from sale proceeds. The title company disburses to the lender (mortgage payoff) and the Ohio tax collector (delinquent taxes), then any remaining equity goes to you. We handle multi-creditor closings in Dayton regularly — it adds about 3-5 days to closing time but isn't a deal-breaker.
Most Ohio counties will postpone or cancel a scheduled tax sale once they receive proof of a pending sale to a buyer who will pay off the delinquent taxes. BuyHousesInCash' title company submits the contract and proof of funds directly to the Dayton tax office to halt the sale. We've stopped tax auctions with as little as 5 days notice.
Selling to BuyHousesInCash doesn't directly impact credit. The negative items — late mortgage payments, judgments, the tax lien itself — already affect your credit. Selling clears those liens, which over time helps your credit recover. Compare to a tax sale: losing the home plus continued lien on credit report. The voluntary sale is almost always the better credit outcome.
Investor purchasers at Montgomery County tax sales typically pay only the back taxes plus fees, leaving any residual property value as profit when the redemption period expires. Dayton homeowners who let this happen lose their entire equity. Selling to BuyHousesInCash before the sale captures that equity for the seller, even if only at 60-75% of after-repair value.
IRS tax liens — separate from property tax — also affect Dayton home sales. Federal liens attach to all real estate owned by the debtor. When the property sells, the IRS gets paid from proceeds before the homeowner sees anything, but Form 14135 (Certificate of Discharge) can clear the lien from the specific property at closing. BuyHousesInCash title teams handle this routinely in Montgomery County.
Tax delinquency in Dayton often correlates with other distress signals — job loss, medical bills, divorce — and Ohio doesn't have a hardship program that reliably saves the home once 24 months pass. Montgomery County's deferral programs cover seniors and disabled veterans but rarely the working-age homeowner facing a temporary cash crunch.
Income tax debt occasionally gets confused with property tax debt in Dayton, but they operate independently. Ohio state income tax liens, federal IRS liens, and Montgomery County property tax liens are three separate exposures that can all attach to the same property. A title search before closing reveals every one of them; BuyHousesInCash clears them all at the settlement table.