Guide10 min read

Free Dallas County Tax Delinquent Property List: How to Pull It

Dallas County publishes tax delinquent and tax-sale property data for free across several sites. This guide shows exactly where each list lives, what it contains, and how to make it usable for investing.

By Liensuite TeamPublished July 2, 2026

Dallas County is the second-largest property market in Texas -- roughly 800,000 parcels, a tax sale held on the first Tuesday of every month, and thousands of accounts that slip into delinquency each year. Almost all of that data is public and free. The problem is that it is scattered across three or four different offices, none of which were built to hand an investor a clean, ready-to-work list.

This guide walks through every free source of Dallas County tax delinquent property data, exactly what each one gives you, and the practical steps to turn raw public records into a list you can actually mail, call, or bid on.

Where Dallas County Delinquent Data Lives

Dallas County spreads responsibility for property-tax data across separate offices. Each holds a different slice of the picture, and serious investors learn to cross-reference all of them rather than trusting any single one.

Source What it holds Best for
Dallas County Tax Office Account-level delinquent balances, penalty and interest, the monthly tax-sale list, and struck-off resale inventory Sale-ready properties and exact amounts owed
Dallas Central Appraisal District (DCAD) Ownership, mailing addresses, parcel size, building details, appraised value, and exemptions Property characteristics and owner contact starting points
Dallas County District Clerk Tax foreclosure lawsuits ("tax suits") filed against delinquent owners Spotting accounts moving toward a forced sale
Delinquent-tax law firms The published monthly sale notice and minimum-bid detail, posted ahead of each auction The properties actually going to sale this month

The Dallas County Tax Office

The Dallas County Tax Assessor-Collector's office is the single most important free source. It maintains the official record of every property-tax account in the county, including the ones that are behind, and it is where the amounts owed are authoritative.

What you can pull for free

  • Individual account lookups -- search by owner name, address, or account number to see the current balance, accrued penalty and interest, and payment history.
  • The monthly tax-sale list -- Dallas County holds its tax sale on the first Tuesday of every month. The list of properties going to that sale is published in advance, typically a few weeks ahead.
  • The struck-off / resale list -- properties that did not sell at auction and are now held by the taxing units for later resale. These are frequently overlooked and can sometimes be acquired without competing in a live sale.

The limitation

The tax office site is built for property owners paying their bill, not for investors building a list. Looking up one account at a time is easy; there is no clean "download every delinquent account in the county" button. The monthly sale list is a manageable size, but the full delinquent roll is not exposed as a single export.

Dallas Central Appraisal District (DCAD)

DCAD is where the property facts live. The tax office tells you what is owed; DCAD tells you what the property is and who is on record as owning it.

What DCAD adds to a delinquent record

  • Current owner name and mailing address -- critical, because the mailing address is often different from the property address, a strong hint that the owner is absentee.
  • Land and improvement values, square footage, year built, and property class.
  • Exemption flags (homestead, over-65, disabled) that hint at the owner's situation.
  • Bulk data files: DCAD publishes downloadable appraisal-roll data sets that advanced users pull to build their own databases.

DCAD's bulk files are genuinely free and genuinely large, but they are raw delimited exports meant for people comfortable with databases. They do not flag delinquency on their own -- you have to join them against tax-office data to know which parcels are actually behind.

The Monthly Tax-Sale List

Dallas County's delinquent property taxes are collected and litigated by outside law firms on behalf of the county, cities, and school districts. Those firms publish the official notice of each monthly sale, generally about three weeks before the first-Tuesday auction.

The published sale list typically includes:

  1. The cause number and account number for each property.
  2. A brief legal description and the property address.
  3. The adjudged value and the minimum bid -- often the lesser of the judgment amount or the adjudged value.

This is the cleanest free "list" you will find for Dallas County, because it is already curated down to the properties actually going to sale. The trade-off is timing and scope: it shows only what is at auction this month, not the much larger universe of owners who are delinquent but not yet in foreclosure. The earliest, least-competitive deals usually come from that larger universe -- owners two or three years behind whose property has not yet hit a sale list.

District Clerk Court Records

When a Dallas County property-tax debt is escalated, the taxing units file a lawsuit -- a "tax suit" -- in district court. The Dallas County District Clerk's online records let you search these filings for free.

This source is valuable because it sits in the middle of the timeline: a tax suit has been filed, but the property has not yet been sold. Owners in this window are highly motivated -- they have received formal legal notice -- yet there is still time to reach them before the auction. Searching by case type and date range surfaces newly filed tax suits, which you can then cross-reference against DCAD for ownership and contact details.

The Real Limitations of Free Dallas County Data

Every source above is free, and together they contain everything you need. The problem is never access -- it is assembly. Here is what stands between the raw data and a working list:

  • Nothing is joined. Delinquent balances live at the tax office, owner and property details at DCAD, lawsuit status at the District Clerk. No single source gives you all three on one row. You join them yourself.
  • Mailing addresses are stale or out of state. The owner on record may have died, moved, or inherited the property. The mailing address DCAD shows is frequently not where the decision-maker actually receives mail.
  • No deceased-owner or heir flags. Some of the best Dallas County deals involve a deceased record owner and heirs who do not realize they own a tax-burdened property. Public county data does not surface this -- you have to layer in probate and death-record signals.
  • No prioritization. A raw delinquent roll treats a $400 sliver of vacant land the same as a $40,000 homestead two years behind. You have to score and sort to find the parcels worth working.
  • It goes stale fast. Owners pay, properties sell, and new accounts fall behind every month. A list you pull today is partly wrong within 30 days.

Free Lists vs. Enriched, Skip-Traced Data

The gap between raw county data and a list you can act on is real work. Here is the same job done two ways:

Step Doing it free, by hand On an enriched platform
Find delinquent parcels Cross-reference multiple county sites Pre-joined and filterable
Get owner mailing address Look up each parcel on DCAD Attached to every record
Flag deceased owners / heirs Manual probate and obituary research Surfaced as signals on the row
Skip trace to phone / email Separate paid service, exported and re-matched Built in, per record
Keep it current Re-pull and re-join every month Refreshed for you

LienSuite was built specifically to collapse that workflow. It carries Dallas County alongside 389 counties across all 50 states, with delinquent records already joined to owner and property details, deceased-owner and heir signals flagged, and skip tracing built in so you can go from a county list to a callable contact without juggling four websites and a spreadsheet. You can browse the Dallas County list for free to see what is there before deciding whether enriched data is worth it for your strategy.

A Practical Approach for Dallas County

  1. Start with the monthly sale list if you want auction-ready inventory and you are comfortable bidding. It is the cleanest free list and it is current.
  2. Watch the District Clerk for new tax suits if you want to reach owners before the auction, when they are motivated but still reachable.
  3. Use DCAD to enrich any parcel you are seriously considering -- ownership, value, exemptions, and whether the mailing address suggests an absentee or out-of-area owner.
  4. Layer in deceased-owner and heir research on the higher-value parcels. This is where the least-competitive deals tend to hide.
  5. Skip trace the owners you want to contact so your outreach actually reaches a person, not a returned envelope.

For a broader view of how the county's free sources fit together statewide, see our guides on free tax delinquent property lists in Texas and buying tax delinquent property in Dallas County.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Dallas County tax delinquent property list really free?

Yes. The county tax office, DCAD, and the District Clerk all publish their data at no charge, and the monthly tax-sale list is posted publicly before each sale. What costs time or money is joining those sources together, finding current owner contact information, and keeping the list fresh.

When are Dallas County tax sales held?

Dallas County holds its tax sale on the first Tuesday of every month, following the standard Texas schedule. The list of properties going to that sale is published in advance -- generally a few weeks ahead -- so you have time to research before bidding.

What is the struck-off list?

Struck-off properties are those that did not sell at a tax auction and are now held by the taxing units for later resale. They are offered outside the live-auction format, which usually means less bidding competition -- but they often carry condition or title issues, so due diligence matters even more.

How do I find the owner's address on a delinquent property?

DCAD lists the record owner and their mailing address for each parcel. Be aware the mailing address is frequently outdated or out of state, especially on the absentee and inherited properties that make the best deals -- which is why skip tracing is usually necessary before outreach.

Can I get the whole delinquent roll as one download?

Not cleanly from a single county site. DCAD offers bulk appraisal-roll files, but those do not flag delinquency on their own, and the tax office exposes balances mostly one account at a time. Building a complete, delinquency-flagged Dallas County list from raw public data takes real assembly work -- which is exactly the gap enriched platforms fill.

See the Free Dallas County List for Your Strategy

You do not have to compile Dallas County by hand to find out whether the inventory is worth working. Browse your county's tax-delinquent list free at liensuite.com/counties -- Dallas County and 388 others are there, with delinquent records already joined to owner and property details and deceased-owner and heir signals flagged. Pull up the free list for your county, see the real parcels, and decide from there.


Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not legal, tax, or investment advice. LienSuite is an independent software product and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or associated with any third-party coach, author, podcast, course, community, or organization. All third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

Topics

dallas countytax delinquent propertyfree property listsdallastax sale listtexas counties

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