Mason County Tax Delinquent Property List
Research tax sale properties or find owners to contact directly. Mason County has tax-delinquent properties tracked and scored for investors.
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Data sourced from public county records. Last verified 3 months ago.
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What brings you to Mason County?
Why Download the Mason County Owner List?
- Skip trace ready — Owner names and mailing addresses included
- Sorted by motivation — Properties ranked by delinquency amount and opportunity signals
- Updated 3 months ago — Sourced from public county records
What's Included in the Mason County List
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Frequently Asked Questions
How often is the Mason County list updated?
We pull fresh data from County Records monthly. Each download reflects the most recent delinquency data available from Mason County.
What owner data is included?
Each record includes owner name, mailing address, property address, assessed value, years delinquent, tax owed, and property type. Pro subscribers also get numeric scores, skip trace phone numbers, deceased owner flags, heir indicators, and lien/judgment signals.
Is the download really free?
Yes. Create a free account and get the top-scored deals with grades and full owner contact info instantly. No credit card required. Upgrade to Pro for numeric scores, heir and lien signals, all rows, map, and CRM.
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Download the top-scored deals from Mason County with grades, addresses, tax owed, and full owner contact info. No credit card required.
About Mason County
- Region
- Kentucky
- Population
- 17K
- Data Source
- County Records
- Data Status
- Available for Download
How Tax Delinquent Property Sales Work in Kentucky
Kentucky is a tax-lien state with an unusual structure: instead of an auction run by a county treasurer, each county clerk sells certificates of delinquency — liens on unpaid property-tax bills — to registered third-party purchasers. The certificate is a collection instrument recorded against the property, not a deed. The holder collects the debt plus a fixed 12% annual return and allowable fees, or ultimately forecloses. A one-year tolling period runs from the date the taxes became delinquent before any collection or foreclosure action may begin, and any enforcement action must be brought within 11 years of that delinquency date. There is no competitive interest or price auction; the clerk runs a draft-style sale where a random draw sets the selection order and purchasers choose certificates in rounds, with priority certificates — held by a purchaser who already owns a prior-year lien on the same parcel — taking first claim. Sales run county-by-county, roughly mid-July through October.
Bidding & Auctions
Kentucky does not use competitive bidding. Each county clerk runs a draft-style sale: a random drawing sets the order in which registered purchasers select, and they then pick certificates in rounds until the available inventory is claimed. Priority certificates — where a purchaser already holds a prior-year certificate of delinquency on the same parcel — are claimed first. Registration is gated: buyers above the county's small-purchase thresholds, or investing over $10,000, must register with the Department of Revenue for a $250 fee, and every purchaser must also register with the county clerk and post a deposit. The 12% return is fixed by statute, not bid.
Redemption & Penalties
Kentucky has no fixed redemption deadline that extinguishes the owner. The lien attaches when the taxes go delinquent, and the owner may pay to redeem at any time until the certificate holder forecloses. Redemption is the certificate face amount plus 12% simple interest per year and allowable fees and costs, after which the purchaser files a Release of Assignment. Enforcement is time-gated instead: no collection or foreclosure action may be brought during the one-year tolling period from delinquency, and any action must be filed within 11 years of the delinquency date. Once a foreclosure sale is completed, there is no owner redemption.
See Kentucky Revised Statutes Chapter 134. Specific procedures vary by county — always verify with the local tax assessor/collector before bidding.
Resources for Kentucky Investors
How to Buy Tax Delinquent Property in Mason County
Step-by-step guide: tax sale process, redemption periods, deal types, and investor tips for Kentucky.
Read the buying guideOther Kentucky Counties
Frequently Asked Questions
How often is the Mason County list updated?▾
We pull fresh data from county records monthly. Each download reflects the most recent delinquency data available from the Mason County appraisal district.
What data fields are included?▾
Each record includes property address, owner name, mailing address, assessed value, years delinquent, tax owed, and property type.
Is the download really free?▾
Yes. Create a free account and get the top 50 highest-scored deals with grades and full owner contact info instantly. No credit card required. Upgrade to Pro for numeric scores, heir and lien signals, all rows, map, and CRM.
What return does a Kentucky certificate of delinquency earn?▾
A fixed 12% simple interest per year on the amount paid, plus statutorily allowed fees and costs. Kentucky does not bid the rate down, so the 12% is the same for every purchaser.
How do I buy Kentucky tax liens?▾
Each county clerk runs a draft-style sale where a random draw sets the selection order and registered purchasers pick certificates in rounds. There is no competitive bidding, but you must register with the county clerk — and, above certain thresholds, with the Department of Revenue for a $250 fee.
Is there a redemption period in Kentucky?▾
There is no fixed deadline. The owner can redeem any time until the holder forecloses. However, no enforcement action can begin during the one-year tolling period after delinquency, and any action must be filed within 11 years of the delinquency date.
When are Kentucky certificate sales held?▾
County clerk sales run roughly mid-July through October, with most occurring between mid-July and the end of August. Each county sets its own date.