Shawnee County Tax Delinquent Property List
Research tax sale properties or find owners to contact directly. Shawnee County has tax-delinquent properties tracked and scored for investors.
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What brings you to Shawnee County?
Why Download the Shawnee County Owner List?
- Skip trace ready — Owner names and mailing addresses included
- Sorted by motivation — Properties ranked by delinquency amount and opportunity signals
- Refreshed regularly — Sourced from public county records
What's Included in the Shawnee County List
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Frequently Asked Questions
How often is the Shawnee County list updated?
We pull fresh data from County Records monthly. Each download reflects the most recent delinquency data available from Shawnee 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 Shawnee County with grades, addresses, tax owed, and full owner contact info. No credit card required.
About Shawnee County
- Region
- Kansas
- Population
- 178K
- Data Source
- County Records
- Data Status
- Available for Download
How Tax Delinquent Property Sales Work in Kansas
Kansas is a deed state that reaches the sale through the courts. When property taxes go unpaid, the parcel is first bid off to the county and held — generally two years, three years for a constitutional homestead, or one year for abandoned buildings — during which the owner can still pay. If the debt remains unpaid, the county files a judicial tax-foreclosure suit, obtains a judgment, and the property is sold to the highest bidder at a sheriff's auction. After the district court confirms the sale, the winning bidder receives a Sheriff's Deed conveying ownership. There is no lien or certificate to buy and no interest return; the investor's return comes from acquiring the property at or below market value. Because there is no post-sale owner redemption, Kansas offers relatively fast ownership, though most buyers still pursue a quiet-title action to obtain marketable, insurable title.
Bidding & Auctions
Kansas uses a straightforward premium, highest-bid auction — there is no bid-down or interest-based bidding. After the county completes its judicial foreclosure suit, the qualifying parcels are sold to the highest bidder above an opening minimum, either live at the courthouse or online. Payment is due promptly under each county's terms, and the sale is not final until the district court confirms it, at which point the Sheriff's Deed issues. Some counties run their sales through CivicSource; others hold in-person sheriff or courthouse auctions. Counties such as Johnson, Sedgwick, and Wyandotte publish specific auction dates each year.
Redemption & Penalties
Kansas provides no post-sale redemption right for the former owner. Their opportunity to pay the delinquency ends at the close of business the day before the auction; once the district court confirms the sale, ownership is final. The only post-sale redemption is a 120-day federal window when an IRS tax lien had attached to the property — the Sheriff's Deed cannot issue until that period expires. Separately, K.S.A. 79-2804b allows a 12-month window in which the foreclosure procedure itself may be legally challenged, for example on defective-notice grounds; this is not an owner redemption right, but investors should be aware of it before improving the property.
See Kansas Statutes Annotated, K.S.A. 79-2801 et seq. Specific procedures vary by county — always verify with the local tax assessor/collector before bidding.
Resources for Kansas Investors
How to Buy Tax Delinquent Property in Shawnee County
Step-by-step guide: tax sale process, redemption periods, deal types, and investor tips for Kansas.
Read the buying guideFrequently Asked Questions
How often is the Shawnee County list updated?▾
We pull fresh data from county records monthly. Each download reflects the most recent delinquency data available from the Shawnee 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 500 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.
Does Kansas have a redemption period after the tax sale?▾
No. The owner's right to pay ends the day before the auction, and once the court confirms the sale, ownership is final. The only exception is a 120-day federal redemption window when an IRS lien had attached to the property.
What kind of title do I get at a Kansas tax sale?▾
You receive a Sheriff's Deed after the district court confirms the sale. Because it comes through foreclosure, most buyers still run a quiet-title action to obtain marketable, insurable title.
How long is a property delinquent before a Kansas tax foreclosure sale?▾
The parcel is bid off to the county and held before the foreclosure suit — generally two years, three years for a constitutional homestead, or one year for an abandoned building. The owner can still pay during that holding period.
What is the K.S.A. 79-2804b window?▾
It is a 12-month period after the sale during which the foreclosure procedure itself can be challenged, for example on defective-notice grounds. It is not an owner redemption right, but many investors wait before making significant improvements.