County Surplus Funds Lists
Every surplus / excess-proceeds record we hold for a single county — former owner names, amounts, sale dates, and published claim deadlines — as a clean CSV download. One-time $97 per county, no subscription.
Compiled from official county public records. Amounts and deadlines are estimates as of our last data pull for each county.
Available County Lists
DeKalb County
Georgia
Records
224
Total Surplus
$6.5M
Largest
$307,589
Data as of July 2, 2026
View list details →Dallas County
Texas
Records
173
Total Surplus
$4.6M
Largest
$195,593
Data as of July 2, 2026
View list details →Fort Bend County
Texas
Records
50
Total Surplus
$2.3M
Largest
$392,415
Data as of July 2, 2026
View list details →Volusia County
Florida
Records
307
Total Surplus
$1.2M
Largest
$79,437
Data as of July 2, 2026
View list details →Pasco County
Florida
Records
95
Total Surplus
$510,557
Largest
$23,011
Data as of July 2, 2026
View list details →Collier County
Florida
Records
26
Total Surplus
$347,620
Largest
$72,693
Data as of July 2, 2026
View list details →Sumter County
Florida
Records
117
Total Surplus
$184,396
Largest
$93,806
Data as of July 2, 2026
View list details →How it works
- Pick a county and pay once — $97, no subscription and no recurring charge.
- Download the full CSV immediately: 3 downloads included, 30-day access window.
- Every record includes the former owner name, estimated surplus amount, sale date, and the claim deadline where the county has published one.
- You are buying data, not a recovery service — LienSuite does not locate claimants, file claims, or take a percentage of anything.
Important legal disclaimer
Surplus amounts and deadlines are estimates compiled from public county records as of the last data pull and may already be claimed, paid, or expired — always confirm with the county before acting. This is information, not legal or financial advice. Recovery fees are capped by state law, and some states (such as Texas) bar non-attorneys from charging any fee to recover an owner's excess proceeds; former owners can also file claims themselves for free. Consult a licensed attorney in the relevant jurisdiction before pursuing a claim.