This is a static reference you can work down parcel by parcel. It pairs with the full due diligence guide and the max-bid calculator.
Title and liens
Confirm what you would actually be buying, and what would come with it.
- Pull the chain of title and run a lien search on the parcel. A tax deed clears most private liens, but government liens, municipal assessments, and IRS liens can survive.
- Budget for a quiet title action. A tax deed is not marketable title on its own, and clearing it takes months and money.
- Note whether the parcel is homestead. In Floridathat changes the deed-sale opening bid, not just the owner's rights.
The parcel on the ground
Value the dirt before the auction, especially on cheap rural lots.
- Find the parcel on the county GIS and map its boundaries, size, and zoning against the listing.
- Confirm legal access. A landlocked parcel with no recorded easement is hard to use and harder to resell.
- Check flood zones and wetlands and whether the lot is buildable (perc test, utilities, setbacks).
- Look up who holds the mineral rights if that matters to your plan for the land.
The numbers
Make the math decide your bid, not the auction adrenaline.
- Price in the redemption timeline: The owner (or anyone) can redeem a certificate at any time after it is issued and before a tax deed is issued. The two-year clock that lets a certificate holder apply for a tax deed runs from April 1 of the year the certificate was issued.
- If you are buying a certificate, model the return at the rate you would actually win, not the 18 percent ceiling, with the yield calculator.
- Set a defensible ceiling with the max-bid calculator, subtracting title-clearing and repair costs from resale value.
- Decide your walk-away number before the sale opens, and hold to it.
Sale-day logistics
Handle the paperwork and the money so a win does not slip away.
- Register on the county's auction platform ahead of the deadline and confirm which sale (certificate or deed) you are entering.
- Have the deposit ready: The high bidder posts a nonrefundable deposit of 5 percent of the bid or $200, whichever is greater, at the time of the sale, applied to the final price.
- Line up cleared funds for the balance. Full payment of the winning bid plus documentary stamp tax and recording fees is due within 24 hours, excluding weekends and legal holidays. Miss it and the deposit is forfeited, all bids are cancelled, and the parcel is readvertised with a higher opening bid.
- Verify the exact date, time, and format on your county page. These are set county by county and can change.
If a parcel fails any item you cannot price or fix, that is your answer. See the common mistakes this checklist is built to catch.
Built Jul 4, 2026 from Florida statutes and our due-diligence guides.
Tax Sale Atlas publishes educational information about public tax sale processes. This is not legal, financial, or investment advice. Rules, dates, and fees change; confirm with the county office before you bid.