Tax Foreclosure vs. Mortgage Foreclosure in North Carolina

Two different foreclosures, two different clocks — here is how to tell them apart.

“Foreclosure” is one word for two very different situations, and knowing which one you face changes what you should do. One comes from your mortgage lender; the other comes from the county for unpaid property taxes. They run under different laws, on different timelines, with different ways to stop them — and it is possible to face both at once. This guide lays them side by side.

Tax foreclosure versus mortgage foreclosure in North Carolina compared for homeowners

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Mortgage Foreclosure: The Lender's Process

A mortgage foreclosure is brought by your lender when you fall behind on the loan. In North Carolina it is most often a power-of-sale proceeding: the trustee files with the clerk of superior court, there is a foreclosure hearing, and if it proceeds the property is sold. The driver is the loan balance, and the parties are you and the mortgage servicer. Curing the default — or selling and paying off the loan — ends it.

How to tell which foreclosure you are facing in Charlotte North Carolina and how to sell fast

Tax Foreclosure: The County's Process

A property tax foreclosure is brought by the county when property taxes go unpaid. North Carolina allows a mortgage-style foreclosure by civil action under G.S. 105-374 and an in rem method under G.S. 105-375 — Mecklenburg County uses in rem. The driver is the unpaid tax bill and its lien, which attached to the property on January 1, and the party pursuing it is the county tax office, not your lender. Paying the taxes in full — including from a sale — stops it.

How to Tell Which One You're Facing — and What Solves Both

Read the notice. A document from your mortgage servicer or a notice of a foreclosure hearing points to a mortgage foreclosure. A notice from the county tax office, or a docketed certificate of taxes, points to a tax foreclosure. Whichever it is — or if it is both — a completed sale that pays what is owed stops the foreclosure, because the debt driving it is satisfied at closing. The one thing both share is the clock, which is why a cash buyer who can close in as little as 7 days is useful either way. Freedom Legacy Homes buys as-is and coordinates with the closing attorney to pay the lender, the county, or both.

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Not sure which clock you are on? Tell us the address and what you have received in the mail — we will help you read the situation and make a written, as-is cash offer that can close in time to stop either kind of foreclosure.

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