Selling a House With a Judgment Lien in Charlotte, NC

A judgment lien turned up on your title — here is how it clears when you sell.

Plenty of owners discover an old judgment only when a title search runs before a sale: a credit card balance, a medical bill, a dispute from years ago that ended in a money judgment. In North Carolina, once that judgment is docketed it becomes a lien on the house — even though no one mailed you a lien document. The reassuring news is that a judgment lien is a routine thing a closing handles: it is paid from your proceeds, the release is recorded, and clear title passes the same day.

Sell a house with a judgment lien in Charlotte North Carolina for cash as-is

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How a Judgment Becomes a Lien on Your House

When a creditor wins a money judgment and it is docketed with the clerk of superior court, G.S. 1-234 makes it a lien on the real property the debtor owns in that county — and on property acquired there later. The lien is effective against third parties once the judgment is indexed. A creditor can also transcribe the judgment to other counties to reach property there. So if a judgment was docketed in Mecklenburg County and you own a house here, the lien is already attached to it, quietly, until it is paid or it expires.

North Carolina judgment lien payoff and release of lien handled at closing when selling a house

How Long a Judgment Lien Lasts

A docketed judgment is a lien on your real property for 10 years from the date the judgment is entered, under G.S. 1-234. During that window it stays attached to the property in the county where it is docketed, and it has to be dealt with before clear title can pass to a buyer. Time matters in both directions: an older judgment may be close to expiring, while a recent one has years to run — and the closing attorney will confirm exactly where yours stands.

How the Lien Is Paid When You Sell — Even If Liens Stack Up

A judgment lien is paid from your sale proceeds at closing. The closing attorney confirms the exact payoff, pays the creditor at the closing table, and records the release so the buyer gets clear title. The money comes off the top of the sale, so you do not pay it separately in advance. When several claims exist — a judgment, a mortgage, maybe a contractor's lien — the attorney sets the correct payoff order, and judgment creditors will sometimes accept a negotiated amount to release the lien so a sale can close. If the debts run close to the home's value, a clean cash sale with a definite closing date still gives room to work.

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Get a No-Obligation Cash Offer

A judgment lien does not have to keep your house off the market. Tell us the address and what the title search showed — we will make a written, as-is cash offer and the lien is paid from proceeds at closing. No repairs, no commissions, no money up front.

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