State-by-State Guide

Texas government property research

Learn how to research public property opportunities in Texas, including county tax sales, surplus property pathways, and the due diligence steps to take before bidding.

How to start in Texas

This Texas guide is designed as a starting point, not a promise of available listings. Begin with county tax foreclosure and sheriff sale pages, then verify the sale type, payment terms, redemption rules, recording steps, and inspection options before you commit.

Southwestern states often require extra review of survey access, utility availability, and county-level sale procedures.

County-level focus

County tax foreclosure and sheriff sale pages are usually your best starting points for local notices, parcel details, registration rules, and payment instructions.

Common opportunity types

  • Tax deed or tax foreclosure opportunities
  • Tax lien, redemption, or certificate processes where applicable
  • State, county, city, or municipal surplus land and real estate
  • Sheriff, trustee, commissioner, or court-ordered sale notices
Research Tools

Quick starting resources for Texas

These buttons launch focused searches to official .gov pages and county auction resources, which is safer than relying on third-party listing summaries alone.

Official tax sale search

Start with official and county-managed pages, then read the sale terms before registering.

Open search

Official surplus property search

Start with official and county-managed pages, then read the sale terms before registering.

Open search

County auction search

Start with official and county-managed pages, then read the sale terms before registering.

Open search

What to verify before bidding

  • Whether the sale transfers full title, a lien interest, or only a limited deed
  • How deposits, payment deadlines, and bidder registration work
  • Whether there is a redemption period or post-sale challenge window
  • Whether back taxes, utility balances, HOA issues, or code violations survive the sale
  • Whether legal access, zoning, occupancy, and parcel boundaries have been checked
Next Step

Keep your process grounded

Work from official notices first, then use the site's due diligence guide to verify title, access, liens, occupancy, and local restrictions.