The regional auction drew 100 registered bidders, who purchased 88 of 115 parcels for $588,087.49 Results were as follows:
Hempstead County: 26 parcels offered; 16 parcels sold; $26,739.27 total; $6,808.75 taxes collected
Lafayette County: 11 parcels offered; 7 parcels sold; $120,489.09 total; $2,462.12 taxes collected
Little River County: 15 parcels offered; 15 parcels sold; $55,604.43 total; $8,714.72 taxes collected
Miller County: 63 parcels offered; 50 parcels sold; $385,254.70 total; $48,448.83 taxes collected
The auctions offered real estate parcels with taxes delinquent since 2019.
“We only auction a fraction of the parcels certified for delinquent taxes,” Commissioner Tommy Land said. “By far, most owners redeem their property by paying the delinquent taxes. Naturally we hope property is redeemed if the owners want to keep it, but it is vital that the parcels return to the county’s active tax rolls.”
The COSL office forwards taxes and interest to the county, whether that money is collected through redemption or sale.
“Last year, the Commissioner of State Lands Office sent more than $21 million to school districts and county governments,” Land said. “Of that, $571,441.44 went to these two counties, helping fund everything from roads to schools.”
Those turnback amounts were:
Hempstead County: $132,863.35.
Lafayette County: $55,574.10.
Little River: $31,341.57.
Miller: $351,662.42.
Auction sales are final.
Unsold parcels may be redeemed online at www.cosl.org, using a credit or debit card, or owners can call 501-324-9422 to request a Petition to Redeem. Redemption does not grant ownership; it simply makes the taxes current.
Parcels that did not sell at the public auction will be available after 30 days and can be purchased through an online auction by viewing the Post-Auction Sales List at www.cosl.org.