
Understanding Gwinnett County Tax Sale Overages (What Happens to the Extra Money?)
Understanding Gwinnett County Tax Sale Overages
When a property is sold at a Gwinnett County tax sale, many people assume the county keeps everything.
That’s not true.
If the property sells for more than the amount owed in taxes, liens, and fees, the remaining money — called tax sale overages or excess funds— may legally belong to the former owner or their heirs.
Most people never realize this money exists.
Here’s how it works.
What Are Tax Sale Overages?
A tax sale happens when unpaid property taxes lead to the property being auctioned.
If:
Sale price > total debt owed
The extra money becomes overages.
That difference does not disappear or automatically belong to the government. It may be claimed by the rightful party.
Where Does the Money Go After the Sale?
After the auction, Gwinnett County typically:
pays unpaid taxes
pays liens and costs
holds any remaining funds
Those leftover funds may sit with the county until someone files a claim.
Sometimes that money remains unclaimed for years.
Who Can Claim Overages?
You may qualify if you are:
the former property owner
a family member or heir
the executor of an estate
Proper documentation is usually required to prove your relationship to the property.
Why Do So Many Funds Go Unclaimed?
Common reasons include:
people move and never receive notices
heirs don’t know the property was sold
the process feels confusing
no one checks county records
As a result, thousands of dollars may sit untouched.
How to Check if You’re Owed Money
You can manually search county records, but it takes time and experience to know what to look for.
We provide afree claim checkto quickly determine whether excess funds may exist in your name.
👉Start your free Gwinnett County claim check
Need County-Specific Help?
For full details on the process and how we help:
