Seminole County, FL Foreclosure & Tax-Deed Auctions

Upcoming Seminole County foreclosure and tax-deed auction sales, how the county’s online bidding process works, deposit and redemption rules, and where to find each sale.

8
Upcoming sales
July 23, 2026
Next sale date
8
Foreclosure
0
Tax deed

Counts reflect the latest calendar sweep and refresh automatically. Public record — no account needed.

How Seminole County runs its auctions

PlatformOnline via seminole.realforeclose.com (RealForeclose / RealAuction)
Foreclosure salesFla. Stat. Ch. 455% of the final bid, due immediately after the sale (non-refundable if you fail to pay the balance).
Balance dueBalance of the winning bid is due by the deadline set by the clerk, typically end of the sale day.
RedemptionIn Florida a mortgagor’s right of redemption is cut off when the certificate of sale is filed after the auction (Fla. Stat. §45.0315) — there is generally no post-sale redemption period on a foreclosure sale.
ObjectionsObjections to the sale must be filed within 10 days of the certificate of sale.
Tax-deed salesFla. Stat. Ch. 197Nonrefundable deposit due at time of sale (commonly $200 or 5% of the bid, whichever is greater). Tax-deed sales convey the property subject to certain surviving liens; they are a distinct process from mortgage foreclosure sales.

Frequently asked questions

Where are Seminole County foreclosure auctions held?
Seminole County conducts its foreclosure and tax-deed sales online at seminole.realforeclose.com, powered by the RealForeclose (RealAuction) platform used across most of Florida.
How much deposit do I need to bid in Seminole County?
For foreclosure sales in Florida, 5% of the final bid, due immediately after the sale (non-refundable if you fail to pay the balance). Balance of the winning bid is due by the deadline set by the clerk, typically end of the sale day.
Is there a redemption period after a Seminole County foreclosure sale?
In Florida a mortgagor’s right of redemption is cut off when the certificate of sale is filed after the auction (Fla. Stat. §45.0315) — there is generally no post-sale redemption period on a foreclosure sale.
What’s the difference between a foreclosure and a tax-deed sale in Seminole County?
Foreclosure sales are governed by Fla. Stat. Ch. 45; tax-deed sales by Fla. Stat. Ch. 197. Tax-deed sales convey the property subject to certain surviving liens; they are a distinct process from mortgage foreclosure sales.
How do I find upcoming Seminole County auctions with equity analysis?
Auxelerate tracks upcoming Seminole County sales and ranks them by equity spread (estimated market value minus amount owed). Public sale dates and counts are free; parcel-level detail is available with an Auxelerate plan.

See Seminole County sales ranked by equity spread

Auxelerate enriches each upcoming Seminole County auction with market value, amount owed, and the equity cushion — ranked so the best opportunities surface first.

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Public sale dates and counts are free. Parcel-level detail and equity analysis require a plan.