Let’s cut through the noise and compare the two paths side-by-side so you can decide which one actually fits your life.
| Traditional Real Estate (Rentals/Flips) | Tax Liens & Deeds | |
| Typical Return | 6–12 % cash-on-cash (after vacancies, repairs, management) | 8–25% statutory interest (if redeemed) + potential deed upside |
| Time Required | Ongoing: tenants, repairs, accounting | Mostly front-loaded research; then very passive |
| Management Hassles | Tenants, toilets, turnover, taxes | Zero tenants, zero repairs (until you take a deed) |
| Liquidity | 6–12+ months to sell a property | Redemption 6–36 months or sell the lien faster |
| Capital Intensity | High (down payments + rehab + reserves) | Lower per deal; cash-heavy but smaller tickets |
| Biggest Risk | Vacancy + unexpected $20k roof | Low-redemption county or hidden prior lien |
| Scalability | Limited by management bandwidth and financing | Limited only by research time and capital |
When Traditional Real Estate Wins
You want monthly cash flow, enjoy the tangible asset, and don’t mind rolling up your sleeves (or hiring a property manager).
When Tax Liens Win
You want predictable, high-yield, truly hands-off income while keeping most of your time free. Liens act like a bond backed by real estate, except the interest rate is set by state law and usually beats anything you’ll find in the bond market.
Many investors I know run both: they use lien income to fund down payments on rentals, or they take the occasional tax deed and turn it into a long-term hold. The beauty is you don’t have to choose forever – you can let the lien returns compound quietly while you decide.
Bottom line: traditional real estate is active wealth-building. Tax liens are passive wealth-building with real estate collateral.
This blog is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as financial or investment advice. Real estate investing carries risks, and individual results will vary. Always consult with your team of professionals before making investment decisions. The authors and distributors of this material are not liable for any losses or damages that may occur as a result of relying on this information.

