The biggest mistake new tax lien investors make is believing the advertised rate is their actual return. It isn’t.
That 16% you see on the auction list is simply the statutory maximum — not what most investors actually earn. Your real ROI depends on competition, redemption timing, how much additional capital you deploy, and how long your money is tied up.
If you don’t run the real numbers, you’re investing on hope instead of math.
Let’s fix that.
The Advertised Rate Is Just the Starting Point
Many tax lien states advertise attractive interest rates — 12%, 16%, sometimes even higher.
But in competitive counties, bidding drives those returns down. It’s common for solid residential liens to close at 4% to 8%. That means your realistic expectation should already be lower than the headline rate.
If you win at 6%, you are earning 6% annualized — not 16%.
That’s your real starting line.
Redemption Timing Changes Your Return
Tax lien interest is annualized. But redemptions rarely happen exactly one year later.
If you buy a $5,000 lien at 8% and it redeems in six months, your return looks like this:
$5,000 × 8% × ½ year = $200
You didn’t earn 8%.
You earned 4% on your capital over that holding period.
Short redemptions compress returns. Long redemptions increase yield — but also increase capital lock-up.
Time is one of the most overlooked variables in tax lien ROI calculation.
Subsequent Taxes Increase Your Capital at Risk
In many lien states, you must pay future property taxes to maintain your position.
So your investment might look like this:
Year 1: $5,000
Year 2: +$4,500
Year 3: +$4,800
Now you have nearly $15,000 deployed.
Even if your interest rate is solid, your true ROI depends on how long that full amount is outstanding. More capital invested means more exposure — and your yield must be evaluated against the total dollars committed, not just the original lien.
Many investors forget to calculate ROI based on total deployed capital.
That’s a mistake.
Most Liens Redeem
Here’s the reality: the majority of tax liens redeem.
The massive returns you hear about usually come from foreclosure — when an investor ultimately acquires the property. But foreclosure is the exception, not the rule.
A disciplined investor assumes redemption and models the return accordingly. Foreclosure is upside, not the base case.
If your strategy only works when you get the property, your math is flawed.
The Formula That Actually Matters
Real tax lien ROI isn’t the statutory rate.
It’s:
(Interest Earned – Legal Costs – Holding Costs)
divided by
Total Capital Deployed
adjusted for
Time
That’s the number that tells the truth.
When you calculate it properly, you may find your actual annualized return is 5% to 9% on clean redemptions — not the flashy double-digit rate that attracted you in the first place.
And that’s okay.
Because tax lien investing isn’t about hype. It’s about structured, secured returns with defined downside and occasional equity upside.
The Bottom Line
Tax lien investing can be powerful. But only if you understand the real math.
The interest rate is the headline.
Time determines your yield.
Capital deployment determines your exposure.
Property selection determines your upside.
When you run the full tax lien ROI calculation — including redemption timing and holding costs — you stop chasing percentages and start making informed decisions.
And informed decisions are where real returns come from.
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.

