For generations, Illinois homeowners falling behind on tax payments risked losing their entire property value to tax lien buyers, regardless of the debt's size. The new law fundamentally alters this by requiring that any surplus proceeds from a property auction be returned to the former owner after taxes, penalties, and fees are satisfied. This shift mirrors the Supreme Court’s Tyler v. Hennepin ruling, which clarified that governments and their agents cannot retain property value beyond what is strictly owed.
Illinois Ends Property Tax Foreclosure Windfalls for Private Investors
Governor JB Pritzker has signed legislation ending a decades-old practice that allowed private investors to seize entire properties—and all accumulated home equity—over minimal tax debts. Championed by Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas, the reform aligns Illinois law with a 2023 U.S. Supreme Court mandate against government-sanctioned equity theft.

Crafted by the office of Maria Pappas with backing from Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and sponsors Senator Celina Villanueva and Representative Curtis Tarver, the bill introduces a structured auction system. By 2030, Cook County will phase out private tax buying entirely, assuming control of delinquent liens to prioritize payment plans over dispossession. This transition aims to preserve generational wealth and prevent the displacement of families, replacing a predatory system with a framework that centers on debt recovery rather than asset seizure.



Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!