Sacramento tax auctions can be risky bets. Here’s what to know

Sacramento County’s bi-annual tax auctions can look like bargain opportunities, but a Sacramento Bee review of 32 properties sold from 2022 to 2025 found many remain vacant, troubled or stuck in limbo.

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Key takeaways about recent Sacramento tax auctions

  • Of 32 properties auctioned by the county from 2022 to 2025, 13 parcels remain vacant and only a handful of new homes have been built on auctioned land.
  • Properties typically reach auction after about seven years of tax default. The average minimum bid was $37,646, with properties selling for around $200,000 on average — well below Sacramento’s average home value of $480,548 as of April 30, according to Zillow.
  • Buyers face real risks: liens, code violations, hazardous contamination and unexpected occupants. Bay Area investor Afshin Sazegari paid $255,381.05 for a south Sacramento house in May 2022 that remains fenced off and uninhabitable after a fire.
  • A 2025 auction resulted in tragedy months later when Karl Lysinger detonated his Oak Park house and died on the day he was to be evicted.
  • Auctions cluster in lower-value neighborhoods on the city’s outer edges, where infill development economics are “problematic” according to architect David Mogavero.

This report was produced with the assistance of a proprietary tool powered by artificial intelligence based on our own originally reported, written and published content. Before publishing, journalists reviewed this content in compliance with McClatchy Media’s AI policy.

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