Track foreclosure records with the source context still attached.
CLTForeclosures organizes Mecklenburg County foreclosure-related records, lifecycle status, map context, and North Carolina upset-bid tools for people who verify before they act.
Coverage snapshot
Live API values when available. Verify records at the source.
107
active records
0
new this week
3
upcoming sales
$9.0M
record value
Get the Weekly Foreclosure Digest
New records, upcoming sale dates, and upset-bid activity every Monday morning.
What gets surfaced first
The product is built around record confidence, not generic real-estate hype.
Lifecycle labels
Separate notice filed, sale scheduled, upset-bid activity, cancelled, and stale records so a lead is not confused with a completed sale.
Source context
Prioritize public-record provenance, source links where available, and last-checked timing before promotional claims.
NC workflow tools
Use calculators and guides as informational aids, then verify all deadlines and requirements with official sources.
Guides and record literacy
Plain-language references for Mecklenburg County and North Carolina processes.
How to Buy a Foreclosure in Charlotte, NC: A 2026 Step-by-Step Guide
Charlotte's foreclosure market moves fast. Here's exactly how to research, bid, and close on a foreclosure in Mecklenburg County, from Lis Pendens to Trustee's Deed.
The North Carolina Upset Bid Process Explained (2026)
NC's 10-day upset bid period is one of the most unusual features in US foreclosure law. Here's exactly how it works, the math behind minimum bids, and strategies for both attackers and defenders.
Charlotte Foreclosure Hotspots: Neighborhoods with the Most Activity in 2026
Where are Charlotte's foreclosures actually concentrated? A data-driven look at which Mecklenburg County neighborhoods have the highest foreclosure rates and what investors should know about each.