Foreclosure Auction — 2026-04-29
- Date: 2026-04-29
- Time: 11:00 AM EST
- Location: Online via Pasco.RealForeclose.com
- Properties listed: 8
- Status: upcoming
- Properties on Docket:
Upcoming foreclosure auctions in Pasco County, Florida. Dates, times, locations, and registration info — updated weekly.
Last updated: April 25, 2026
Wednesday, 11:00 AM Eastern
Auction location: Online via pasco.realforeclose.com
Required deposit: 5% of anticipated high bid
Deposit and payment requirements are set by the RealAuction platform and may change. Verify current methods, timing, and any associated fees at pasco.realforeclose.com before bidding.
ForeclosureCalendar gives you a clean, current view of upcoming Pasco County foreclosure sales — auction dates, times, property counts, and direct links to verify every detail with the clerk.
Pasco County spans the I-75 corridor north of Tampa, covering New Port Richey and the west coast, Wesley Chapel and the I-75 growth corridor, Land O' Lakes, Zephyrhills, and Dade City out east. The foreclosure docket reflects that geographic diversity — older coastal homes on the west side, newer subdivision inventory along I-75, and rural properties on the east side.
Pasco conducts all foreclosure sales online through pasco.realforeclose.com. There are no in-person auctions. Sales run on Wednesdays at 11:00 AM Eastern, with most auction dates posting properties 7–10 days in advance.
The county uses the RealAuction platform — the same system used by Hillsborough, Pinellas, Orange, Polk, and several other Florida clerks. If you've bid in those counties, the Pasco interface will be familiar.
Sale schedule: Wednesday, 11:00 AM Eastern (note: later than most Florida counties' 10:00 AM standard), online via pasco.realforeclose.com. Properties typically appear on the docket 7–10 days before sale.
Pasco's single-day-per-week schedule means the weekly docket is compressed into one session. Volume per auction tends to be higher than daily-auction counties like Hillsborough.
Before placing a bid, you must register an account at pasco.realforeclose.com and deposit funds to cover your anticipated high bid. Pasco requires a deposit per property, with the specific percentage and payment methods set by the RealAuction platform.
Deposit methods and timing: Pasco accepts multiple payment methods including ACH transfer, wire transfer, and in-person cash or cashier's check. Timing requirements and any associated fees may change. Always verify current deposit requirements at pasco.realforeclose.com before your first bid.
Balance due: The remaining purchase price is due the next business day after the sale. Because Pasco auctions run on Wednesdays, the settlement deadline typically falls on Thursday — verify the exact cutoff at pasco.realforeclose.com before bidding.
Three distinct sub-markets. Pasco is geographically large and operationally feels like three counties:
These sub-markets behave differently. A strategy that works in Wesley Chapel (bid near market, rely on rental demand) may destroy margin in Hudson. Know which sub-market each property is in before you bid.
Volume. Pasco typically posts 40–80 properties per weekly auction. Volume spikes in the first and third weeks of each month as cases from the prior month's final judgment cycle work through.
Property mix. Docket skews to single-family homes and modest condos, with occasional manufactured homes in rural areas (additional due diligence required — ownership of the underlying land is a separate question from the structure). Vacant land parcels appear regularly, especially in east Pasco.
HOA liens in subdivisions. Central Pasco's newer subdivisions often carry substantial HOA delinquencies that don't clear through foreclosure and can be surprising if you haven't checked. Review HOA records before bidding on any property in a deed-restricted community.
Agricultural exemptions. East Pasco properties may carry agricultural tax exemptions (greenbelt designation). If you're planning to change use, understand what you're losing and whether the property's tax basis changes materially.
Title and due diligence. Pasco's online records are searchable through the clerk's main site, but code enforcement liens, HOA back dues, municipal assessments, and utility liens don't always appear in a basic search. Professional title search is the safer path for anything you're serious about.
Occupied properties. Florida is a judicial foreclosure state. Gaining physical possession of an occupied property post-sale requires a writ of possession through the court. Budget 30–60 days and attorney fees for this scenario.
ForeclosureCalendar.com aggregates publicly available foreclosure auction data from Florida county clerk websites. Always verify auction details directly with the county clerk before bidding. This site does not provide legal or financial advice. Consult a real estate attorney before bidding at a foreclosure auction.
Register an account at pasco.realforeclose.com and deposit funds to cover your anticipated high bid before placing any bids. Deposit must be on account per property.