Tarrant County, TX Foreclosures (2026)

Explore foreclosure properties with the highest estimated available equity in Tarrant County, TX. Rankings are based on county appraisal values and recorded lien information.

Top Foreclosure Cities in Tarrant County

Tarrant County currently has 42 active foreclosure properties across 28 cities going into auction on 07/07/2026. The highest concentration of listings is in Fort Worth, Arlington, and Crowley. All properties are sourced from county courthouse public records and updated weekly ahead of the first Tuesday auction. Tarrant County foreclosure auctions are held at The sales take place on the west side steps of the Tarrant County Courthouse.

Auction Location: The sales take place on the west side steps of the Tarrant County Courthouse

Best auction deals in Tarrant County, TX (upcoming auction)
2920 Wilkinson Ave, Fort Worth, TX, 76103

2920 Wilkinson Ave, Fort Worth, TX 76103

R Residential Single Family
Appraised Value: $140,944
Lien: $38,000
6519 Blackberry Dr, Arlington, TX, 76016

6519 Blackberry Dr, Arlington, TX 76016

R Residential Single Family
Appraised Value: $259,000
Lien: $80,910
718 W SUBLETT RD, Arlington, TX,

718 W SUBLETT RD,

C Commercial
Appraised Value: $534,380
Lien: $172,000
5287 River Lake Way, Grand Prairie, TX, 75052

5287 River Lake Way, Grand Prairie, TX 75052

R Residential Single Family
Appraised Value: $611,238
Lien: $197,400
9060 Heartwood Dr, Fort Worth, TX, 76244

9060 Heartwood Dr, Fort Worth, TX 76244

R Residential Single Family
Appraised Value: $278,984
Lien: $100,000
9410 Nine Mile Bridge Rd, Fort Worth, TX, 76135

9410 Nine Mile Bridge Rd, Fort Worth, TX 76135

C Vacant Land Commercial
Appraised Value: $1,085,972
Lien: $408,029
5109 LUCILLE ST, Haltom City, TX,

5109 LUCILLE ST,

R Residential Single Family
Appraised Value: $265,964
Lien: $123,600
9128 Christopher Cir, Fort Worth, TX, 76140

9128 Christopher Cir, Fort Worth, TX 76140

R Residential Single Family
Appraised Value: $180,000
Lien: $92,547
8704 Stone Valley Dr, Fort Worth, TX, 76244

8704 Stone Valley Dr, Fort Worth, TX 76244

R Residential Single Family
Appraised Value: $496,308
Lien: $315,000
2840 Mariposa Dr, Grand Prairie, TX, 75054

2840 Mariposa Dr, Grand Prairie, TX 75054

R Residential Single Family
Appraised Value: $555,482
Lien: $380,000

For a complete foreclosure listing in Tarrant County, TX and information visit foreclosure listing page



Tarrant County, TX House Price Index

Tarrant County, TX Labor Market Condition

Tarrant County Housing Market Condition

Strong Market

Strong Market driven by steady population growth, rising home values, and low unemployment. Tarrant County added about 31,600 people over the past year (a 1.5% increase), and housing stock rose by roughly 15,400 units (about 1.9%), keeping pace with statewide gains and growing faster than the national supply increase; that combination points to continued demand alongside a modest easing of tightness as more homes come online. Median home values climbed roughly 10.1% year-over-year to about $323,900, a sizable move that tracks with broader price gains in Texas and nationally, while rents also rose—median gross rent increased nearly 7% to about $1,547 per month—so both buyers and renters are seeing higher housing costs.

Home price trends and FHFA

Looking at the FHFA house price index, Tarrant County recorded a 0.46% increase over the same 12‑month period used for the state measure, compared with a 0.8% change for Texas; because FHFA tracks price movement on a repeat-sales basis, its smaller percentage change versus median value growth can reflect differences in measurement and timing rather than a contradiction in direction. Vacancy and tenure patterns point to only small shifts: the vacancy rate ticked up 0.1 percentage point to 7.2%, owner-occupied share fell marginally to 59.3%, and renter-occupied share rose to 40.7%, suggesting a generally stable balance between owners and renters even as more units enter the market.


Labor market conditions

The labor market is supportive of housing demand—Tarrant’s most recent unemployment rate was 3.8%, compared with 4.3% for both Texas and the U.S.—which helps sustain household formation and buying power. Taken together, the data describe a market with solid demand from population and job growth, rising prices and rents, and a growing but not overwhelming supply of homes; where indicators diverge, the strongest signals are continued buyer interest and a gradual increase in available housing.


What this means
HomeownersHome values have risen significantly over the past year, which can boost equity but expect more moderate measured appreciation on repeat-sales indexes.
BuyersCompetition persists, though growing inventory could give buyers slightly more options and negotiating room.
RentersRents are climbing, so renting will likely remain more costly for many households.
Market ParticipantsExpect steady demand supported by jobs and population growth, with opportunities tied to new supply and rental-market dynamics.