Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle F— - Procedure and Administration › Chapter CHAPTER 76— - JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS › Subchapter Subchapter B— - Proceedings by Taxpayers and Third Parties › § 7425
Protects the United States’ lien on property when the property is sued over or sold. If the government is not part of the court case, a court judgment or sale will not cancel the federal lien if a notice of that lien was filed where such notices are filed before the case started. If no notice was filed or if local law has no filing system, then the local law where the property sits controls whether the lien is wiped out. Also covers nonjudicial sales (like sales under a lien instrument, confession of judgment, or statutory lien). If the lien was filed or recorded more than 30 days before the sale and the United States was not given written notice, the sale does not disturb the lien. The seller must give the Secretary written notice at least 25 days before the sale by registered or certified mail or personal service under the Secretary’s rules. The United States can agree to let a sale go through free of its lien. Perishable or quickly losing property may be sold after the Secretary gets prior written notice; the sale proceeds (minus costs) must be held for at least 30 days and remain subject to U.S. liens. A sale also includes forfeiture of a land sales contract. If real estate is sold to satisfy a prior lien, the Secretary may redeem it within 120 days or the longer local redemption period. The payment amount follows section 2410(d) of title 28, and the Secretary must get and record documents or issue a certificate of redemption that shows the United States’ title.
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 7425
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73