The Length Of Time That Tax Liens Show Up On A Credit Report 

A
lien ensures that the required obligation is met, it is the interested granted
over some property; whereas a tax lien is a lien that is placed on a particular
property to ensure payment of taxes. These liens are imposed on failure
to pay taxes, personal property tax, income tax, delinquent tax or a real
property tax. If you happen to have ignored paying your taxes even after
the demand notice, then the complete tax amount along with the interest and
fines will become the tax lien to the government on any personal or real
property that belongs to you.
The tax lien is effective as of the IRS assessment date, which means the date
when the tax is recorded in the revenue records. If you received the
demand to pay the tax and you do not do so in ten days, from the date of
notice, the lien is activated automatically.
The worst part about tax liens is that they are recorded on your most important
credit report and this is really a bad thing to happen as credit reports last a
long time, as long as seven years after payment is done and in cases of unpaid
tax liens, it will show up on the credit report for more than fifteen years or
even forever.
This affects the credit score and that is the end of you ever trying to find a
lender as you will be considered as high risk and your value in the loan market
is low.
It is crucial to clear the credit reports of tax liens, by ensuring that you
pay the taxes that are pending in full, and show the receipts to the tax agency
and request them to remove the lien. You should also ensure that the
credit report reflects the tax settlement. Although, the tax lien will continue
to show up on the credit report, the credit rating will not suffer this way.
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