North Carolina · Alamance County · Foreclosure Surplus

Alamance County Foreclosure Surplus Funds — You May Be Owed Money

When a foreclosed home in Alamance County sells for more than the outstanding debt, the difference belongs to the former owner — not the bank. That money sits in the courthouse until someone claims it. FundRite searches Alamance County court records to find what's owed to you.

2 Eligible Cases Found
$33,800 Total Estimated Surplus
$17K Avg. Surplus per Case
September 2025 Most Recent Eligible Sale

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How Surplus Funds Work in Alamance County

When a foreclosure sale in Alamance County produces more than the outstanding mortgage balance, court costs, and junior liens, the remaining balance is surplus funds. Under N.C.G.S. § 45-21.31, that money belongs to the former property owner — not the bank, not the county.

The Clerk of Superior Court holds the surplus until a claim is filed. Courts are not required to notify former owners. If you've moved or don't know the sale happened, you may have unclaimed funds sitting in a Alamance County courthouse account right now.

Under G.S. 116B-78, recovery service fees in North Carolina are capped at 20% of the recovered amount. FundRite operates at a flat 20% contingency — no upfront cost, no fee unless you collect.

Local Filing Information — Alamance County

Alamance County Courthouse

Clerk of Superior Court: Alamance County Clerk of Superior Court — 212 W. Elm St, Graham, NC 27253

Phone: (336) 570-5200

Surplus Filing: Alamance County surplus fund petitions are filed at the Clerk of Superior Court in Graham. Burlington is the county seat's largest neighboring city and sees significant foreclosure activity.

Tax Office: Alamance County Tax Department

Surplus fund petitions in Alamance County are filed with the Clerk of Superior Court under N.C.G.S. § 45-21.32. If the foreclosure was a tax sale (not a mortgage foreclosure), the process follows G.S. 105-374 and excess proceeds are handled through the county tax office or the NC State Treasurer.

FundRite handles the case research, petition preparation, and all court filings on your behalf. You don't need to appear in person.

Who Can Claim Alamance County Surplus Funds?

  • Former record owner — the person on the deed at time of sale has first claim after all liens are satisfied.
  • Heirs — if the former owner is deceased, heirs with proper estate documentation can file a claim.
  • Junior lienholders — second mortgage holders or HOA associations can claim their share if the primary lien didn't exhaust the surplus.

Priority is set by NC law. If multiple parties have potential claims, the clerk adjudicates priority. Competing claims are common — don't assume another claimant has already collected before you check.

The Claim Process for Alamance County

  1. Confirm the surplus exists — pull the foreclosure case file from the Alamance County Clerk's office and review the sale confirmation order and disbursement worksheet.
  2. Check NCCash.gov — if funds were transferred to the NC State Treasurer as unclaimed property, they appear at NCCash.com under your name.
  3. File a petition — submit a petition for disbursement with the Clerk of Superior Court, including documentary proof of entitlement (deed, court orders, payoff statements).
  4. Clerk review — if no competing claims exist, the clerk issues a disbursement order. Contested cases may transfer to Superior Court.
  5. Receive funds — uncontested cases typically resolve in 90–120 days from filing.

FundRite handles every step — from initial research to final disbursement. If your case requires legal escalation, we route it to vetted NC attorneys at no additional upfront cost.

NC Compliance & Licensing

FundRite operates under North Carolina surplus fund recovery regulations. Key compliance points:

  • G.S. 116B-78 — caps recovery service fees at 20% of recovered funds for unclaimed property. Our flat 20% fee complies with this cap.
  • PI-licensed — surplus fund case research in NC requires private investigator registration for professional services. FundRite is properly registered.
  • No assign-of-rights contracts — your claim stays in your name. We represent you; we don't replace you.
  • No upfront fees — contingency only. If you don't collect, you owe nothing.

Related Guides

These cornerstone guides cover NC surplus fund law in full detail:

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