Common questions

Property-record review FAQ

What does a letter mean?

It means a reviewed public-record batch produced a parcel-specific question. It does not establish eligibility. Open the private link to inspect the record, calculation, and sources before providing information.

Can I file without DueFound?

Yes. The county self-file route is shown before any agreement. Public filing research is also available in the resource library.

Who decides whether the benefit applies?

You attest to ownership and occupancy facts. The relevant county office determines eligibility and whether a filing is accepted.

Why did I receive a letter?

A public county record showed a parcel-specific question under the draft rule set for that jurisdiction. The letter is an invitation to inspect that evidence, not proof that you qualify and not a message from the county.

Where did the property information come from?

The finding identifies the county record, record date, and source fields used for each material figure. Owner-only facts such as occupancy are not inferred from the roll; you must confirm them separately.

How is the private code protected?

The code is a high-entropy bearer link tied to one parcel finding. It expires, can be revoked, is rate-limited against guessing, and is not a general owner or address search. Anyone who has the code can view that finding, so do not post or forward it. See the privacy notice for retention and request options.

When is the service fee charged?

The draft service terms save a payment method at signing and permit a charge only after the county records an accepted filing. Final language remains pending counsel approval.

Is this legal or tax advice?

No. DueFound organizes evidence and prepares filing materials. Questions requiring legal or tax advice are referred for qualified review.