Logan County Public Trustee publishes active foreclosure list for Feb. 13, 2026
Logan County Public Trustee’s office published the county’s active non-judicial foreclosure notices on Feb. 13, 2026, listing filings that have moved toward a trustee sale.

Homeowners and potential buyers in Logan County were given official notice when the Logan County Public Trustee’s office published the county’s active foreclosure details on Friday, Feb. 13, 2026. The posting identifies properties for which foreclosure filings have advanced to the stage where the office posts notices ahead of a trustee sale.
The Public Trustee’s office handles the statutory process for non-judicial foreclosures in Colorado, a role that includes issuing and publishing the official notices that signal foreclosure filings are proceeding toward a sale. That statutory duty means the Feb. 13 publication is the formal step before properties can be set for sale under trustee procedures.
For anyone listed in the Feb. 13, 2026 publication, the practical consequence is clear: the county’s administrative record now reflects filings that have progressed beyond initial default notices. Lenders, title companies, and prospective purchasers use the Public Trustee’s postings to track when a property may be scheduled for a trustee sale, and homeowners named in the notices face a legal timeline that can culminate in the loss of title if remedies are not pursued.
The Logan County Public Trustee’s Feb. 13 list is the most recent official record available from the office as of Feb. 20, 2026. Because the office’s publications are the statutory alerts that precede sale actions, the list functions as both legal notice and a resource for residents to verify whether a specific parcel or address is subject to a trustee filing.
If a Logan County property appears on the Feb. 13, 2026 list, contact the Logan County Public Trustee’s office promptly to learn what notices were filed and what next steps remain under Colorado’s non-judicial foreclosure process. Homeowners seeking to avoid a trustee sale should inquire about reinstatement options and timelines with the Public Trustee’s office; prospective buyers and title professionals should treat the Feb. 13 publication as the authoritative indicator that filings have moved toward sale.
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