Choctaw County Alabama Landlord-Tenant Law: Complete Guide for Rental Property Owners in Butler and Southwest Alabama
Choctaw County sits in the far southwestern corner of Alabama, a county of forests, rivers, and small communities that is among the state’s most sparsely populated. With a total population of around 13,000, its rental market is correspondingly small — concentrated almost entirely in Butler, the county seat, with a handful of units in smaller communities like Gilbertown and Toxey. The economy runs on timber, paper and wood products manufacturing, agriculture, and county government employment. For landlords operating here, the challenges are real: very low rent ceilings, a limited tenant pool, older housing requiring active maintenance, and an income-limited tenant base that makes every tenancy decision matter. Yet the same Alabama URLTA that governs Birmingham applies here, and its protections and procedures are available to every landlord willing to use them correctly.
Butler’s Rental Market: What Landlords Are Working With
Butler is Choctaw County’s only incorporated city with meaningful commercial and governmental activity. County government, Choctaw General Hospital and associated clinics, timber and paper industry operations, and retail businesses serving the local population provide the employment base. Most residents earn modest incomes — median household income in Choctaw County is well below the Alabama state average — and prevailing rents reflect this: $450 to $700 per month for most residential units, with the upper end of that range for better-maintained homes with modern systems.
Alabama’s one-month security deposit cap under Ala. Code § 35-9A-201 produces deposits of $450 to $700 for most Choctaw County properties. These are small sums in absolute terms, but the legal obligations governing their return are identical to those for a $2,000 deposit in a higher-rent market. The 60-day return deadline with itemized written accounting applies regardless of deposit size. Process discipline — prompt move-out inspection, immediate contractor outreach, early delivery of the accounting statement — is the landlord’s protection against forfeiting deductions on a deadline violation.
Timber Industry Employment and Income Verification
The timber and wood products industry is the dominant private-sector employer in Choctaw County. Jobs in sawmills, paper mills, logging operations, and timber support services provide employment for a significant share of the county’s working population. These jobs can be stable — larger paper and wood products operations have operated in the region for generations — but they are also subject to industry cycles, seasonal variation in logging activity, and the operational decisions of large paper and timber corporations that may adjust production levels in response to national market conditions.
For landlords screening applicants employed in the timber industry, standard income verification practices apply: recent pay stubs from the last 30 to 60 days, employer name and contact, length of employment, and — for hourly workers whose income may vary with hours worked — a review of several pay periods to assess average take-home pay rather than relying on a single peak week. County government and healthcare employees at Choctaw General Hospital represent the most stable income profiles in Butler’s tenant pool: fixed salaries, predictable pay schedules, and employment security that generally exceeds the private-sector average in a rural county.
Habitability in Choctaw County’s Housing Stock
Choctaw County’s rental housing is predominantly older, with much of the stock built in the decades following World War II. These properties have real value as rental assets but require active maintenance management to consistently meet the habitability standard at Ala. Code § 35-9A-204. The three most pressing maintenance obligations for older Choctaw County properties are HVAC reliability, moisture and humidity management, and structural integrity.
HVAC reliability is a genuine legal obligation in Choctaw County’s climate. Southwest Alabama experiences long, hot summers with temperatures regularly exceeding 90 degrees and high relative humidity. Air conditioning failure in these conditions is not merely an inconvenience — it is a health risk and a habitability failure under Ala. Code § 35-9A-204. Schedule annual pre-summer HVAC service for every rental property, maintain service records, and treat cooling system failures as emergency maintenance requiring same-day or next-day contractor response.
Moisture management is particularly important near the Tombigbee River corridor. High ambient humidity combined with older building construction that may lack modern vapor barriers and insulation creates conditions where moisture intrusion, wood rot, and mold can develop in rental properties without proactive prevention. Annual inspections for moisture infiltration around windows, foundations, and rooflines, combined with prompt repair of any water intrusion paths, are essential maintenance practices for Choctaw County landlords. Mold in a rental unit is a habitability failure — address moisture issues before they produce visible mold, and remediate any mold promptly when found.
The Eviction Process in a Very Small Court
Choctaw County District Court in Butler handles all residential Unlawful Detainer proceedings for the county. With one of Alabama’s smallest county populations, the court’s docket is correspondingly small, and hearings are typically scheduled efficiently after filing. Most Choctaw County landlords experience a three-to-five-week total process from notice service to Writ enforcement by the Choctaw County Sheriff.
The nonpayment process begins with the written 7-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under Ala. Code § 35-9A-421(a). State the exact unpaid rent amount. Serve by personal delivery or door posting plus first-class mail, and retain dated photographic proof of any posted notice. After seven days without payment or surrender, file the Unlawful Detainer complaint in District Court. The filing fee is $150 to $250. Attend the hearing with the written lease, rent payment history, and service documentation. If judgment is entered for the landlord, the Writ issues and the sheriff handles the lockout.
For remediable lease violations, serve the 14-Day Notice to Cure under § 35-9A-421(b). If the tenant cures within fourteen days, the tenancy continues. If not, file Unlawful Detainer. Self-help eviction — lock changes, utility shutoffs, removal of belongings — is prohibited under Alabama law and creates civil liability for the landlord regardless of how clearly the tenant has violated the lease. In a small community like Butler, self-help eviction attempts also generate community-level reputational damage that affects the landlord’s future ability to attract tenants. Use the court process. It works and it protects the landlord.
For legal questions specific to a tenancy or eviction in Choctaw County, consult a licensed Alabama attorney. This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.
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