Dallas County Alabama Landlord-Tenant Law: Complete Guide for Rental Property Owners in Selma and the Black Belt Region
Dallas County, Alabama sits squarely in the state’s historic Black Belt, a swath of central Alabama named for its dark, fertile soil and defined by a particular history of cotton agriculture, plantation economics, and the civil rights era. The county seat of Selma — population roughly 17,000 — carries that history more visibly than almost any other city in the American South. The Edmund Pettus Bridge, Bloody Sunday, and the Selma-to-Montgomery Voting Rights marches of 1965 have given the city an enduring national profile. But for landlords operating rental property here, the day-to-day reality of the market is shaped less by history and tourism than by the economics of a small, slowly contracting city in a rural Alabama county. The total Dallas County population sits around 38,000 — down significantly from mid-twentieth century peaks — and the rental market operates accordingly. Vacancy is elevated, rents are modest, and the most reliable tenants are drawn from a relatively narrow slice of stable institutional employers. Every residential tenancy in the area is governed by Alabama’s Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, and Dallas County District Court processes all Unlawful Detainer filings for the jurisdiction.
The Economic Foundation of Selma’s Rental Market
Understanding who pays rent reliably in Selma requires understanding who the stable employers are. City and county government represent a significant portion of local employment, and government workers — whose pay is fixed, regular, and not subject to private-sector layoff cycles — make up some of the most predictable tenants in the market. Vaughan Regional Medical Center anchors healthcare employment, providing nursing, technical, and administrative positions with stable hourly and salaried compensation. Wallace Community College Selma employs faculty and administrative staff whose academic-year compensation schedules are predictable and whose positions tend toward long tenure. These three employment anchors — government, healthcare, and higher education — together produce the most creditworthy and tenancy-stable applicant pool available in the Selma market.
Manufacturing plays a secondary role. Selma and Dallas County have hosted various industrial operations over the years, including automotive parts suppliers and food processing facilities. These employers provide hourly income that, when steady, is sufficient for Selma’s rent levels — but manufacturing employment carries more volatility risk than government or healthcare. When screening manufacturing workers, verify employment tenure, shift stability, and pay history over multiple pay periods rather than relying on a single recent stub. A worker who has been with the same plant for four or more years and has consistent hours presents a meaningfully different risk profile than a recent hire on a swing shift with variable weekly hours.
Craig Field Airport and Business Park — successor to the former Craig Air Force Base — generates some commercial and industrial employment at the field. The airport’s tenant businesses provide a modest but real employment base that occasionally produces rental applicants. Screen these applicants as you would any private-sector worker: verify the employer, confirm the position is ongoing, and review pay history.
Screening Standards in a Soft Rental Market
Selma’s elevated vacancy rates and ample rental supply create a dynamic that can tempt landlords to loosen screening standards in order to fill units faster. This is a trap that experienced rental property owners learn to avoid. The math is straightforward: in Alabama, even an efficient eviction from notice through Writ enforcement runs three to six weeks at minimum, plus filing fees, court time, potential attorney fees, and the cost of turnover after the tenant vacates. A unit that sits vacant for two months while you wait for a creditworthy tenant will almost always cost less than an eviction, lost rent during the proceeding, and a damaged unit at the end. The soft market is a reason to screen carefully, not an excuse to skip it.
Establish written screening criteria before you begin accepting applications and apply them uniformly to every applicant. Fair housing law requires consistency — criteria that vary by applicant create legal exposure regardless of intent. Typical income-to-rent standards (gross monthly income three times monthly rent) are appropriate for the Selma market. Run credit and background checks through a compliant screening service. Call prior landlord references and ask specific questions: did the tenant pay on time, were there lease violations, would you rent to this person again? Document all screening decisions in writing and retain records.
Alabama URLTA Essentials for Dallas County Landlords
Every residential rental agreement in this area is subject to Alabama’s URLTA whether written or oral, whether for a house or an apartment. The security deposit cap under Ala. Code § 35-9A-201 is one month’s rent — at Selma rent levels, that means deposits of $550 to $850 for most rental units. Deposits must be held separately from operating funds, though Alabama does not require a dedicated escrow account. At the end of any tenancy, return the deposit within 60 days with a written itemized statement of any deductions. Failure to return on time or failure to provide written accounting forfeits your right to make deductions and can expose you to damages under Alabama law. Document unit condition at move-in and move-out with dated photographs and a signed checklist.
The habitability standard under § 35-9A-204 requires maintaining the rental unit in a condition fit for habitation throughout the tenancy. In practical terms for this area, this means functioning cooling from May through September and functioning heat from November through February, with service calls treated as emergency maintenance during those months. It also means maintaining structural integrity, plumbing, electrical systems, and pest control at a level consistent with habitable occupancy. Annual HVAC servicing for both heating and cooling systems is the minimum preventive maintenance standard. Keep service records in the property file; they become evidence in any habitability dispute.
The Eviction Process at Dallas County District Court
When a tenancy must end and the occupant will not leave voluntarily, the only lawful path in Alabama is Unlawful Detainer through the District Court. Self-help eviction — changing locks, removing belongings, shutting off utilities to force departure — is prohibited under Alabama law and exposes the landlord to civil liability. For nonpayment of rent, the process begins with a written 7-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate served in compliance with § 35-9A-421(a). Keep dated proof of service. If the tenant neither pays in full nor vacates within seven days, file the Unlawful Detainer complaint at Dallas County District Court in Selma. The court will schedule a hearing, typically within two to three weeks. Attend with your complete documentation: the lease, the rent ledger showing the balance owed, and proof of notice service. For remediable lease violations, serve the 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate under § 35-9A-421(b) first, then file if the violation is not cured within the cure period. After a judgment in your favor, the Dallas County Sheriff enforces the Writ of Possession.
Keep every step documented in writing. Courts in Alabama expect landlords to have clean paper trails — lease, notice with service date, rent ledger, prior written communication about violations. A landlord who appears at the hearing with a complete, organized file moves through the process faster and with fewer complications than one who is reconstructing a timeline from memory. For any Dallas County eviction with unusual complexity — disputed lease terms, claims of retaliation, counterclaims, or significant money at issue — consult a licensed Alabama attorney before filing.
This guide covers general informational principles for rental property owners in the Dallas County area and is not a substitute for legal advice. For questions about a specific tenancy or eviction proceeding, consult a licensed Alabama attorney or contact Dallas County District Court directly.
|