Lawrence County Alabama Landlord-Tenant Law: Complete Guide for Rental Owners in Moulton and the Tennessee Valley
Lawrence County, Alabama occupies a distinctive slice of the state’s Tennessee Valley region — a stretch of rolling terrain, river bottomland, and small agricultural communities anchored by the county seat of Moulton. With a population hovering around 34,000, it is a mid-sized rural county by Alabama standards. The local economy reflects the broader North Alabama pattern: manufacturing jobs at regional facilities, some agricultural activity, public school and county government employment, and a meaningful share of residents who commute north toward the Decatur metro or east toward the rapidly expanding Huntsville corridor. That commuter dynamic has kept rental demand fairly consistent over time, even as Lawrence County itself has not experienced the growth pressures seen in Madison or Limestone counties.
For landlords, Lawrence County represents a classic small-market opportunity: modest acquisition costs, low competition for quality rentals, and a tenant pool that — when properly screened — tends toward stability and long-term occupancy. Typical monthly rents in and around Moulton range from approximately $650 for older single-bedroom units to $1,100 or more for newer or larger single-family homes. The rental market is governed entirely by Alabama state law, specifically the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (URLTA), with no county-level rent control, no just-cause eviction requirement, and no local tenant protection ordinances that would impose obligations beyond those set by the state.
The Tennessee Valley Economic Context
Lawrence County’s position in the Tennessee Valley has shaped its economy in ways that directly affect landlords. The Tennessee River and associated infrastructure — including Wilson Dam and Wheeler Dam on either side of the county — were products of the TVA era and transformed the region from an agricultural backwater into an industrial zone in the mid-twentieth century. That industrial heritage persists in the form of manufacturing employers scattered across the county and the broader Decatur metro area, which sits just to the east in Morgan County. Many Lawrence County renters hold manufacturing or logistics jobs that offer stable but not high wages — a profile that means consistent rent payment when times are good but real vulnerability during layoffs or plant slowdowns.
Landlords operating in this environment should build lease structures that account for this reality. A well-drafted lease should include a clear grace period provision (Alabama law does not require a grace period, but offering three to five days in writing can reduce unnecessary conflict), a late fee structure that is clear and consistently enforced, and explicit terms around subletting, pet policies, and the handling of property access for repairs. The goal is a professional, businesslike relationship that tenants understand from day one.
Security Deposits in Lawrence County
Alabama law caps the security deposit at one month’s rent under Ala. Code § 35-9A-201. For a $850-per-month rental in Moulton, that means a maximum deposit of $850. There is no additional “last month’s rent” deposit permitted under this framework — the cap is all-inclusive. Landlords must hold the deposit in a manner that keeps it separate from operating funds (though Alabama does not require a dedicated escrow account), and must return the deposit — or a written itemized statement of deductions with any balance owed — within 60 days of the tenancy’s end.
The 60-day return window is one of the more generous in the country for landlords, but it comes with a strict documentation requirement. If a landlord fails to return the deposit or provide an itemized accounting within 60 days, the tenant may be entitled to recover the full deposit regardless of any legitimate damage claims. Lawrence County landlords should conduct a thorough move-out inspection, photograph all damage with timestamps, collect contractor estimates or invoices promptly, and send the itemized statement via certified mail to create a record. Do not wait until day 55 to begin this process.
Habitability and Maintenance Obligations
Alabama’s habitability standard under Ala. Code § 35-9A-204 requires landlords to maintain rental property in a condition that is fit for human habitation — meaning structural integrity, functioning plumbing and electrical systems, adequate weatherproofing, working heat and cooling, and freedom from conditions that pose a health or safety hazard. In Lawrence County, this standard has particular relevance given the climate and the prevalence of older housing stock.
North Alabama summers are hot and humid, with temperatures regularly exceeding 90°F for weeks at a time. A rental unit without functioning air conditioning can quickly become uninhabitable by any reasonable standard. Similarly, winter cold snaps — while less severe than in northern states — are sufficient to cause pipe bursts in poorly insulated homes and to create dangerous conditions without adequate heat. Annual HVAC servicing, prompt response to tenant-reported system failures, and proactive weatherization (caulking, door sweeps, attic insulation checks) are all practical steps that protect both tenants and landlords from costly disputes.
For rural properties on well water and septic, the habitability obligation extends to those systems. A landlord who ignores a tenant’s report of a failing septic system is not only creating a health hazard — they are inviting a habitability defense in any subsequent eviction proceeding. Courts have recognized that tenants may have grounds to withhold rent or pursue damages when a landlord fails to maintain essential utility infrastructure. The practical lesson: respond to maintenance requests in writing, track all repairs, and schedule preventive maintenance rather than waiting for failures.
The Eviction Process: Step by Step
When a tenancy must be terminated, Alabama law provides a clear but unforgiving procedural framework. For nonpayment of rent, the landlord must serve a written 7-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under Ala. Code § 35-9A-421(a). This notice must demand payment of the full amount owed and inform the tenant that the tenancy will terminate if payment is not received within seven days. If the tenant neither pays nor vacates, the landlord may file an Unlawful Detainer complaint with Lawrence County District Court in Moulton.
For lease violations other than nonpayment — unauthorized pets, property damage, lease term violations — the required notice is a 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate under § 35-9A-421(b). The tenant has 14 days to correct the violation. If they do so, the tenancy continues. If not, the landlord may proceed to file in District Court.
Filing fees at Lawrence County District Court run approximately $150 to $250 depending on the specific action and any service costs. Once filed, the court will schedule a hearing — typically within two to four weeks. If the landlord prevails, the court issues a writ of possession, which is then executed by the Lawrence County Sheriff’s Office. The entire process, from initial notice to writ execution, generally takes three to six weeks assuming no continuances or appeals.
Self-help eviction — changing locks, removing belongings, shutting off utilities, or otherwise forcing a tenant out without a court order — is strictly prohibited under Alabama law and exposes landlords to significant liability, including potential damages and attorney’s fees. There are no shortcuts to the Unlawful Detainer process, and attempting to create them invariably makes the landlord’s legal position worse.
Retaliatory and Discriminatory Eviction Risks
Alabama law prohibits retaliatory eviction under Ala. Code § 35-9A-501. A landlord may not terminate a tenancy, raise rent, reduce services, or otherwise retaliate against a tenant who has exercised a legal right — such as complaining about habitability conditions to a code enforcement agency or withholding rent under legally recognized circumstances. Courts will examine the timing of eviction actions relative to any such tenant activity, and a notice served shortly after a maintenance complaint can raise a retaliatory inference that the landlord must then rebut.
Additionally, federal Fair Housing Act protections apply to all Lawrence County rentals (with limited exemptions for owner-occupied properties with four or fewer units). Landlords may not discriminate in tenant selection, lease terms, or eviction decisions on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, or disability. Screening criteria must be applied consistently and documented carefully. Any eviction action taken against a protected class member that cannot be clearly tied to a legitimate, documented lease violation is a potential fair housing complaint.
This guide is for general informational purposes only. For questions about a specific Lawrence County tenancy or eviction, consult a licensed Alabama attorney or contact Lawrence County District Court in Moulton.
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