Morgan County Alabama Landlord-Tenant Law: Complete Guide for Rental Owners in Decatur, Hartselle, and the Tennessee Valley Corridor
Morgan County occupies a stretch of the Tennessee River valley in north-central Alabama, where the river broadens into Wheeler Lake — one of the TVA’s major impoundments — before continuing west toward Guntersville and the broader Tennessee Valley. The county covers approximately 582 square miles and has a population approaching 120,000, with the majority concentrated in Decatur, the county seat and north Alabama’s largest industrial city. Morgan County’s economic history is inseparable from the TVA’s 1930s transformation of the Tennessee Valley, which brought electrical power, flood control, and navigable waterways that made Decatur one of Alabama’s most attractive industrial sites. Decades of investment by chemical companies, plastics manufacturers, and metalworking operations have made the Decatur-Morgan County corridor a major industrial employment center, and that foundation continues to define the rental market. Landlord-tenant relationships in Morgan County are governed entirely by the Alabama Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, with no significant local ordinance overlay beyond Decatur’s standard municipal property maintenance code.
Decatur’s Economic Mix and Rental Demand
Decatur’s economy combines large industrial employers — Daikin America, 3M, Nucor, and various chemical operations — with a healthcare sector anchored by Decatur Morgan Hospital, a regional retail trade base, and a growing logistics and distribution presence along the I-65/US-72 corridor. This mix produces a tenant population that spans skilled manufacturing workers, healthcare professionals, retail employees, and a growing cohort of Huntsville commuters who have chosen Decatur for its significantly lower cost of housing. The Huntsville commuter segment has emerged as a meaningful driver of rental demand in Decatur’s eastern neighborhoods and in Hartselle, as workers employed at Redstone Arsenal, the defense contractor corridor, and the Huntsville technology park increasingly seek rental housing in Morgan County where a comparable unit rents for $150–$300 per month less than in Madison County.
For landlords, this commuter dynamic is a positive development that has diversified demand beyond the industrial cycle. When Decatur’s manufacturing sector experiences a slowdown, the Huntsville commuter segment provides a buffer, and vice versa. Properties well-positioned along US-72, US-31, and I-65 for commuter access can command modest rent premiums compared to similar units in less commuter-accessible locations. Landlords in the Trinity area — southeast of Decatur toward the Huntsville line — have benefited particularly from this dynamic as residential development in Lawrence and Morgan counties has followed the commuter corridor.
Security Deposits and Documentation
Alabama’s security deposit cap of one month’s rent under Ala. Code § 35-9A-201 limits Morgan County landlords to a deposit equal to the monthly rent — typically $850–$1,200 for most Decatur-area units. The deposit must be returned within 60 days of tenancy end with an itemized written accounting of any deductions. Landlords who miss the 60-day deadline risk forfeiting the entire deposit. A move-in inspection report signed by the tenant and accompanied by dated photographs is the cornerstone of any deposit deduction defense. For properties near Decatur’s industrial areas, landlords should also note any pre-existing environmental odors, staining, or exterior conditions at move-in that could otherwise be disputed as tenant-caused at move-out.
Eviction Procedures at Morgan County District Court
Unlawful Detainer actions in Morgan County are filed at Morgan County District Court in Decatur. The process begins with the appropriate statutory notice — a 7-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate for nonpayment of rent under § 35-9A-421(a), or a 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate for a lease violation under § 35-9A-421(b). After the notice period expires without compliance, the landlord files the complaint and pays the filing fee. The court schedules a hearing, typically within two to three weeks, and if the landlord prevails, issues a writ of possession enforced by the Morgan County Sheriff. The typical timeline from filing to possession is three to six weeks. Self-help eviction is unlawful and exposes the landlord to civil liability regardless of the tenant’s default status.
This guide is for general informational purposes only. For questions about a specific Morgan County tenancy or eviction, consult a licensed Alabama attorney or contact Morgan County District Court in Decatur.
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