A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Nassau County, Florida
Nassau County is one of Florida’s great growth stories of the 2020s. Perched at the state’s northeastern corner, where the last stretch of Florida meets the Georgia border, Nassau County has long been overshadowed by its massive neighbor to the south — the Jacksonville metro, with its military bases, logistics industry, healthcare sector, and financial services employment. But as Jacksonville has grown to become one of the largest cities by land area in the continental United States, its overflow has poured into Nassau County, particularly into Yulee and the State Road 200 corridor, transforming what was once a largely rural and agricultural county into one of Florida’s fastest-growing suburban markets.
Two Markets in One County
Nassau County is really two distinct rental markets operating simultaneously under the same county government. The first is Fernandina Beach and Amelia Island — a historic Victorian seaport community on a barrier island just south of the Georgia border, with a walkable downtown of 19th-century storefronts, the Ritz-Carlton Amelia Island resort, an active shrimping and fishing industry, and a tourism economy that creates significant demand for both short-term vacation rentals and workforce housing for hospitality employees. Median home values in Fernandina Beach reached approximately $780,000 in late 2025, reflecting the island’s premium desirability. Long-term rental rates in the Fernandina Beach area run considerably higher than the county average, particularly for properties with ocean access or proximity to the historic downtown district.
The second market is inland Nassau County, particularly Yulee, the Wildlight master-planned community, and the communities along the SR-200 corridor between Yulee and Jacksonville International Airport. This is where the population growth is most concentrated and where the new construction pipeline has been most active. Yulee functions as a classic suburban bedroom community: residents work in Jacksonville, shop at the rapidly expanding retail strip along SR-200, and live in the sprawling subdivisions that have replaced pine flatwoods and farmland over the past 15 years. Rental rates in Yulee and the SR-200 corridor run approximately $1,600 to $1,900 per month for a typical two- to three-bedroom single-family home or apartment, reflecting Jacksonville-adjacent pricing rather than coastal premium pricing.
The Fourth Judicial Circuit
Nassau County is part of Florida’s Fourth Judicial Circuit, which also covers Duval County (Jacksonville) and Clay County (Orange Park, Fleming Island). For Nassau County landlords, evictions are filed at the Robert M. Foster Justice Center, 76347 Veterans Way, Yulee, FL 32097, phone (904) 548-4606. The historic Nassau County Courthouse at 416 Centre Street in Fernandina Beach has historically served as a secondary filing location; landlords with properties on Amelia Island should confirm current filing procedures with the Clerk’s Office, as operational hours and service availability at the historic courthouse may vary. Filing fees run approximately $185 for a possession-only eviction complaint.
Consistent with the Fourth Circuit’s experience with high-volume eviction processing in Duval County, the Nassau County court system handles eviction cases efficiently. The standard Florida timeline applies: after proper notice, file the complaint, the tenant has five business days to respond after service, and an uncontested default can typically be obtained within two to three weeks of filing. The Nassau County Sheriff’s Office handles service of the summons and execution of Writs of Possession following final judgment.
Short-Term Rental Considerations on Amelia Island
The vacation rental market on Amelia Island is active and economically significant. Properties on the island that might produce $2,000 per month as a long-term rental can achieve substantially higher returns as licensed STRs during peak tourist season. Landlords considering the STR model in Nassau County must navigate a multi-layer licensing structure: a Florida DBPR vacation rental license is required statewide, and the City of Fernandina Beach and any unincorporated Nassau County STR regulations must also be satisfied. Nassau County and Fernandina Beach have both taken active interest in managing STR activity as tourism has grown, and regulations in this area can evolve. Always verify current STR requirements before converting a long-term rental to a vacation rental use.
Growth-Driven Demand and Tenant Quality
The Nassau County rental market benefits from a steady pipeline of demand driven by Jacksonville metro employment growth and the area’s appeal to families seeking lower-cost suburban living than Jacksonville’s pricier beach communities to the south. Major employers nearby include Jacksonville International Airport, naval stations at Mayport and Jacksonville, Baptist Health and UF Health hospital systems, and a large logistics and distribution center cluster along I-95. Tenants in the Yulee/SR-200 corridor are frequently dual-income households with stable employment, which supports relatively low eviction rates compared to higher-poverty Florida markets.
Landlords should nonetheless maintain standard screening practices: three times the monthly rent in gross income, verification of employment stability, a full credit and background check, and a review of Fourth Circuit court records for prior eviction history. Nassau County’s growth has attracted a diverse applicant pool that includes both well-qualified long-term renters and more transient applicants whose Jacksonville-area employment situations may be less stable than they appear on initial application.
Florida State Law: The Complete Framework
Nassau County landlords operate under Florida Chapter 83 exclusively, with no supplemental local ordinances adding to the state framework. The standard Florida notice periods apply: three-day notice for nonpayment, seven-day notice to cure or uncurable violations, and thirty-day notice for month-to-month terminations. Florida HB 615, effective July 1, 2025, allows landlords and tenants to agree in writing to receive notices by email — a practical improvement for Nassau County landlords whose tenants may be Jacksonville commuters rarely home to receive physical notices. Florida Statute § 83.512, effective October 1, 2025, requires flood disclosure in all residential leases of one year or more; given Nassau County’s coastal and riverine flood zones, this disclosure is particularly relevant for properties near the St. Marys River, Amelia Island, and the Nassau River watershed.
Nassau County is well-positioned for the decade ahead. The Jacksonville metro continues to add population and employment, the SR-200 corridor continues to attract new residential and commercial development, and Amelia Island retains its appeal as one of Florida’s premier coastal destinations. For landlords who own well-located, well-maintained properties in this market, the combination of strong demand, favorable state law, and an efficiently functioning court system makes Nassau County one of the more straightforward places to operate as a residential landlord in northeast Florida.
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