A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Pinellas County, Florida
Pinellas County is one of the most landlord-favorable supply environments in Florida, for one simple reason: they are not making more land. The county is a peninsula bounded by the Gulf of Mexico on the west, Tampa Bay on the east, and the Gulf-to-Bay connection at its southern tip. It is almost entirely built out. There is no undeveloped land for the kind of large-scale multifamily development that has flooded markets like Orlando, Jacksonville, and Fort Myers with new apartments over the past three years. When demand increases in Pinellas — and it has, substantially, driven by the explosive growth of downtown St. Petersburg and the continued appeal of the Clearwater/Dunedin/Safety Harbor coastal lifestyle — supply cannot respond in any meaningful way. The result is one of the structurally tightest rental markets in the Tampa Bay metro.
St. Petersburg’s Transformation
The story of Pinellas County’s rental market over the past decade is largely the story of downtown St. Petersburg’s transformation. What was once a quiet mid-size city best known as a retirement destination has become one of Florida’s most vibrant urban cores — with a booming arts scene, nationally recognized restaurants, a growing technology and financial services sector, a thriving waterfront, and a demographic profile that is increasingly young, educated, and well-compensated. The Rays stadium redevelopment project and continued investment in the Grand Central and Edge districts have created additional demand drivers. Rents in downtown and near-downtown St. Petersburg have risen sharply, with luxury one-bedrooms now regularly commanding $2,000 to $2,500 per month and two-bedrooms $2,500 to $3,200 and up. Vacancy in well-located St. Pete properties is effectively structural rather than cyclical — good units lease quickly because there simply are not enough of them.
Away from the urban core, Pinellas County’s beach communities — Clearwater Beach, St. Pete Beach, Treasure Island, Indian Rocks Beach, and Dunedin — operate as a hybrid market combining a permanent resident rental base with strong short-term vacation rental demand. The competition between STR use and long-term housing for available inventory has put upward pressure on long-term rents in beach communities, as units that might have rented for $1,800 per month on a 12-month lease can generate significantly more per night through VRBO or Airbnb during peak season.
Filing Evictions in the Sixth Circuit
Pinellas County evictions are filed through the Clerk of the Circuit Court, which operates two locations. The main courthouse is at 315 Court Street, Room 170, Clearwater, FL 33756, phone (727) 464-7000, serving north Pinellas County. For properties in St. Petersburg and south Pinellas, the St. Petersburg Judicial Building serves as the filing location, phone (727) 582-7941. Both courthouses have Self Help Centers open Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., where self-represented landlords can obtain eviction packet forms and, uniquely, schedule paid attorney consultation appointments for procedural guidance. Filing fees are approximately $185 for a possession-only eviction complaint.
One local procedural requirement worth noting: Pinellas County’s eviction packet requires landlords to provide self-addressed stamped envelopes for each defendant when filing. This is a Sixth Circuit local rule requirement that catches some landlords off guard. Come prepared with pre-addressed, stamped envelopes for each tenant named in the complaint. The Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office serves summons and executes Writs of Possession, with separate fees payable at filing.
Coastal Flood Risk and Insurance
Virtually every property in Pinellas County that is near water — and in a county that is essentially a peninsula, that is a very large share of the housing stock — is in a FEMA flood zone. The combination of Gulf coast storm surge exposure, Tampa Bay flooding risk, and the county’s low average elevation makes flood insurance mandatory for most mortgaged properties and a practical necessity for all properties. Hurricane Idalia (2023) and its successor storms have kept insurance costs elevated and in some cases made coverage difficult to obtain through private carriers. Landlords acquiring property in Pinellas County should obtain current insurance quotes before closing, budget for annual insurance costs that may be $8,000 to $20,000 or more for coastal properties, and ensure compliance with the flood disclosure requirement for all leases of one year or more under Fla. Stat. § 83.512 (effective October 1, 2025).
For the landlord with the right property in the right location, Pinellas County’s structural supply constraint, strong in-migration demand, and Florida’s landlord-friendly legal framework create conditions for long-term rental income stability that are difficult to replicate in high-supply markets. The county rewards careful operators who screen well, maintain their properties, and price rents accurately for their specific neighborhood — and it tends to punish those who do not, because Pinellas tenants often have more options than the overall supply story suggests, particularly in the mid-market price range where competition from new Pasco and Hillsborough County supply is an indirect factor.
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