Paulding County
Paulding County · Georgia

Paulding County Landlord-Tenant Law

Georgia landlord guide — county ordinances, courthouse info & local rules

πŸ“ County Seat: Dallas
πŸ‘₯ Pop. ~175,000
βš–οΈ Magistrate Court
🏘️ Major NW Atlanta Suburb

Paulding County Rental Market Overview

Paulding County is one of the Atlanta metro’s most significant growth stories of the past two decades. Situated northwest of Atlanta along US-278 and SR-120, with access to I-20 via the Douglasville corridor and to I-75 via Marietta and Cobb County, Paulding has absorbed wave after wave of Atlanta-area families seeking larger homes, lower property taxes, and suburban school systems at prices below what Cobb or Cherokee Counties demand. The county’s population has grown from roughly 80,000 in 2000 to over 175,000 today, and that growth has created one of the most active single-family rental markets in northwest Georgia.

Dallas serves as the county seat, but Paulding County’s identity is dispersed across a network of subdivisions, commercial corridors, and unincorporated communities that spread across its hilly terrain. Hiram is a commercial hub; Seven Hills, Nebo Road, and Villa Rica Road corridors anchor major subdivision clusters. The rental market is dominated by single-family homes β€” many built during the 2000s growth boom β€” with a growing component of purpose-built rental product and scattered townhome communities. Institutional investment has been active in Paulding County, and individual landlords compete in the same market as single-family rental REITs and regional property management companies.

Georgia state law governs all residential tenancies without local modification. All dispossessory proceedings are filed with the Magistrate Court of Paulding County in Dallas.

πŸ“Š Quick Stats

County Seat Dallas
Population ~175,000
Key Communities Dallas, Hiram, Acworth (adj.), Rockmart (adj.)
Court System Magistrate Court of Paulding County
Rent Control None (state preemption)
Just-Cause Eviction Not required statewide

⚑ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice Demand for Rent (no statutory waiting period)
Lease Violation Notice per lease terms
Filing Fee ~$60–$100
Court Type Magistrate Court of Paulding County
Avg. Timeline 3–6 weeks
Writ Enforcement Paulding County Sheriff

Paulding County Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
Rent Control None. Georgia state law preempts any local rent control ordinance statewide.
Security Deposit No statutory cap. Must be returned within 30 days of move-out with itemized written deductions (O.C.G.A. Β§ 44-7-34). Must be held in a separate escrow account or backed by a surety bond.
HOA Restrictions Paulding County has a large number of HOA-governed subdivisions. Many have rental caps, tenant approval processes, or minimum lease term requirements. Review CC&Rs for each property before marketing for rent.
Habitability Standard O.C.G.A. Β§ 44-7-13 requires landlords to maintain premises in good repair. No repair-and-deduct right for tenants under Georgia law.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited. Dispossessory through Magistrate Court is the only lawful removal process.
Retaliatory Eviction O.C.G.A. Β§ 44-7-24 prohibits retaliatory eviction following a tenant habitability complaint.
Late Fees No statutory cap. Must be disclosed in the lease.

πŸ›οΈ Courthouse Finder

πŸ›οΈ Courthouse Information and Locations for Georgia

πŸ’΅ Cost Snapshot

πŸ’° Eviction Costs: Georgia
Filing Fee 75
Total Est. Range $150-$400
Service: β€” Writ: β€”

Georgia State Law Framework

⚑ Quick Overview

3
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
0
Days Notice (Violation)
21-45
Avg Total Days
$75
Filing Fee (Approx)

πŸ’° Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 3-Day Notice to Vacate or Pay
Notice Period 3 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes
Days to Hearing 7-14 days
Days to Writ 7 days
Total Estimated Timeline 21-45 days
Total Estimated Cost $150-$400
⚠️ Watch Out

As of July 1, 2024 (HB 404 "Safe at Home Act"), landlords must provide a 3-business-day written notice to vacate or pay before filing a dispossessory for nonpayment. Tenant can tender all rent owed within 7 days of service of the dispossessory summons to avoid eviction (once per 12-month period per O.C.G.A. Β§44-7-52(a)). Filing fees vary by county ($60-$78 typical).

Underground Landlord

πŸ“ Georgia Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Magistrate Court. Pay the filing fee (~$75).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Georgia eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Georgia attorney or local legal aid organization.
πŸ› See an error on this page? Let us know
Underground Landlord Underground Landlord
πŸ” Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Georgia landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Georgia β€” including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references β€” is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Georgia's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
Ready to File?

Generate Georgia-Compliant Legal Documents

AI-generated, state-specific eviction notices, pay-or-quit letters, lease termination documents, and more β€” pre-filled with your tenant's information and built to Georgia requirements.

Generate a Document β†’ View AI Hub β†’

πŸ”Ž Notice Calculator

πŸ“‹ Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
Underground LandlordUnderground Landlord

πŸ™οΈ Local Market & Screening Tips

Key markets: Dallas, Hiram, unincorporated Paulding County subdivisions

Commute route realism: Paulding County has no direct interstate access β€” all commutes to Atlanta run through surface roads and adjacent county interstates. Ask applicants where they work and walk through their realistic commute scenario. Tenants who underestimate the Paulding-to-Atlanta drive are a higher early-termination risk.

Dual-income households: Many Paulding renters are families with two earners in different directions β€” one toward Cobb/Atlanta, one toward the local commercial and healthcare sector. Verify both income sources independently. Loss of one income stream is a common rent-disruption scenario in this market.

REIT competition: Institutional single-family rental operators are active in Paulding County. Their properties tend to be well-maintained and professionally managed. Individual landlords compete best on responsiveness, flexibility, and personal relationship β€” qualities institutional operators structurally can’t match at scale.

Dallas and Paulding County: Landlord Guide to Northwest Atlanta’s Fastest-Growing Suburb

Paulding County’s population growth over the past two decades is among the most dramatic in the Atlanta metro β€” a county that had roughly 80,000 residents in 2000 now counts more than 175,000, driven almost entirely by Atlanta-area families seeking the combination of space, affordable housing, and suburban school systems that the closer-in northwest suburbs no longer provide at accessible price points. Dallas, the county seat, has grown from a quiet small town into the administrative center of a genuinely suburban county, and the rental market has expanded alongside the owner-occupied housing stock at every price tier.

Understanding the Paulding County Commuter Profile

Paulding County’s most important geographic characteristic for landlords is also its most frequently underestimated by tenants: the county has no direct interstate highway access. Residents commuting to Atlanta’s core employment centers must travel east through Cobb County on US-278 or south to I-20 through Douglas County β€” surface road commutes that can stretch to 45–60 minutes under normal conditions and considerably longer during peak traffic. This is not a hidden fact, but it is one that prospective tenants sometimes discount when they fall in love with a Paulding County home’s square footage and price point.

As a landlord, your screening process should include a direct conversation about the applicant’s commute. Where do they work? Have they driven the actual route during morning rush hour? Do they work remotely, and if so, is that arrangement permanent or subject to employer change? The tenants who struggle most in Paulding County are those who accepted the commute on faith and found the reality unsustainable after a few months. Early lease termination and related financial disruption often follow. Tenants who have researched the commute, already made it from a prior address, or work locally within Paulding or adjacent counties are meaningfully lower attrition risks.

The Dual-Income Household Dynamic

Paulding County’s rental market is heavily weighted toward family households, and a large share of those households depend on two incomes to qualify. One earner may commute toward the Atlanta metro; the other may work locally in the county’s growing healthcare, education, and commercial sectors. Wellstar Paulding Hospital is a significant local employer, as are the Paulding County School District and the retail and service economy along the SR-120 and US-278 corridors.

When screening dual-income households, verify both income sources independently and stress-test the household’s ability to pay rent on a single income if one were disrupted. A household that qualifies comfortably on two incomes but can’t cover rent on one is carrying real financial fragility that won’t be visible until a job loss, pregnancy leave, or medical event occurs. This doesn’t mean disqualifying dual-income applicants β€” it means understanding the risk profile and potentially requiring a stronger security deposit or co-signer for borderline qualifications.

HOA Compliance in a Subdivision-Heavy Market

Paulding County’s rapid growth produced hundreds of HOA-governed subdivisions built between the late 1990s and mid-2010s. Many of these communities have rental restrictions embedded in their CC&Rs β€” rental caps (limiting the percentage of homes that may be rented), tenant approval or registration requirements, minimum lease terms of 6 or 12 months, and in some cases complete prohibition on investor-owned rentals. These restrictions are legally enforceable in Georgia and operate entirely independently of the landlord-tenant statute.

Before listing any Paulding County property for rent, pull the HOA’s CC&Rs and confirm rental permissions. If the community has a rental cap, confirm you’re within the cap before marketing. If tenant approval is required, build that step into your leasing timeline β€” some HOAs have board approval cycles that add two to four weeks to the process. Failing to follow HOA rental procedures can result in fines, forced eviction of your tenant, and legal action against you as the property owner β€” and none of those outcomes are remedied by Georgia’s landlord-tenant law.

Competing with Institutional Landlords

Single-family rental investment has been institutionalized at scale in the Atlanta suburbs, and Paulding County is no exception. Large single-family rental REITs and regional investment firms own thousands of homes across the northwest metro, including a meaningful inventory in Paulding County’s major subdivisions. These operators bring professional property management standards, online portals, rapid maintenance dispatch systems, and consistent lease documentation. Their properties typically show well and are marketed efficiently.

Individual landlords compete in the same market for the same tenants. The competitive advantage of an individual landlord isn’t scale β€” it’s responsiveness and relationship. Institutional operators are structurally unable to provide the personal flexibility, negotiated lease terms, and human communication that a local landlord can offer. A tenant who has dealt with a large management company’s call center for maintenance requests appreciates a landlord who answers their phone and shows up when something breaks. Position yourself on those dimensions, invest in property condition so you can honestly charge competitive rent, and you’ll find that high-quality tenants in Paulding County actively seek out individual landlords over institutional alternatives.

Georgia Law in Paulding County’s Active Market

All residential tenancies in Paulding County operate under Georgia state law. The Magistrate Court of Paulding County in Dallas sees a regular dispossessory docket β€” it’s an active suburban court processing a meaningful volume of filings from a county of 175,000. Security deposits must be held in a separate escrow account and returned within 30 days with itemized written documentation of any deductions. In a fast-moving market, landlords sometimes skip thorough move-in documentation because everything seems fine and the tenant seems solid. That documentation gap always surfaces in the exact situation where you need it most β€” a deposit dispute with a tenant who denies damage that you can’t prove was pre-existing. Photograph every room on move-in day, have the tenant sign a condition checklist at possession, and keep that file for the life of the tenancy.

πŸ—ΊοΈ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Georgia attorney or contact the Magistrate Court of Paulding County for guidance on specific matters. Last updated: March 2026.

Explore by State

ALAKAZARCACOCTDEDCFLGAHIIDILINIAKSKYLAMEMDMAMIMNMSMOMTNENVNHNJNMNYNCNDOHOKORPARISCSDTNTXUTVTVAWAWVWIWY

Click any state to explore resources

Scroll to Top