A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Turner County, Georgia
Turner County is one of south Georgia’s most proudly self-defined communities: a place that knows exactly what it is, wears it without apology, and has the giant peanut monument on I-75 to prove it. Created in 1905 from parts of four neighboring counties and named for Henry Gray Turner — Confederate officer, Georgia legislator, state Supreme Court justice, and U.S. Congressman — the county of approximately 9,000 residents in the Georgia Wiregrass has built its modern identity on peanuts. Ashburn, the county seat and only significant city, carries the title of “Peanut Capital of the World,” and the title is not mere boast: the Golden Peanut and Tree Nuts processing plant in Ashburn is genuinely the largest peanut shelling and processing facility in the world, handling over 60 million pounds of Turner County peanuts annually.
From Cotton to Peanuts: The Boll Weevil and Georgia’s First Diversified Farm Program
Turner County’s agricultural story is one of forced reinvention. Before the 1920s, the county planted over 30,000 acres of cotton — the dominant cash crop of the Georgia Wiregrass, as it had been throughout the Deep South since the antebellum era. Then the boll weevil arrived, and it destroyed the cotton economy with a thoroughness that left farmers with almost nothing to fall back on. Turner County’s response was not to give up on agriculture but to reinvent it: the county instituted Georgia’s first “cow-hog-hen” diversified farming program, encouraging farmers to shift from monoculture cotton to a mixed livestock and crop operation that proved far more resilient. This model — which spread to counties across Georgia and the broader South — was one of Turner County’s most consequential contributions to the state’s agricultural history.
The pivot to peanuts followed as the sandy, well-drained soils of the Wiregrass proved ideally suited to groundnut cultivation. Today, peanuts are the cornerstone of Turner County’s agricultural economy, supplemented by cotton, corn, and a growing pecan industry. The Big Peanut monument — originally constructed in 1975 and declared an official Georgia state monument in 1998 — was destroyed by Hurricane Michael in 2018 and subsequently rebuilt as a smaller but still proudly visible landmark visible from I-75.
I-75, Logistics, and Industrial Diversification
Turner County’s position on I-75 approximately 75 miles south of Macon — midway between Atlanta and Jacksonville on one of the busiest freight corridors on the East Coast — has made it an attractive logistics hub. The county’s development authority markets this position aggressively, and it has attracted a meaningful cluster of industrial employers beyond peanut processing: McElroy Metal (metal sheeting manufacturing), Hanes Geo Components (silt fencing and construction supplies), Phoenix Wood Products, United Forestry Products, and Birdsong Peanut (hull-to-biodegradable-filler conversion) all operate in the county. These manufacturers and processors collectively provide the county’s most stable private-sector employment, and their workers represent Turner County’s most reliable tenant pool.
For landlords, this industrial base — modest as it is relative to larger Georgia counties — is the key economic anchor. In a county where the overall poverty rate is 21.6% and Ashburn city proper runs at 26.3%, the manufacturing workforce stands out as a financially stable and consistent segment. These are workers with regular schedules, verifiable wages, and genuine roots in the community. Landlords who can verify employment and income at these facilities will find substantially lower eviction risk than the county’s overall poverty statistics might initially suggest.
The Fire Ant Festival and Community Character
Turner County’s annual Fire Ant Festival each March is worth a brief mention for what it says about the county’s character: this is a community that can laugh at itself, that names its most-attended annual event after an invasive pest, and that attracts thousands of visitors to celebrate small-town south Georgia life with food, music, and the shared recognition that fire ants, like peanuts, are simply part of the landscape here. Landlords who understand and appreciate this community character — unpretentious, agricultural, hardworking, and self-aware — will find it easier to build the genuine landlord-tenant relationships that make property management in small counties function well.
Turner County landlord-tenant matters are governed by OCGA Title 44, Chapter 7. Georgia uses a dispossessory process — no minimum notice period before filing for nonpayment of rent. Tenant has 7 days to answer dispossessory warrant. Security deposits must be held in a separate escrow account; return within 30 days with itemized statement. No rent control statewide. No statutory cap on late fees — must be specified in lease. Out-of-state landlords must have a GA-licensed property manager (HB 399, effective 2025). Dispossessory actions filed in Turner County Magistrate Court in Ashburn. Consult a licensed Georgia attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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