Franklin County Landlord Guide: Brookville Lake, the Whitewater River Valley, and Indiana’s Most Visited Recreation County
Franklin County has a secret that its 22,800 permanent residents know well but most of Indiana doesn’t fully appreciate: it is one of the most visited counties in the state. Brookville Lake draws over 1.3 million visitors annually, making it consistently Indiana’s second or third most visited state park destination. The Whitewater River is recognized by paddlers across the Midwest as one of the region’s finest canoe and kayak corridors — its class I and II rapids, forested river gorges, and cold-water trout fishing draw enthusiasts from Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and beyond. Metamora, a preserved 1830s canal town with the only known working wooden aqueduct in the United States, brings heritage tourists and antique shoppers throughout the warm months. And the entire county sits just 40 minutes from downtown Cincinnati and 90 minutes from Indianapolis, making it an accessible weekend destination that swells its population significantly on warm-weather weekends. Understanding this visitor economy is essential to understanding Franklin County’s rental market, where short-term and seasonal demand coexists with a thin but stable permanent residential market.
Brookville Lake: Indiana’s Hidden Recreation Giant
Brookville Lake was created when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dammed the East Branch of the Whitewater River in the 1970s, creating an 8-mile-long reservoir in the rolling hills of southeastern Indiana. The lake and its surrounding 16,000-acre DNR property offer boating (both motorized and sailboats), fishing for walleye, bass, and crappie, swimming beaches, camping, hiking and mountain biking trails, horseback riding, ATV trails, and a full range of outdoor recreation that draws a remarkably diverse visitor base — Cincinnati families, Indianapolis outdoor enthusiasts, serious anglers, mountain bikers, and campers.
For landlords, the lake’s visitor economy creates a niche rental opportunity that doesn’t exist in most Indiana counties: short-term vacation rental demand for properties with lake views, lake access, or proximity to the lake. Cabins, cottages, and vacation homes near Brookville Lake can command short-term rental premiums that significantly exceed what permanent residential tenants would pay at the same property. The demand is seasonal — concentrated between Memorial Day and Labor Day, with shoulder-season activity in spring and fall — but for properties well-positioned relative to the lake, the economics can be compelling.
The Whitewater River: Premier Paddling and Trout Fishing
The Whitewater River system — consisting of the East and West Branches that join at Brookville before flowing southeast into Dearborn County — is one of Indiana’s most scenically dramatic river corridors. The forested hills of southeastern Indiana create river gorges unlike the flat landscape that dominates most of the state, and the Whitewater’s cool, clear water supports brown and rainbow trout populations that are rare in Indiana rivers. The county hosts Canoefest annually in Brookville, one of Indiana’s longest-running paddling events, drawing participants from across the Midwest.
The river corridor also creates flood risk for properties along its banks. Brookville sits at the confluence of the East and West Branches, and the river valley has experienced significant flood events that affect properties in the floodplain. Indiana law under IC 32-31-1-21 requires landlords to disclose when a property is in a designated flood plain. Properties near the river in Brookville or along the creek tributaries throughout the county should have current FEMA flood zone status verified before acquisition, and flood insurance should be carried where indicated.
Metamora: The Living Canal Town
Metamora is one of Indiana’s most successfully preserved heritage communities — a small village in the western part of Franklin County where the Whitewater Canal and its associated infrastructure have been partially restored to operating condition. The canal’s aqueduct that carries the waterway over Duck Creek is the only known working wooden aqueduct in the United States, a distinction that draws canal history enthusiasts and curious visitors in numbers disproportionate to Metamora’s size. The village’s shops, historic mill, and canal boat rides have made it a day-trip destination from Cincinnati and Indianapolis for decades.
Metamora is small enough that its own permanent residential market is negligible — it is primarily a commercial heritage tourism destination rather than a residential community. But its visitor traffic contributes to the broader Franklin County tourism economy that creates demand for accommodations throughout the county.
Oldenburg: The Village of Spires
Oldenburg, in the southeastern part of Franklin County, is a German Catholic community established in the 1830s by German immigrants whose architectural legacy is visible in the multiple church spires that dominate the village skyline — earning it the nickname “Village of Spires.” The Academy of the Immaculate Conception, a historic school complex, and the Franciscan Sisters of Our Lady of Perpetual Help motherhouse give Oldenburg a distinctively institutional and religious character. The village is a minor heritage tourist attraction in its own right and one of Indiana’s more striking examples of ethnic community preservation.
The Permanent Rental Market
Franklin County’s permanent residential rental market is thin relative to the county’s visitor traffic. The county is predominantly owner-occupied, with most of the rental inventory concentrated in Brookville’s downtown and residential neighborhoods. Median gross rent in Brookville runs approximately $850 per month — affordable by Indiana standards and reflecting the rural wage structure of an agricultural and small-manufacturing economy. The county is part of the greater Cincinnati metropolitan statistical area, meaning some residents commute to Cincinnati employment while living in Franklin County for its lower housing costs and rural character. This Cincinnati commuter dynamic modestly elevates rental demand compared to purely agricultural Indiana counties of similar size.
Franklin Circuit Court
All Franklin County evictions are filed in Franklin Circuit Court, located on the second floor of the Franklin County Courthouse at 459 Main Street, Brookville, IN 47012. The Circuit Court phone is (765) 647-4186. Note the distinctive hours: Monday through Friday, 8:30am to 12:00pm and 1:00pm to 4:00pm, with the courthouse closed during the noon to 1pm lunch hour. Landlords filing or inquiring should plan around this midday closure. The Circuit Court Judge and Clerk are both located in the courthouse; the Prosecutor’s office is also there. The eviction process follows Indiana’s standard IC 32-31 framework. A 10-day notice to pay or quit must be properly served with no grace period. After 10 days, the landlord files the Eviction complaint, receives a hearing, and proceeds through the court process to Judgment for Possession and, if needed, a Writ of Assistance directing the Franklin County Sheriff to execute the judgment. An uncontested eviction from notice through Writ typically resolves in 30 to 60 days.
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