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Huntington County · Indiana

Huntington County Landlord-Tenant Law

Indiana landlord guide — eviction rules, courthouse info & local regulations

🏛️ County Seat: Huntington
👥 Population: ~37,000
🏭 Huntington • Quayle Museum • Huntington University • GM Truck Plant

Landlord-Tenant Law in Huntington County, Indiana

Huntington County is a northeastern Indiana county of approximately 37,000 residents positioned southwest of Fort Wayne (Allen County) along the US-24 Hoosier Heartland Highway corridor. The county seat and dominant population center is Huntington, a city of approximately 17,000 that sits at the confluence of the Little River and the Wabash River and serves as the regional commercial and institutional center for the surrounding rural area. Huntington occupies a distinctive position in American political history as the hometown of former Vice President Dan Quayle, who served as the 44th Vice President of the United States from 1989 to 1993 under President George H.W. Bush. Quayle was born in Indianapolis but grew up in Huntington, graduated from Huntington North High School, and represented Indiana in the U.S. House and Senate before his vice presidency. The Dan Quayle Center, located in the former Christian Scientist church building in downtown Huntington, houses the only U.S. museum dedicated exclusively to the vice presidency — interpreting the office of vice president through the careers of all American vice presidents, not just Quayle’s. Beyond its political heritage, Huntington is home to Huntington University, a Christian liberal arts institution affiliated with the Church of the United Brethren in Christ with approximately 1,200 students. The county’s contemporary economy combines proximity to Fort Wayne’s employment base (including the major GM Fort Wayne Assembly truck plant located in Roanoke at the Huntington-Allen County border), local manufacturing, the institutional employment at Huntington University, and the historical significance of the Forks of the Wabash — the site where the Little Wabash and Wabash rivers merge, historically a major Miami and Potawatomi Indian gathering and trading place, treaty signing location, and the home of Miami Chief Little Turtle. All landlord-tenant matters in Huntington County are governed by Indiana Code Title 32, Article 31. The eviction action is called an Eviction and is filed in Huntington Circuit or Superior Court. Indiana has no Fair Rent Commissions and no statewide rent control. The 10-day pay-or-quit notice applies to nonpayment. Security deposits have no statutory cap. Deposit return is required within 45 days after termination, delivery of possession, and tenant’s written mailing address.

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📊 Huntington County Quick Stats

County Seat Huntington (~17,000) — Quayle hometown, Huntington University
Notable Institutions Dan Quayle Center (only VP museum in U.S.), Huntington University
County Population ~37,000 — NE Indiana, Fort Wayne SW metro edge
Key Employers GM Fort Wayne Assembly (Roanoke), Huntington University, Bippus State Bank, UTC Aerospace (Goodrich), Parkview Huntington Hospital
Renter Share ~27% of housing units renter-occupied
Fair Rent Commission None — Indiana has no Fair Rent Commissions

⚖️ Eviction At-a-Glance

Eviction Action Eviction — filed in Huntington Circuit or Superior Court
Nonpayment Notice 10-day pay or quit (IC 32-31-1-6)
No Grace Period Indiana has no statutory grace period
Huntington County Courthouse 201 N. Jefferson Street, Huntington • (260) 358-4812
Court Hours Mon–Fri 8:00am–4:00pm
Avg Timeline 30–60 days start to finish

Huntington County Local Regulations

Indiana state law governs all landlord-tenant relationships in Huntington County. There are no county-level landlord-tenant ordinances, no Fair Rent Commissions, and no rent control anywhere in Indiana. Huntington and other municipalities enforce their own housing codes.

Category Details
No Rent Control Indiana law prohibits local rent control statewide (IC 32-31-1-20). No Huntington County municipality may regulate rental rates. Landlords may raise rents freely with 30 days written notice for month-to-month tenancies (IC 32-31-5-4). Huntington rents run moderate for northeastern Indiana, reflecting the stable local manufacturing workforce and Fort Wayne commuter segment without significant metro-pricing pressure.
No Fair Rent Commission Indiana has no Fair Rent Commissions anywhere in the state. Huntington County landlords operate under Indiana state law exclusively.
Security Deposit No statutory cap (IC 32-31-3-12). No escrow or interest requirement. Return within 45 days after: (1) termination of the rental agreement; (2) delivery of possession; and (3) tenant provides written mailing address. All three conditions required before the clock starts. Itemized written deduction statement required. Failure forfeits right to retain any portion and triggers attorney’s fee liability (IC 32-31-3-16).
GM Fort Wayne Assembly (Roanoke) Workforce The General Motors Fort Wayne Assembly Plant, located in Roanoke at the Huntington-Allen County border, is the largest single employer drawing workforce from Huntington County. The plant produces full-size pickup trucks (Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra) on three-shift operations employing thousands of workers across production, maintenance, quality, and support functions. The plant’s UAW workforce represents the most stable tenant segment in the Huntington rental market. Truck market cyclicality affects production volumes, and periodic layoffs have occurred during downturns, but overall employment has been durable across decades.
Huntington University Student Rentals Huntington University, a Christian liberal arts institution affiliated with the Church of the United Brethren in Christ with approximately 1,200 students, is a small but distinctive anchor. Most Huntington University students live on-campus or with family, but a modest off-campus rental market exists serving upperclassmen, graduate students, and some athletic program students. The university’s conservative Christian institutional identity shapes student housing expectations and makes parent co-signers standard for student leases.
Other Local Manufacturing UTC Aerospace Systems (formerly Goodrich Aerospace, now part of RTX/Raytheon Technologies) operates aerospace component manufacturing in Huntington. Various smaller manufacturing operations round out the base. The diversified mix provides some stability against single-industry cyclicality.
Historic Downtown and Forks of the Wabash Huntington contains a preserved 19th-century downtown reflecting its position as a Wabash & Erie Canal era commercial center. The Forks of the Wabash Historic Park, at the confluence of the Little Wabash and Wabash rivers, preserves sites of significant Miami Indian history including the home of Chief Little Turtle (Mihsihkinaahkwa), who negotiated key treaties including the Treaty of Greenville in 1795 and the Treaty of Grouseland in 1805. The historic sites draw modest cultural tourism without significant rental market impact.
Wabash River Flood Plain The Wabash River and Little Wabash River run through Huntington. FEMA flood zone designations cover portions of both river corridors. Landlords with properties in designated zones must provide flood plain disclosure before lease execution (IC 32-31-1-21).
Lead Paint Compliance Huntington’s historic downtown and older residential neighborhoods contain substantial pre-1940 and pre-1978 housing stock. Federal law requires lead paint disclosure and the EPA pamphlet for all pre-1978 rental properties.
Required Disclosures At or before lease commencement: (1) property manager and agent for service of process, both Indiana residents (IC 32-31-3-18); (2) smoke detector acknowledgment (IC 32-31-5-7); (3) lead paint disclosure for pre-1978 properties; (4) flood plain disclosure for Wabash River-adjacent properties (IC 32-31-1-21); (5) water/sewage service itemization if landlord passes through utility charges (IC 8-1-2-1.2).
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited Indiana law expressly prohibits self-help eviction (IC 32-31-5-6). Lock changes, utility shutoffs, removal of doors or windows, or removal of tenant’s personal property without a court order is illegal. Huntington County landlords must file through Huntington Circuit or Superior Court in Huntington.

Last verified: 2026-04-01

🏛️ Huntington County Courthouse

201 N. Jefferson Street, Huntington, IN 46750 • (260) 358-4812

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Indiana

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Huntington County eviction

💰 Eviction Costs: Indiana
Filing Fee $35-160
Total Est. Range $100-400
Service: — Writ: —

Indiana Eviction Laws

State statutes that apply throughout Huntington County

⚡ Quick Overview

10
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
Reasonable (typically 14-30 days); 45 days for illegal activity
Days Notice (Violation)
21-60
Avg Total Days
$$35-160
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 10-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit
Notice Period 10 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay all rent within 10 days to stop eviction
Days to Hearing 10-21 days
Days to Writ Immediate after judgment; 24 hours to vacate days
Total Estimated Timeline 21-60 days
Total Estimated Cost $100-400
⚠️ Watch Out

10-day notice must use specific statutory language per IC § 32-31-1-6: 'You are notified to vacate the following property not more than ten (10) days after you receive this notice unless you pay the rent due...' No state-mandated grace period - rent is late the day after due date. Accepting partial payment during eviction can jeopardize case unless written partial payment agreement exists. Emergency/expedited eviction available within 3 days for waste/severe property damage (IC § 32-31-6-5). 45-day unconditional quit for illegal activity. No cure required for waste or holdover tenants (IC § 32-31-1-8). Senate Enrolled Act 142 (2025): allows sealing/nondisclosure of dismissed/favorable eviction records.

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📝 Indiana 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 Small Claims Court (under $6000) or Circuit/Superior Court. Pay the filing fee (~$$35-160).
  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 Indiana 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 Indiana attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Indiana landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Indiana — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Indiana's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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⚠️ 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.
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🏙️ Communities in Huntington County

Cities and towns

Huntington
Roanoke
Warren
Andrews
Markle
Mount Etna
Huntington County

Huntington — Quayle Hometown, Huntington University, GM Truck Plant Workforce

No rent control. No deposit cap. 10-day pay-or-quit. 45-day deposit return. Huntington: Dan Quayle Center (only VP museum), Huntington University (Christian college). GM Fort Wayne Assembly truck plant in Roanoke major workforce. UTC Aerospace. Forks of the Wabash / Little Turtle history. Fort Wayne SW metro edge. File Huntington Circuit or Superior Court, Huntington.

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Huntington County Landlord Guide: GM Fort Wayne Assembly, Quayle’s Hometown, Huntington University, and Operating Northeast Indiana’s Wabash Valley Edge

Huntington County sits at an interesting intersection of multiple economic and cultural threads that give it operational character distinct from most comparably-sized Indiana rural counties. The massive General Motors Fort Wayne Assembly Plant — technically located in Roanoke at the Huntington-Allen County border but drawing substantial workforce from Huntington proper — provides employment stability few comparable markets can match. Huntington the city holds national political-history significance as the hometown of Dan Quayle. Huntington University adds a small but stable institutional anchor. The Forks of the Wabash preserves sites of genuine importance in the early-republic history of Indiana Native American relations. For landlords, these elements combine to produce a rental market with structurally reliable tenant demand supported by one of northeastern Indiana’s most durable industrial employment concentrations.

The GM Fort Wayne Assembly Truck Plant

The General Motors Fort Wayne Assembly Plant, located in Roanoke immediately east of Huntington County along US-24, is one of General Motors’ primary full-size pickup truck assembly operations. The plant produces the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickup trucks — products that generate substantial revenue and profit for GM and that have been among the company’s most important product lines for decades. The plant operates on three-shift production employing thousands of workers across production, maintenance, quality, supervisory, engineering, and support functions. The UAW-represented workforce provides the kind of stable, well-compensated, benefits-rich manufacturing employment that has become increasingly rare in post-industrial America but that persists in this specific segment of the domestic automotive industry.

For Huntington County landlords, the GM Fort Wayne Assembly workforce is the single most important tenant segment. GM truck plant employment correlates directly with the US pickup truck market, which is cyclical but has been durable across decades because pickup trucks are both personal vehicles and the essential work vehicles of contractors, farmers, and small businesses. Three-shift operations mean a portion of tenants work second or third shift, requiring the operational accommodations familiar from other automotive manufacturing markets: property showings outside strict business hours, maintenance response flexibility around sleeping schedules, community tolerance for vehicles coming and going at non-standard hours. Compensation levels at the plant are meaningfully above local median wages, supporting rental pricing at a premium to what purely local workforce economics would suggest. Employment verification through GM HR is straightforward for landlords who develop the appropriate familiarity.

Periodic layoffs and production adjustments do occur. When pickup truck market conditions weaken — driven by consumer discretionary income contraction, interest rate spikes affecting truck purchase financing, fuel price volatility, or broader economic conditions — GM adjusts production volumes and workforce hours. Tenants employed at the plant face income variability during these periods, and landlords with heavy concentration in GM-workforce tenants should factor this exposure into longer-term planning. The 2020 COVID-era production shutdowns provided a recent example of how quickly plant operations can change and how that change affects workforce income.

Huntington: Dan Quayle’s Hometown

Dan Quayle served as the 44th Vice President of the United States from 1989 to 1993 under President George H.W. Bush. Quayle was born in Indianapolis in 1947 but grew up in Huntington, attended Huntington schools, graduated from Huntington North High School in 1965, and developed his political career based in Indiana. His political career included two terms in the U.S. House representing Indiana’s 4th Congressional District (1977-1981) and then two terms in the U.S. Senate (1981-1989) before his election as Vice President. After leaving office, Quayle has maintained Huntington ties and the community’s identification with him remains a recognizable element of local civic identity.

The Dan Quayle Center, located in a former Christian Science church building at 815 Warren Street in downtown Huntington, operates as the only U.S. museum dedicated exclusively to the vice presidency as an institution. The museum interprets the careers of all American vice presidents, not just Quayle’s, examining how the office has evolved from its constitutional origins through its modern form. Exhibits include memorabilia, correspondence, photographs, and interpretive materials covering vice presidents from John Adams through recent vice presidents. The museum draws modest cultural tourism with a distinctive character — political history enthusiasts, students, and political-science-adjacent visitors — that doesn’t produce major rental market effects but contributes to Huntington’s civic distinctiveness.

Huntington University

Huntington University, founded in 1897, is a Christian liberal arts institution affiliated with the Church of the United Brethren in Christ. The university enrolls approximately 1,200 undergraduate and graduate students across traditional liberal arts programs along with professional programs in animation and digital media arts (a distinctive program area for which the university has developed national recognition), ministry, business, education, and other fields. The campus is compact and the residential character supports on-campus housing as the dominant student living arrangement, but a modest off-campus rental market serves upperclassmen, graduate students, and some athletic program students.

The university’s evangelical Christian institutional identity shapes student culture and housing expectations in ways that differentiate the segment from state-university student markets. The Huntington Community Covenant sets lifestyle expectations that affect student behavior both on and off campus. Parent co-signers are standard for off-campus student leases, and the tenant segment is generally stable and low-turnover within the academic year. Summer occupancy is seasonal, and landlords serving this segment should understand the academic calendar implications for lease terms.

The Forks of the Wabash and Little Turtle History

Huntington’s position at the confluence of the Little Wabash and Wabash rivers made it a significant Miami and Potawatomi Native American gathering place and trading center long before European-American settlement. The Miami Chief Little Turtle (Mihsihkinaahkwa), who emerged as one of the most important Native American military and diplomatic leaders of the late 18th century, lived at the Forks of the Wabash. Little Turtle led the Miami Confederacy to significant military victories against American forces including the decisive defeat of General Arthur St. Clair in 1791 (one of the worst defeats American forces have ever suffered), before negotiating the Treaty of Greenville in 1795 that opened much of Ohio and parts of Indiana to American settlement. Little Turtle’s subsequent diplomatic efforts included the Treaty of Grouseland (1805) and various other negotiations attempting to protect Miami interests as American westward expansion accelerated.

The Forks of the Wabash Historic Park preserves sites associated with Little Turtle and the Miami community, including reconstructed treaty council grounds and historical interpretive programming. The park draws modest cultural tourism and educational visits, particularly from regional schools studying Indiana history and Native American history. For landlords, the historic character is civic identity rather than direct rental market driver, but it shapes the cultural distinctiveness of Huntington in ways residents and prospective tenants can find appealing.

Roanoke: The Huntington-Allen County Border Community

Roanoke, a small community of approximately 1,500, sits at the Huntington-Allen County border and is effectively the northernmost Huntington County community. GM Fort Wayne Assembly is technically in Roanoke, and the community’s economic and residential character is deeply shaped by proximity to the truck plant and to Fort Wayne. Some Roanoke residents work at GM; others commute to other Fort Wayne employment. The rental market in Roanoke is small but supported by this manufacturing workforce base. Warren, Andrews, and Markle elsewhere in the county operate as smaller rural communities with classic rural Indiana rental market characteristics.

UTC Aerospace and the Broader Manufacturing Base

Beyond GM, Huntington County’s manufacturing base includes UTC Aerospace Systems (now part of Raytheon Technologies after the 2020 Raytheon-UTC merger, with origins as Goodrich Aerospace before earlier mergers), which operates aerospace component manufacturing in Huntington producing components for commercial and military aircraft. Smaller manufacturing operations across the county add to the employment base. The diversified mix across automotive assembly (GM), aerospace (UTC/RTX), and smaller specialty manufacturers provides some insulation against single-industry cyclicality.

Huntington Historic Downtown and Older Housing Stock

Huntington’s historic downtown reflects the city’s 19th-century prosperity as a Wabash & Erie Canal era commercial center. The Little River Railroad, various historic industrial operations, and the canal-era commercial base combined to produce a substantial downtown building stock that has been partially preserved. Older residential neighborhoods surrounding downtown contain pre-1940 housing. Federal lead paint disclosure applies universally to pre-1978 rental properties and is particularly relevant given the age distribution of Huntington’s inventory. Landlords operating in older Huntington neighborhoods should budget rehabilitation appropriately and engage contractors familiar with older-property maintenance.

Huntington Circuit and Superior Courts and the Eviction Process

All Huntington County eviction actions file in Huntington Circuit Court or Huntington Superior Court, with the courthouse at 201 N. Jefferson Street, Huntington, IN 46750, phone (260) 358-4812. The 10-day pay-or-quit notice must be properly served before filing any nonpayment eviction. Total timeline in an uncontested case from notice service through sheriff execution of a Writ of Possession typically runs 30 to 60 days. The Huntington County eviction docket is relatively low in volume, reflecting the overall stability of the manufacturing workforce tenant base and the relatively modest renter share in the county.

Operating Principles for Huntington County Landlords

Huntington County rewards landlords who understand the GM Fort Wayne Assembly truck plant’s central role in the local rental economy and operate accordingly. Properties positioned appropriately for the GM workforce — with operational flexibility around shift schedules, pricing calibrated to UAW compensation levels, and location preferences that match typical plant worker commute patterns — support stable occupancy and manageable turnover. Tenants in the Huntington University student segment represent a smaller but also stable niche with specific Christian institutional expectations around lease terms and co-signers. UTC Aerospace and other local manufacturing workforce segments round out the diversified employment base. Historic downtown properties require pre-1978 lead paint compliance and older-property rehabilitation competence, and pay off for operators who invest appropriately. The Fort Wayne metropolitan edge position means some tenants commute to Fort Wayne for employment beyond GM, and cross-verification familiarity with Fort Wayne employers adds operational value. Indiana’s pro-landlord statutory framework — no rent control, 45-day deposit return, 10-day pay-or-quit, prohibition of self-help eviction — applies consistently and provides the favorable legal environment within which Huntington County’s durable manufacturing base supports sustainable rental business practice.

Neighboring Indiana Counties

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Disclaimer: This page provides general information about landlord-tenant law in Huntington County, Indiana and is not legal advice. Always verify current requirements with Huntington Circuit or Superior Court or a licensed Indiana attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

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