Bubbleland, Bananas, and HB128: Fulton County Kentucky Landlord Law
There is a small piece of Kentucky that you can only reach by driving through Missouri or Tennessee. It is called the Kentucky Bend — also known locally as Bubbleland — and it exists because of an 1820 surveying agreement that drew Kentucky’s western boundary along the east bank of the Mississippi River, then failed to account for a loop in the river that left a roughly 17-square-mile oxbow of Kentucky territory entirely encircled by other states. The Kentucky Bend sits in Fulton County, has no paved road connecting it to the rest of Kentucky, and has a permanent population that can be counted on two hands in a good census year. It is, as geographic anomalies go, a genuine one-of-a-kind.
The rest of Fulton County is not quite as unusual, but it has its own distinct character. The county seat of Hickman sits on a limestone bluff above the Mississippi River at the far western edge of the Jackson Purchase region — about as far west as you can go in Kentucky before you run out of state. The city of Fulton, in the county’s interior, literally straddles the Kentucky-Tennessee state line, with South Fulton across the border. Formed in 1845 from Hickman County and named for Robert Fulton, inventor of the commercially viable steamboat, Fulton County has always been oriented toward the river and the connections it enables rather than toward the Kentucky interior.
The banana story is real and worth telling. For much of the 20th century, Fulton was a major switching point on the Illinois Central Railroad for refrigerated freight cars carrying bananas from the port of New Orleans northward to markets throughout the Midwest. The Illinois Central maintained a large division facility here, and the banana traffic through Fulton was substantial enough that the city styled itself the Banana Capital of the World and hosted an International Banana Festival for decades. The railroad division closed as rail industry consolidation eliminated the need for switching points like Fulton, and the banana traffic moved on, but the festival lived on as a celebration of the town’s unusual commercial heritage.
The Smallest Rental Market in the Purchase
With fewer than 6,000 residents spread across 212 square miles, Fulton County has one of the smallest rental markets in Kentucky. The economy rests primarily on agriculture — soybeans, corn, and cotton thrive in the rich Mississippi bottomland soils — with the county school system and local government providing the most stable employment base. A significant share of residents who need larger-market employment commute to Paducah (McCracken County, roughly 60 miles northeast) or to Union City, Tennessee (just across the state line). There is no hospital in Fulton County, no four-year college, and no significant manufacturing complex remaining after the railroad era ended.
For a landlord in this market, expectations should be calibrated accordingly. Rents are very low by any Kentucky standard — the same forces that make housing affordable here (limited demand, depressed incomes, aging stock) also limit rent growth potential. Tenant turnover can be higher than in more economically dynamic markets because people who find better employment opportunities tend to leave. The rental pool is weighted toward lower-income households, agricultural workers with seasonal income variation, retirees, and public employees. Apply your screening criteria consistently but be realistic about the income levels you are working with.
The State Line Issue in Fulton City
The city of Fulton presents a legal consideration that is genuinely uncommon in Kentucky landlord practice: it straddles the state line. The northern portion of the city is in Kentucky; the southern portion — technically incorporated as South Fulton — is in Tennessee. If you own rental property in or near the Fulton city area, you need to confirm which state your specific parcel is located in before relying on Kentucky’s HB128 framework.
Tennessee has its own landlord-tenant statutes, and while there are broad similarities to Kentucky law, the details differ — notice periods, security deposit rules, habitability requirements, and eviction procedures are not identical across the state line. A property on the Kentucky side requires a Forcible Detainer action in Fulton County District Court in Hickman. A property on the Tennessee side requires action in the appropriate Tennessee court in Obion County. If you are unsure which state your property falls in, check with the Fulton County Property Valuation Administrator, the Fulton County, Kentucky Clerk’s office, or a licensed attorney before you draft a lease or serve a notice. Getting the jurisdiction wrong can mean your notice is legally defective and your eviction timeline resets from zero.
Mississippi River Flooding and Housing Conditions
Hickman and the surrounding lowland areas of Fulton County have a documented history of Mississippi River flooding. The river’s floodplain in this part of western Kentucky is broad, and properties in low-lying bottomland areas — including portions of Hickman itself, which despite its bluff location has low-lying neighborhoods near the river — can be affected by major flood events. Before renting any property near the river or in obvious bottomland terrain, verify its FEMA National Flood Insurance Program flood zone designation. Properties in Special Flood Hazard Areas (Zone A or AE) with federally backed mortgages are required to carry flood insurance. Even if flood insurance is not required, disclosing known flood risk to prospective tenants in writing is both legally prudent and the right thing to do.
The bottomland humidity of the Mississippi River region also creates persistent moisture and mold management challenges for older housing stock. HB128’s nonwaivable habitability duty includes control of mold and other hazardous substances. In a climate where summer humidity is high, drainage is slow, and many structures are old enough to have foundation and ventilation issues, mold can develop quickly in neglected properties. Address moisture complaints promptly — within the 14-day written response window required by HB128, or within 5 days if the condition implicates essential services. Deferred mold remediation in a humid bottomland environment does not improve with time.
Filing in Hickman and HB128 Essentials
For Kentucky-side properties, all residential evictions in Fulton County are Forcible Detainer actions filed in District Court at the Fulton County Justice Center, 2216 Moscow Avenue, Hickman, KY 42050, phone (270) 236-2727. Hickman is a small bluff-top community; call ahead to verify current office hours and civil hearing dates before making the drive. Bring the original lease, notice with proof of service, and your complete payment and communication record.
HB128 applies in full to all Kentucky-side residential leases made on or after its effective date. The core requirements: 14-day written notice to pay or vacate for nonpayment; 14-day notice to cure for lease violations with termination no sooner than 30 days; one month’s written notice for month-to-month termination; security deposits capped at two times monthly rent, held in a separate account, returned within 30 days with an itemized written deduction statement — penalty of $250 or twice the withheld amount for noncompliance; nonwaivable habitability across 13 categories; 24-hour advance notice for standard entry; and self-help eviction absolutely prohibited at a penalty of three times periodic rent or actual damages.
In a market where rents may be as low as $300–$500 per month, the $250 statutory floor penalty for improper deposit withholding can represent half or more of a full month’s rent. Return deposits promptly and document every deduction. And for virtually every rental in Fulton County — where the housing stock is overwhelmingly pre-1978 — the federal lead paint disclosure requirement applies: written disclosure of known hazards plus the EPA pamphlet before lease signing, with a signed acknowledgment in your lease records.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. HB128 applies to leases made on or after its effective date; prior Kentucky law governs older leases. Properties in the Fulton city area that are located in Tennessee are subject to Tennessee landlord-tenant law, not Kentucky’s. Consult a licensed Kentucky attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
|