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Acadia Parish Louisiana
Acadia Parish · Louisiana

Acadia Parish Landlord-Tenant Law

Louisiana landlord guide — parish ordinances, courthouse info & local rules

📍 Parish Seat: Crowley
👥 Pop. ~62,000
⚖️ 15th Judicial District Court
🌾 Rice Capital / Cajun Prairie

Acadia Parish Rental Market Overview

Acadia Parish is a mid-sized south Louisiana parish of approximately 62,000 people anchored by Crowley, the self-proclaimed Rice Capital of America and the parish seat, with a population of around 12,500. The parish sits on the Cajun Prairie in the heart of the Acadiana region, between Lafayette to the east and Lake Charles to the west along the I-10 corridor, and its economy reflects the agricultural traditions of the region — rice and crawfish farming dominate the rural landscape — alongside oil and gas employment and a public sector base in schools and local government. Crowley’s downtown retains a working small-city character, and the parish as a whole has a strong Cajun cultural identity that shapes community life.

The Acadia Parish rental market is concentrated in Crowley, with secondary markets in Rayne and Church Point. Rents are modest, reflecting a parish poverty rate of approximately 22%. The tenant pool blends agricultural workers, oil field employees, healthcare workers at Acadia St. Landry Hospital, public sector workers, and households relying on government transfer income. Louisiana landlord-tenant law — governed by the Civil Code rather than a standalone statute — applies uniformly across the parish with no local rent control or just-cause eviction ordinances.

Acadia Parish Allen Parish Ascension Parish Assumption Parish Avoyelles Parish
Beauregard Parish Bienville Parish Bossier Parish Caddo Parish Calcasieu Parish
Caldwell Parish Cameron Parish Catahoula Parish Claiborne Parish Concordia Parish
De Soto Parish East Baton Rouge Parish East Carroll Parish East Feliciana Parish Evangeline Parish
Franklin Parish Grant Parish Iberia Parish Iberville Parish Jackson Parish
Jefferson Parish Jefferson Davis Parish Lafayette Parish Lafourche Parish La Salle Parish
Lincoln Parish Livingston Parish Madison Parish Morehouse Parish Natchitoches Parish
Orleans Parish Ouachita Parish Plaquemines Parish Pointe Coupee Parish Rapides Parish
Red River Parish Richland Parish Sabine Parish St. Bernard Parish St. Charles Parish
St. Helena Parish St. James Parish St. John the Baptist Parish St. Landry Parish St. Martin Parish
St. Mary Parish St. Tammany Parish Tangipahoa Parish Tensas Parish Terrebonne Parish
Union Parish Vermilion Parish Vernon Parish Washington Parish Webster Parish
West Baton Rouge Parish West Carroll Parish West Feliciana Parish Winn Parish

📊 Quick Stats

Parish Seat Crowley
Population ~62,000 (2020 census)
Key Communities Crowley, Rayne, Church Point, Iota, Estherwood
Court 15th Judicial District / Crowley City Court
Typical Rent Range ~$550–$850/mo
Rent Control None
Just-Cause Eviction Not required

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 5-Day Notice to Vacate
Lease Violation 5-Day Notice to Vacate
Month-to-Month Term. 10-Day Written Notice
Cure Period None required by law
Eviction Filing Rule to Show Cause
Eviction Timeline 2–5 weeks total
Security Deposit Cap 2 months rent
Security Deposit Return 30 days after termination
Statute La. CC Art. 2686–2729; CCP Art. 4701

Acadia Parish Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
Rental Licensing No parish-level rental license required. Louisiana has no statewide landlord licensing statute. Verify with the City of Crowley for any local code enforcement requirements within city limits.
Rent Control None. Louisiana has no statewide rent control and Acadia Parish has no local rent control ordinance. Lessors may raise rent freely at lease renewal with proper notice.
Security Deposit Capped at 2 months’ rent (R.S. 9:3251). Must be returned with itemized deductions within 30 days of lease termination or surrender of premises, whichever is later (R.S. 9:3252). Permissible deductions: unpaid rent, damage beyond normal wear and tear, unpaid utilities owed by lessee.
Eviction Court — Crowley City Court Most residential evictions in Crowley are filed in Crowley City Court, which has jurisdiction over eviction proceedings within Crowley city limits. Address: 426 N. Avenue F, Crowley, LA 70526. Phone: (337) 788-4116. For properties outside Crowley city limits, file in the 15th Judicial District Court, Acadia Parish Courthouse, 500 Court Circle, Crowley, LA 70526. Phone: (337) 788-8831.
Notice to Vacate — Nonpayment Written 5-day notice to vacate required before filing eviction for nonpayment of rent (CCP Art. 4701). Unlike many states, Louisiana does not give the tenant a statutory right to pay and stay during the notice period — though the lessor may accept payment if they choose to do so.
Month-to-Month Termination 10-day written notice required to terminate a month-to-month lease (La. CC Art. 2687, 2728). Notice must be given at least 10 days before the end of the monthly rental period to be effective at the end of that period. This is significantly shorter than the 30 days required in most other states.
Tacit Reconduction If a lessee remains in possession after a fixed lease term expires and the lessor accepts rent or otherwise acquiesces, the lease automatically renews as a month-to-month tenancy under Louisiana’s tacit reconduction doctrine (CC Art. 2686). Lessors who do not wish to renew must give proper 10-day notice before the end of the final month of the fixed term.
No Statutory Cure Period Unlike most other states, Louisiana does not provide tenants with a statutory right to cure a lease violation before eviction proceedings begin. After the 5-day notice period expires, the lessor may immediately file a Rule to Show Cause. The lease itself may provide a cure period, but Louisiana law does not require one.
Rice Industry & Agricultural Workers Acadia Parish is the center of Louisiana’s commercial rice industry, and agricultural employment — including rice farming, crawfish aquaculture, and related processing — is a significant part of the local economy. Agricultural workers may have seasonal income patterns; request multiple pay periods or prior-year tax returns to assess annual income rather than relying on a single in-season pay stub.
Oil & Gas Employment Oil field workers — common in south Louisiana — often work rotation schedules (e.g., 14 days on / 14 days off) with variable overtime income. Request three months of pay stubs and average them rather than relying on a single stub that may reflect an atypically high or low rotation period.
Lessor’s Privilege Louisiana law gives lessors a legal privilege (lien) on the lessee’s movable property (personal property) found on the leased premises to secure up to two years of unpaid rent (CC Art. 2752). This is a unique Louisiana remedy with no equivalent in most other states. Consult a Louisiana attorney before attempting to exercise this right.
Source of Income / HCV No state or local source of income protections. Landlords are not required to accept Housing Choice Vouchers. Contact the Acadia Parish Housing Authority for current HCV payment standards if considering participation.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited. Louisiana law forbids lessors from taking possession of leased premises by any means other than lawful judicial process (CCP Art. 4736). Changing locks, shutting off utilities, or removing tenant belongings without a court order exposes the lessor to liability for damages and attorney fees.

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: Acadia Parish, LA

🏛️ Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Louisiana

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Louisiana
Filing Fee 50-150
Total Est. Range $100-$400
Service: — Writ: —

Louisiana State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

5
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
5
Days Notice (Violation)
14-30
Avg Total Days
$50-150
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 5-Day Notice to Vacate
Notice Period 5 days
Tenant Can Cure? No - Louisiana notices are unconditional. No right to cure by paying rent. However, tenant can negotiate with landlord. Notice can be waived entirely in lease.
Days to Hearing 2-7 days
Days to Writ 1-3 days
Total Estimated Timeline 14-30 days
Total Estimated Cost $100-$400
⚠️ Watch Out

VERY landlord-friendly state. 5-day notice is UNCONDITIONAL - no cure right, tenant must vacate. Notice can be WAIVED in lease - if waived, landlord can file immediately without any notice. No grace period. No statewide late fee cap. No security deposit cap. Tenant gets only 24 hours to appeal after judgment. Lease term notice: 10-day for month-to-month, 30-day for year lease. Do not count weekends/holidays in 5-day period.

Underground Landlord

📝 Louisiana 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 Justice of the Peace Court / City Court / District Court. Pay the filing fee (~$50-150).
  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 Louisiana 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 Louisiana attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Louisiana landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Louisiana — 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 Louisiana's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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📋 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.
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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Key communities: Crowley, Rayne, Church Point, Iota, Estherwood.

Crowley market: Rice and crawfish agricultural workers (seasonal income — use full-year documentation), oil field rotation workers (3-month averaging), hospital and school district employees (most stable segment). Screen at 3x monthly rent.

Louisiana key differences: 10-day month-to-month notice (not 30), 5-day notice to vacate, no cure period, 30-day deposit return, tacit reconduction trap.

Acadia Parish Landlords

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Background checks, eviction history, credit reports — get the full picture before handing over the keys.

Acadia Parish Louisiana Landlord-Tenant Law: A Complete Guide for Rental Property Owners in Crowley and the Cajun Prairie

Acadia Parish is the heart of Louisiana’s rice country — a flat, fertile agricultural parish on the Cajun Prairie where the International Rice Festival has drawn visitors to Crowley every October since 1937, and where the landscape of rice paddies, crawfish ponds, and grain elevators tells the story of an economy shaped by the land. Crowley, the parish seat, is a working agricultural city with a downtown character that reflects both its agricultural roots and its position on I-10 between the Lafayette and Lake Charles metros. For landlords operating in Acadia Parish, this context shapes a rental market that is distinctly Louisiana in its legal framework and distinctly Acadiana in its economic and cultural character.

Louisiana Law Is Different: What Every Acadia Parish Landlord Needs to Know

Louisiana landlord-tenant law is unlike the law in any other state. It derives from the Napoleonic Code tradition rather than the English common law that governs landlord-tenant relationships in every other U.S. state. Louisiana does not have a Residential Landlord and Tenant Act — no single statute analogous to what Mississippi, Texas, or California enacted. Instead, the rules governing leases in Louisiana are found in the Louisiana Civil Code (primarily Articles 2668 through 2729), the Code of Civil Procedure (Articles 4701 through 4735), and Revised Statutes Title 9. Understanding these differences is not optional for landlords in Acadia Parish: the notice periods, eviction procedures, and tenant rights differ significantly from what landlords accustomed to other states might expect.

The most important Louisiana-specific rules for Acadia Parish landlords are these. First, month-to-month tenancies require only 10 days of written notice to terminate — not the 30 days required in most states. Notice must be given at least 10 days before the end of the monthly rental period. Second, the notice to vacate for nonpayment of rent is 5 days — longer than the 3-day notice common in many states but shorter than the longer periods some states require. Third, Louisiana provides no statutory cure-or-quit period for lease violations: after the 5-day notice expires, the lessor may file immediately without giving the tenant an additional opportunity to correct the problem. Fourth, tacit reconduction — Louisiana’s automatic lease renewal doctrine — means that if a fixed-term lease expires and the lessor accepts rent or otherwise allows the tenant to remain, a new month-to-month tenancy is automatically created. Landlords who want the fixed term to end must give proper notice before expiration.

The Acadia Parish Economy and Tenant Pool

Rice farming, crawfish aquaculture, and related agricultural processing represent Acadia Parish’s most distinctive economic identity, but they are not its largest employment sectors in terms of wages or workforce stability. Agricultural workers — both field workers and processing plant employees — have income that varies significantly by season, and their pay stubs from harvest or crawfish season will look very different from their off-season earnings. For agricultural worker applicants, request prior-year tax returns or 12 months of bank statements to assess annual income reliably rather than applying the 3x rent multiplier to a single peak-season pay stub.

Oil and gas employment is the other major economic variable in Acadia Parish. South Louisiana’s oil field workforce works on rotation schedules — typically 14 days on, 14 days off or similar arrangements — that produce pay stubs with significant variation between periods depending on overtime and the specific rotation. These workers often earn strong incomes when employed, but the cyclical nature of oilfield employment means that a strong recent pay stub does not guarantee continued employment. Request three months of stubs, average them, verify current employment directly with the employer, and consider the applicant’s overall employment history in the industry alongside the income figures.

The most financially stable tenant segments in Acadia Parish are public sector workers — Acadia Parish School Board employees, parish and city government workers, and healthcare employees at Acadia St. Landry Hospital — whose monthly income is predictable, institutionally secure, and easy to verify. For landlords with well-maintained properties in the $650–$850 range in Crowley, marketing to school district and hospital employees tends to attract the most reliable long-term tenants.

The Eviction Process in Acadia Parish

Louisiana calls its eviction filing a Rule to Show Cause rather than a Complaint for Unlawful Detainer or Unlawful Entry and Detainer. The substance is the same — the court orders the tenant to appear and show cause why eviction should not be granted — but the terminology and procedural rules are Louisiana-specific. Begin with a written 5-day notice to vacate, served personally, by domiciliary service (handing to a person of suitable age at the residence), or by affixing to the door and sending first class mail if no one of suitable age is found (CCP Art. 4704). After the 5-day period expires without compliance, file a Rule to Show Cause in Crowley City Court (for properties within Crowley city limits) or the 15th Judicial District Court (for properties outside city limits). The court sets a hearing date, the rule is served on the tenant at least 2 days before the hearing, and the judge rules. If the lessor prevails, judgment of eviction is entered and the tenant has 24 hours to vacate voluntarily before the lessor may obtain a writ of possession enforced by the Acadia Parish Sheriff.

Security deposits must be returned with an itemized written statement of deductions within 30 days of lease termination or the surrender and acceptance of the premises, whichever occurs later (R.S. 9:3252). The deposit cap is 2 months’ rent (R.S. 9:3251). Failure to return the deposit with proper accounting within 30 days exposes the lessor to liability for the full deposit amount plus reasonable attorney fees and court costs — and bad faith is presumed if no itemized statement is provided, which can add actual damages to the recovery.

This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Louisiana landlord-tenant law is subject to change and differs significantly from the law of other states. Consult a licensed Louisiana attorney or contact Crowley City Court at (337) 788-4116 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Parishes

⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Louisiana landlord-tenant law is governed by the Civil Code and differs significantly from the law of other states. Consult a licensed Louisiana attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.

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