#1 Landlord Community
⚖️ Eviction Laws
🔄 Compare Evictions
📚 State Laws
🔎 Search Laws
🏛️ Courthouse Finder
⏱ Timeline Tool
📖 Glossary
📊 Scorecard
💰 Security Deposits
🏠 Back to Legal Resources Hub
🏠 Law-Buddy
🏠 Compare State Laws
🏠 Quick Eviction Data
🔎 Notice Calculator
🔎 Cost Estimator
🔎 Timeline Calculator
🔎 Eviction Readiness
💰 Full Landlord Tenant Laws

Maryland State Flag
Dorchester County · Maryland

Dorchester County Landlord-Tenant Law

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

🏛️ County Seat: Cambridge
👥 Population: ~31,000
🏭 Eastern Shore • Choptank River • Blackwater NWR • 1st Circuit

Landlord-Tenant Law in Dorchester County, Maryland

Dorchester County occupies the heart of Maryland’s lower Eastern Shore, stretching from the Choptank River in the north to the Nanticoke River in the south and encompassing vast tidal marshlands, including the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge — one of the most important waterfowl habitats on the Atlantic Flyway. With approximately 31,000 residents, it is one of Maryland’s least populous counties and one of its most economically challenged. Cambridge (~12,000), the county seat and sole city, sits on the south bank of the Choptank River and serves as the county’s commercial and judicial center. The county’s economy draws on seafood processing, poultry operations, healthcare, government services, and a growing outdoor recreation and heritage tourism sector. Approximately 33% of housing units are renter-occupied. All residential evictions file with the District Court of Maryland for Dorchester County at 206 High Street, Cambridge, MD 21613. Court phone: (410) 901-1430. Hours: Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The 1st Judicial Circuit also serves Somerset, Wicomico, and Worcester counties. Median household income is approximately $47,500 — among Maryland’s lowest. The poverty rate is approximately 18.6% — one of the state’s highest. All landlord-tenant matters are governed by Maryland Real Property Article §§ 8-101 through 8-604.

Allegany Anne Arundel Baltimore County Baltimore City Calvert Caroline
Carroll Cecil Charles Dorchester Frederick Garrett
Harford Howard Kent Montgomery Prince George’s Queen Anne’s
Somerset St. Mary’s Talbot Washington Wicomico Worcester

📊 Dorchester County Quick Stats

County Seat / Largest City Cambridge (~12,000)
Renter Share ~33% of housing units renter-occupied
County Population ~31,000 (slow decline)
Median Household Income ~$47,500 — among Maryland’s lowest
Poverty Rate ~18.6% — among Maryland’s highest
Landlord Rating 4/10 — High poverty, aging stock, thin applicant pool

⚖️ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Action Failure to Pay Rent (FTPR) — file after rent is due
Month-to-Month Termination 60-Day Written Notice Required
Court District Court of Maryland — Dorchester County, Cambridge
Court Phone (410) 901-1430
Court Hours Mon–Fri 8:30am–4:30pm
Avg Timeline 25–50 days start to finish

Dorchester County Local Regulations

No county-level rental registration requirement. Maryland state law governs all residential landlord-tenant matters in Dorchester County.

Category Details
Local Ordinances Dorchester County has no county-level landlord-tenant ordinances or rental registration requirements beyond Maryland state law. The City of Cambridge maintains its own property maintenance and housing codes. Cambridge has historically enforced housing code complaints and may conduct inspections on receipt of tenant complaints. Confirm current City of Cambridge requirements at (410) 228-4020 before renting within city limits.
Rent Control Prohibited statewide. Dorchester County and the City of Cambridge may not impose rent caps or stabilization measures. Month-to-month rent increases require 60-day written notice under Maryland Real Property Article § 8-402.
Security Deposit Capped at two months’ rent (Real Property Article § 8-203). Must be held in a federally insured interest-bearing account in a Maryland institution, separate from operating funds. Return within 45 days of vacating with itemized written deduction statement. Willful noncompliance: liability for up to three times the withheld amount plus attorney’s fees.
Lead Paint Pre-1978 rental properties must be registered with the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) and comply with lead risk reduction standards. Cambridge has substantial pre-1950 housing stock — lead paint compliance is a critical priority for virtually all Cambridge rental inventory. Contact MDE Lead Division: (410) 537-3825. Noncompliance carries severe civil liability risk.
District Court of Maryland All residential evictions file with the District Court of Maryland for Dorchester County, 206 High Street, Cambridge, MD 21613. Phone: (410) 901-1430. Hours: Mon–Fri 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The 1st Judicial Circuit serves Dorchester, Somerset, Wicomico, and Worcester counties; Dorchester County matters file in Cambridge.
Flood Zone Awareness Significant portions of Dorchester County, including some Cambridge neighborhoods, lie within FEMA-designated flood zones. Landlords renting properties in flood zones should carry appropriate flood insurance, disclose flood zone status to tenants, and address lease provisions related to flooding events and displacement. Check FEMA’s Flood Map Service Center for specific property flood zone status.
Business Entity Requirement LLCs, corporations, and other business entities must be represented by a licensed Maryland attorney in all District Court proceedings. Individual owners may appear pro se.

Last verified: 2026-04-01

🏛️ District Court of Maryland — Dorchester County

206 High Street, Cambridge, MD 21613

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Maryland

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Dorchester County eviction

💰 Eviction Costs: Maryland
Filing Fee 15-46
Total Est. Range $100-$400
Service: — Writ: —

Maryland Eviction Laws

State statutes that apply throughout Dorchester County

⚡ Quick Overview

10
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
30
Days Notice (Violation)
30-60
Avg Total Days
$15-46
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 10-Day Notice of Intent to File (Summary Ejectment)
Notice Period 10 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay all rent owed plus court costs at any time before actual execution of eviction order (right of redemption). Exception: after 3 judgments in 12 months (4 in Baltimore City), court enters judgment with No Right of Redemption.
Days to Hearing 5-15 days
Days to Writ 7 days
Total Estimated Timeline 30-60 days
Total Estimated Cost $100-$400
⚠️ Watch Out

CRITICAL: Landlord must have current rental license (most counties/Baltimore City) and lead paint registration (pre-1978 properties) to file. 10-day written notice required before filing - must use official form DC-CV-115. After judgment, tenant has 7 business days to pay before warrant issues. Right of redemption allows tenant to pay ALL amounts due before sheriff executes eviction - but lost after 3 judgments in 12 months (4 in Baltimore City). Renters' Rights and Stabilization Act (2024) expanded protections.

Underground Landlord

📝 Maryland 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 District Court of Maryland. Pay the filing fee (~$15-46).
  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 Maryland 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 Maryland attorney or local legal aid organization.
🐛 See an error on this page? Let us know
Underground Landlord Underground Landlord
🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Maryland landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Maryland — 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 Maryland's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
Ready to File?

Generate Maryland-Compliant Legal Documents

AI-generated, state-specific eviction notices, pay-or-quit letters, lease termination documents, and more — pre-filled with your tenant's information and built to Maryland requirements.

Generate a Document → View AI Hub →

⏱ Notice Period Calculator

Calculate your required notice period

📋 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.
Underground LandlordUnderground Landlord

🏙️ Communities in Dorchester County

Cities and communities

Cambridge
Hurlock
East New Market
Secretary
Church Creek
Vienna
Linkwood
Dorchester County

High Poverty, High Due Diligence

18.6% poverty rate — income verify rigorously. Cambridge housing stock largely pre-1950 — lead paint compliance non-negotiable. Flood zone awareness required. 60-day notice for month-to-month. No county registration. LLCs need Maryland attorney.

Run a Tenant Background Check →

Renting in Dorchester County: A Candid Look at Maryland’s Lower Eastern Shore Rental Market

Dorchester County demands honesty from anyone writing about it as a rental market. With a poverty rate of approximately 18.6% and a median household income of roughly $47,500 — both among the worst in Maryland — and a population that has been declining slowly for decades, this is not a market that rewards optimistic assumptions or sloppy underwriting. The county is genuinely beautiful: the vast tidal marshes of the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge, the Choptank River waterfront at Cambridge, the quiet rural roads threading through centuries-old agricultural land. But beauty does not pay rent, and a landlord who approaches Dorchester County without clear eyes about its economic challenges will not last long.

That said, Dorchester County does have a rental market. Cambridge has approximately 12,000 residents, a significant share of whom rent rather than own. The county’s economy provides employment in healthcare, food processing, government services, and a growing outdoor recreation sector. Housing acquisition costs are among the lowest in Maryland, and the combination of low purchase prices and steady rental demand from a limited-options renter population can produce cash flow positive outcomes for landlords who operate with discipline. This guide covers what that operation actually requires: lead paint compliance in one of Maryland’s most challenging older housing markets, flood zone realities, the Cambridge District Court process, tenant screening in a high-poverty environment, and the Maryland state law framework that governs every tenancy in the county.

Cambridge: The County’s Sole City and Its Housing Stock

Cambridge is Dorchester County in miniature — everything significant in the county happens here or in relation to it. The city sits on the south bank of the Choptank River, connected to the Eastern Shore’s highway network via US-50 and Maryland Route 16. Cambridge has a downtown that has been slowly revitalizing over the past decade, with waterfront development, new restaurants, and some boutique retail beginning to take root alongside the legacy commercial district that has served the county since the nineteenth century.

The housing stock that makes up Cambridge’s rental inventory is old. A significant majority of Cambridge’s residential buildings were constructed before 1950, and many date to the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when Cambridge was a prosperous seafood processing and maritime trade center on the Choptank. These are genuinely old buildings — wood-frame row houses, converted single-family homes, older apartment conversions — with the accumulated deferred maintenance, aging systems, and lead paint hazards that buildings of that age accumulate when they cycle through multiple ownership generations in a low-income market.

For landlords, Cambridge’s older housing stock creates a specific set of obligations and risks that must be taken seriously. Lead paint compliance is not a checkbox item here — it is a fundamental operating requirement that affects every pre-1978 property, which in Cambridge means essentially every property. Aging plumbing and electrical systems in pre-war structures require capital budgeting that reflects the actual cost of maintaining them, not just the carrying cost at acquisition. And the habitability standards that Maryland’s Real Property Article imposes on landlords apply with full force regardless of how low the rent is or how modest the acquisition price was.

Lead Paint: The Non-Negotiable in Cambridge’s Rental Market

If there is one single compliance issue that defines landlord risk in Cambridge and Dorchester County, it is lead paint. The housing stock is old, the tenant population includes a meaningful share of families with young children, and Maryland’s lead paint liability framework is designed specifically to address situations like this one. Landlords who operate pre-1978 rentals in Cambridge without current MDE registration and lead risk reduction certification are carrying liability that far exceeds the value of any rent they collect.

The requirements are statutory and non-negotiable: register every pre-1978 rental property with the Maryland Department of the Environment annually, obtain a lead risk reduction certificate from a Maryland-accredited inspector, and provide the federally mandated lead hazard disclosure form and pamphlet to every tenant at lease signing. For properties built before 1950 — most of Cambridge’s rental stock — that are occupied by families with children under six, full lead risk reduction standards apply, which may require a certified lead risk assessment and targeted remediation of identified hazards.

Maryland law creates a presumption of landlord liability when a child in an unregistered or noncompliant rental property is found to have elevated blood lead levels. In a market where rents may be $800 per month on a small Cambridge row house, a single lead paint liability judgment can represent years of lost rental income and then some. This is not a risk category where cutting corners is rational economics — it is the category where cutting corners produces outcomes that end landlord careers.

Get current on MDE registration for every pre-1978 property you own. Get the lead risk reduction certificate. Provide the disclosures. Keep copies of everything permanently. If you are purchasing Cambridge property, factor the lead inspection and any required remediation into your acquisition analysis as a firm cost, not a contingency.

Flood Zones and Tidal Risk: A Dorchester County Reality

Dorchester County is one of the most vulnerable jurisdictions in Maryland to sea level rise and tidal flooding. The county’s topography is exceptionally flat — much of the county sits only a few feet above sea level — and its vast tidal marshlands are actively subsiding as sea levels rise. The Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge has lost thousands of acres of marsh to open water over the past several decades, a process that is ongoing and accelerating. Cambridge itself has neighborhoods that flood regularly during major storm events and increasingly during high tides.

For landlords, this creates specific obligations and practical considerations that go beyond the legal minimum. First, FEMA flood zone status: many Cambridge and Dorchester County properties are located in Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs) designated by FEMA. Properties in SFHAs with federally backed mortgages are required to carry flood insurance, but even properties without mortgage requirements benefit from flood coverage in a county with Dorchester’s tidal exposure. Check the FEMA Flood Map Service Center for the specific flood zone designation of any property before purchasing or renting.

Second, disclosure: while Maryland does not have a specific statewide flood disclosure requirement for residential rentals equivalent to what some states mandate, a landlord who knowingly rents a property in a flood zone without informing the tenant is creating a relationship based on information asymmetry that will produce disputes and potential liability when the property floods. Disclosing flood zone status in the lease is both the ethical and the practical approach. Include a provision acknowledging the flood zone designation, the availability of flood insurance for the tenant’s personal property, and the landlord’s flood insurance coverage for the structure.

Third, lease provisions for displacement: a lease for a property in a flood-prone area should address what happens if the property becomes temporarily uninhabitable due to flooding. Who is responsible for emergency accommodation costs? What is the timeline for repairs before the tenant may consider the lease constructively terminated? These are questions that become urgent during and after flooding events, and addressing them in advance in a written lease provision is far better than negotiating them in the aftermath of a crisis.

Tenant Screening in a High-Poverty Market

Dorchester County’s 18.6% poverty rate and $47,500 median household income create the most challenging tenant screening environment of any Maryland county covered in this guide. The applicant pool is real — there are people who need to rent in Cambridge — but finding applicants who meet a standard three-times-rent income threshold at rents that produce acceptable cash flow is genuinely harder here than in most Maryland markets.

This creates the same pressure that rural and high-poverty markets always create: the temptation to lower screening standards rather than absorb extended vacancy. The consequences of yielding to that temptation in a market with low rents and limited financial cushion are severe. A nonpayment situation, an eviction proceeding, and the cost of returning a poorly maintained unit to rentable condition can consume many months of the modest cash flow that drew the investor to the market in the first place.

The discipline required in Dorchester County is not different from what any well-run rental business requires — it is simply more important here because the margin for error is thinner. Apply income verification consistently: request pay stubs for the most recent 60 days, verify employment directly, and consider the source and stability of income carefully. A Cambridge healthcare worker at Dorchester General Hospital has a meaningfully different income profile than a seasonal seafood processing worker, and your lease terms and screening depth should reflect that difference without discriminating against protected classes.

Maryland’s source of income protection means you cannot refuse to rent solely because an applicant intends to use a Housing Choice Voucher. Dorchester County has a voucher population, and the local housing authority administers the program. Voucher tenants whose income is primarily the voucher subsidy may meet income standards differently than market-rate tenants — understand how the voucher program calculates tenant contribution versus the housing authority’s payment before evaluating a voucher application against your income standard.

The Cambridge District Court

All Dorchester County evictions file with the District Court of Maryland for Dorchester County at 206 High Street in Cambridge, MD 21613. Phone: (410) 901-1430, hours Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Dorchester County is part of the 1st Judicial Circuit, which also serves Somerset, Wicomico, and Worcester counties. The Cambridge District Court processes a modest docket given the county’s small population, and FTPR hearings are typically scheduled within 5 to 10 business days of filing.

The standard Maryland eviction procedure applies. FTPR may be filed immediately once rent is past due. At the hearing, the tenant retains the right of redemption — paying all rent owed plus court costs stops the eviction, up to four times in a 12-month period. After judgment, the landlord requests a Warrant of Restitution, and the Dorchester County Sheriff’s Office schedules the physical removal. In a small county court with a light docket, the total timeline from filing to possession in a straightforward case is typically 25 to 50 days.

Breach of Lease requires prior written notice and opportunity to cure. Holding Over requires proper 60-day written notice to terminate a month-to-month tenancy. Business entities must retain a Maryland attorney. Individual landlords may represent themselves.

Cambridge’s Revitalization: A Cautious Note on Opportunity

Cambridge has been the subject of genuine revitalization attention in recent years, with waterfront development, investment in the historic downtown, some boutique hospitality development, and growing interest from outdoor recreation and heritage tourism visitors drawn by the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge, the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway, and the Choptank River. The Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad National Historical Park, which interprets Tubman’s life and the Underground Railroad network she operated in Dorchester County, has brought visitor traffic and some ancillary economic development to the region.

This revitalization is real but incremental. It has not yet fundamentally transformed the economic profile of the city’s resident population, and the improvements visible in the downtown and waterfront have not uniformly reached the residential neighborhoods where most rental housing is concentrated. Landlords who are attracted to Cambridge by the revitalization narrative should visit the specific neighborhoods where they intend to invest, assess the actual condition of comparable rental inventory, and underwrite conservatively rather than projecting rapid appreciation or rent growth that the market has not yet demonstrated.

The investors who will benefit most from whatever trajectory Cambridge is on are those who buy at prices that work today, manage carefully, maintain compliance rigorously, and hold long enough to benefit from incremental improvement. That is a patient strategy, and Dorchester County is a market that requires patience.

Security Deposits and Habitability in Older Cambridge Stock

Maryland’s two-month deposit cap and 45-day return deadline apply in full. In Cambridge, where rents for a two-bedroom may range from $750 to $1,100, maximum deposits are modest in absolute terms but still require the full statutory compliance framework: interest-bearing account, separate from operating funds, written move-in inventory, itemized return within 45 days.

The habitability obligation under Maryland Real Property Article § 8-211 is especially relevant in Cambridge’s aging housing stock. Landlords must maintain rental property in a condition fit for human habitation throughout the tenancy. In older buildings, this means proactive attention to heating systems before winter, plumbing that may have decades of mineral buildup and corrosion, roofing and weatherproofing that deteriorates faster in the Dorchester County climate, and any other systems that age-related deterioration is likely to affect. A landlord who collects a modest Cambridge rent while allowing a building to deteriorate toward uninhabitability is not only facing legal exposure — they are building toward an outcome that will cost far more to repair than any annual deferred maintenance savings could justify.

Dorchester County is not the right market for absentee investors who want passive income from aging buildings. It is a market for active operators who understand what they are managing, price their investments accordingly, and maintain their properties as businesses rather than neglected assets.

Neighboring Maryland Counties

← View All Maryland Landlord-Tenant Law

Disclaimer: This page provides general information about landlord-tenant law in Dorchester County, Maryland and is not legal advice. Always verify current requirements with the District Court of Maryland for Dorchester County or a licensed Maryland attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

📋

View Membership Plans

Compare plans and pricing.

Explore by State

ALAKAZARCACOCTDEDCFLGAHIIDILINIAKSKYLAMEMDMAMIMNMSMOMTNENVNHNJNMNYNCNDOHOKORPARISCSDTNTXUTVTVAWAWVWIWY

Click any state to explore resources

🏠

Manage Your Properties

Track every expense automatically.

Browse Laws by State

AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT DE DC FL GA HI
ID IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MD MA MI MN
MS MO MT NE NV NH NJ NM NY NC ND OH
OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT VA WA
WV WI WY