Prince George’s County Landlord Guide: The University, the Federal Corridor, and a Market in Transformation
Prince George’s County is Maryland’s second most populous jurisdiction, a 487-square-mile county that wraps around Washington, D.C.’s eastern and southeastern edges and contains within it one of the most diverse rental markets in the mid-Atlantic. The county is simultaneously home to the University of Maryland at College Park — a flagship research university with more than 40,000 students — the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Joint Base Andrews in the southern county, some of the closest-in and most transit-accessible D.C. bedroom communities in the metro area, and a significant number of communities that have lagged the broader regional economy and are only now seeing sustained investment attention. Managing rental property in Prince George’s County requires understanding which of these very different market environments your property sits in, because the tenant profile, the demand dynamics, the rent levels, and the practical management considerations vary enormously across the county’s geography.
The regulatory environment adds complexity. Prince George’s County requires a DPIE rental license before any unit may be rented, and its County Code Subtitle 13 provides tenant protections beyond Maryland state law. Unlike Montgomery County, Prince George’s does not currently operate a general rent stabilization program, but its regulatory framework is still more demanding than most Maryland counties and requires specific compliance steps before and during each tenancy.
The DPIE Rental License: First Step Before Renting
The Department of Permitting, Inspections and Enforcement (DPIE) administers Prince George’s County’s rental licensing program. All residential rental properties in the county must be licensed before a tenant is placed, and licenses must be renewed annually. The licensing process may include a rental inspection to verify minimum habitability standards. Contact DPIE at (301) 636-2050 to begin the licensing process and confirm current requirements, fees, and inspection protocols for your specific property type.
An unlicensed property in Prince George’s County creates the same problems it does anywhere in Maryland with a licensing requirement: fines, potential inability to pursue eviction remedies, and a compromised legal position in any dispute with a tenant. Get the license before you hand over keys. Renew it annually without exception. Keep documentation of your current license status permanently in your property file.
The University of Maryland: College Park’s Dominant Demand Driver
The University of Maryland at College Park is one of the largest and most productive research universities in the country, enrolling more than 40,000 students at its flagship campus and employing thousands of faculty, researchers, and staff. Its presence dominates the rental market in College Park and the surrounding communities of Hyattsville, Greenbelt, and Riverdale Park in the county’s northeastern quadrant.
The student rental market in and around College Park operates on academic calendar rhythms, with August move-ins driving the peak of annual activity and May move-outs creating a concentrated turnover period. For landlords with properties within walking or biking distance of campus or the College Park WMATA Green Line station, the applicant pool during peak season is substantial and competition for well-maintained units is real. Vacancy during the summer months is a known and manageable feature of the student market rather than an unusual event.
The College Park student market has evolved significantly in recent years as the university has attracted major corporate tenants to its Discovery District and the surrounding area has gentrified around the new Purple Line light rail construction. The mix of graduate students, university researchers, young professionals working at technology companies adjacent to campus, and undergraduate student households creates a more economically diverse applicant pool than the classic undergraduate student market. Graduate students and research professionals bring stronger and more stable incomes than undergraduates, and they tend to be longer-tenured in their rentals, making them particularly valuable tenants for College Park landlords.
Lease provisions for student and early-professional tenants near UMD should address the matters familiar from the Kent County discussion of Washington College: parental guarantors for financially dependent undergraduates, explicit lease term language that is not governed by the academic calendar, occupancy limits and noise provisions for shared housing, and joint-and-several liability clauses for units rented by groups. For graduate students and research professionals, these provisions are less critical, but income verification using graduate stipend letters or employment verification from university departments or private employers is important.
The Federal Science and Defense Complex
Prince George’s County hosts a remarkable concentration of federal science and defense infrastructure. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt employs roughly 10,000 civil servants and contractors in space science, Earth observation, and technology development — one of NASA’s largest installations. Joint Base Andrews in the southern county hosts the 89th Airlift Wing (which operates Air Force One and other executive transport aircraft) and numerous other Air Force units, employing thousands of military and civilian personnel. The U.S. Census Bureau is headquartered in Suitland. The National Archives, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and multiple other federal agencies have major facilities within the county’s boundaries.
This federal employment base creates a tenant population that shares characteristics with the federal workforce markets described for other Maryland counties: transparent, verifiable income through federal pay scales, relative employment stability, and — for active-duty military near Joint Base Andrews — SCRA lease termination rights that must be understood and planned for. The communities around Andrews, including Camp Springs and Clinton in the southern county, have a significant military household population whose rental behavior is shaped by the PCS cycle as much as by individual choice.
For landlords near JBA, the same SCRA best practices discussed in the Harford County and Anne Arundel County guides apply: understand the termination provisions, build mid-lease turnover into the operating model, maintain units in show-ready condition to minimize re-leasing time, and include a military addendum in leases to active-duty households that acknowledges SCRA rights and establishes a professional communication framework for when orders arrive.
Prince George’s County’s Diverse Rental Submarkets
Prince George’s County contains rental submarkets that differ from each other as dramatically as any county in Maryland. Understanding the submarket your property occupies is as important as understanding the county-wide legal framework.
The inner-ring D.C. border communities — Hyattsville, Mount Rainier, Bladensburg, Seat Pleasant, Capitol Heights, Fairmount Heights — represent some of the county’s oldest housing stock and historically most economically challenged communities. These neighborhoods are undergoing significant change: proximity to D.C. and WMATA Metro access are driving investment and gentrification in some areas, particularly around the Prince George’s Plaza Metro station in Hyattsville and the Route 1 corridor. Lead paint compliance is critical in these communities — many buildings predate 1950 — and the tenant population is economically diverse, ranging from D.C. commuters attracted by affordable rents and Metro access to lower-income local households with more limited alternatives. Income verification is important in this tier.
The College Park / Greenbelt corridor along the WMATA Green Line is driven by UMD, NASA Goddard, and the Purple Line construction that is bringing new transit investment and developer attention to communities along the light rail alignment. This corridor has seen significant apartment construction and mixed-use development around Metro stations, and the tenant profile skews younger and more professionally oriented than the inner-ring communities. Rents in well-positioned College Park apartments have risen substantially as the area has attracted non-student professional renters who value the transit access and proximity to both D.C. and the university community.
The Bowie and suburban east represents Prince George’s County’s more established suburban character — larger homes, quieter neighborhoods, family-oriented communities at greater distance from D.C. and Metro. Bowie (~65,000), the county’s largest city, has a strong middle-class base and a rental market oriented toward family households. Rents are moderate, the applicant pool is stable, and the market lacks the high-density apartment character of the inner ring or the College Park corridor.
The southern county around Camp Springs, Clinton, and Fort Washington is shaped by proximity to Joint Base Andrews and the Potomac River. The military household presence, the longer distance from D.C. Metro access, and the more rural character of communities approaching Charles County create a rental dynamic distinct from the county’s northern and central submarkets.
Lead Paint in Prince George’s Inner-Ring Communities
The inner-ring communities along Prince George’s County’s D.C. border contain some of the oldest housing stock in the county, with substantial pre-1950 construction in Hyattsville, Mount Rainier, Bladensburg, and adjacent areas. Maryland’s MDE registration and lead risk reduction compliance requirements apply to every pre-1978 rental without exception. In neighborhoods where a high proportion of rental units predate World War II and where families with young children are a significant share of the tenant population, lead paint compliance is not a formality — it is an active health and liability matter.
The MDE registration requirement, the lead risk reduction certificate, and the federally mandated disclosure at lease signing are all mandatory for pre-1978 rentals. For pre-1950 properties occupied by families with children under six, full risk reduction standards apply. Landlords acquiring older Prince George’s County properties in the inner-ring communities should commission a lead risk assessment before closing and factor required remediation into the acquisition analysis as a firm cost.
County Code Subtitle 13: What Landlords Need to Know
Prince George’s County Code Subtitle 13 provides the county-level framework for landlord-tenant relations beyond Maryland state law. Subtitle 13 addresses rental licensing, habitability standards, lease requirements, notice provisions, and various tenant protections. It is a meaningful layer of local regulation that landlords must understand in addition to the Maryland Real Property Article.
Some specific areas where Subtitle 13 may exceed state law requirements or add process steps: notice requirements for lease non-renewal or termination may have county-specific timing or content requirements in addition to Maryland’s 60-day statutory standard; habitability and maintenance obligations may be defined in greater detail by county code than by the state statute alone; and landlord retaliation protections — prohibitions on adverse action against tenants who exercise legal rights, including filing housing code complaints — are addressed at the county level with specific procedural consequences.
Because Subtitle 13 is subject to amendment by the County Council and because interpretations may evolve through DPIE enforcement practice and court decisions, landlords operating in Prince George’s County should review the current text of Subtitle 13 with a Maryland attorney experienced in Prince George’s County landlord-tenant law before executing new leases, increasing rents, or initiating any termination or eviction action. The county’s regulatory environment is less complex than Montgomery County’s Chapter 29, but it is more demanding than Maryland state law alone, and treating it as equivalent to state law will produce compliance gaps.
The Upper Marlboro District Court
All Prince George’s County evictions file with the District Court of Maryland for Prince George’s County at 14735 Main Street in Upper Marlboro, MD 20772. Phone: (301) 952-4080, hours Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Upper Marlboro is the county seat and the court’s physical location, which is somewhat removed from the county’s densest population centers — landlords with properties in College Park, Hyattsville, or Bladensburg should account for the drive to Upper Marlboro when planning for court appearances. The 7th Judicial Circuit also serves Calvert and St. Mary’s counties; Prince George’s County matters file exclusively in Upper Marlboro.
Prince George’s County District Court processes a substantial landlord-tenant docket given the county’s 970,000 residents and 40% renter-occupied housing share. FTPR hearings are typically scheduled within 5 to 15 business days of filing, though the docket’s volume can extend scheduling during busy periods. Total timeline from filing to possession in a straightforward nonpayment case runs approximately 35 to 75 days.
Maryland’s standard eviction procedure applies: FTPR immediately upon nonpayment, right of redemption up to four times in 12 months, Breach of Lease requires prior written notice and cure, Holding Over requires 60-day written termination notice for month-to-month tenancies. County code requirements for notices may add additional content or timing obligations beyond the state baseline — verify current Subtitle 13 notice requirements before serving any termination notice. Business entities must retain a Maryland attorney; individual landlords may appear pro se.
Security Deposits in Prince George’s County
Maryland’s two-month deposit cap applies statewide. In Prince George’s County’s higher-rent submarkets — College Park apartments near Metro, new construction in Hyattsville, suburban Bowie — deposits of $3,000 to $4,000 are not unusual. The full statutory compliance framework is required: federally insured interest-bearing account, separate from operating funds, written move-in condition inventory at lease signing, itemized return within 45 days of vacating. The three-times-wrongful-withholding penalty applies in full.
In the county’s older inner-ring communities with pre-1950 housing, the move-in documentation is especially important. Document pre-existing conditions — aged flooring, original fixtures, patched walls, older appliances — with photographs and written checklists signed by the tenant at move-in. These documents are your protection against move-out claims that attribute pre-existing wear to tenant damage.
Source of Income and Housing Choice Vouchers
Maryland’s source of income protection prevents landlords from refusing to rent solely because a prospective tenant intends to use a Housing Choice Voucher. Prince George’s County has a significant voucher population, and the county’s Housing Authority administers the local program. Landlords interested in participating in the voucher program must pass a Housing Quality Standards (HQS) inspection conducted by the Housing Authority. For licensed, code-compliant properties, HQS inspections are generally straightforward.
Apply screening criteria consistently to every applicant regardless of payment source. In a county with a 9.8% poverty rate and a diverse economic profile across its many communities, the applicant pool can vary significantly from one neighborhood to another. Consistent documented screening practices are essential for fair housing compliance.
Prince George’s County in Transition
Prince George’s County is a market in genuine transition. For much of the past half century, the county lagged its neighbor Montgomery County in income growth, investment, and development attention despite sharing a D.C. border and WMATA Metro access. That pattern has been shifting. The University of Maryland’s growing national research profile, the Purple Line light rail (currently under construction, connecting the county’s major employment and activity centers to Metro and beyond), significant private investment in communities along the Route 1 corridor and around Metro stations, and deliberate county policy to attract private sector investment have combined to create conditions for sustained improvement.
For landlords, this trajectory means that well-located properties in transit-accessible communities — College Park, Hyattsville, Greenbelt, Riverdale Park — are likely to see sustained demand and incremental rent growth as the county’s trajectory continues. The Purple Line in particular, when completed, will fundamentally change the transit access calculation for several communities that are currently car-dependent and will connect them to a broader regional labor market.
The landlords who will benefit most from Prince George’s County’s evolution are those who buy correctly priced properties in well-positioned communities, obtain the DPIE license before renting, comply with Subtitle 13 requirements, maintain properties in code-compliant condition, screen tenants carefully and consistently, and operate with the procedural precision that Maryland state law and county code jointly demand. The market is improving. The regulatory requirements are real. Both of these things are true simultaneously, and operating successfully in Prince George’s County requires holding them both.
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