A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Androscoggin County, Maine
Androscoggin County occupies a unique and increasingly important position in Maine’s rental landscape. It is not the most expensive market in the state — that distinction belongs to Cumberland County and the Greater Portland area — but it is arguably the most dynamic. The Lewiston-Auburn metropolitan area has undergone a remarkable transformation over the past two decades, evolving from a struggling post-industrial city pair into one of the most talked-about urban turnaround stories in northern New England. For landlords, this transformation creates real opportunity: a growing renter population, tightening vacancies, rising rents that still remain accessible relative to Portland, and an improving economic foundation that points toward continued demand.
Lewiston: Maine’s Second City Reinvented
Lewiston was built on textiles. The great brick mill buildings that line the Androscoggin River were once among the most productive textile facilities in the United States, employing thousands at their peak. The mills closed, as they did across New England, and Lewiston spent decades working through the economic and demographic consequences. What distinguishes Lewiston from similar post-industrial cities across the region is the scale and character of its renewal. Beginning in the early 2000s, Lewiston became one of the primary resettlement destinations in the country for refugees from Sub-Saharan Africa — primarily Somalia and the Congo — and that community has grown into a transformative force in the city’s economy and culture. Today, Lewiston has a vibrant Somali community of roughly 8,000–10,000 residents who have opened businesses, enrolled in schools, entered the healthcare and manufacturing workforce, and revitalized neighborhoods that were previously in decline.
The rental market consequences have been significant. Demand for housing in Lewiston has grown steadily as the city’s population has recovered, as Bates College’s expanding enrollment and faculty presence has created demand for quality rentals near campus, and as remote workers and cost-conscious households priced out of Portland have looked to the Twin Cities as an affordable alternative with improving quality of life. Median rents in Lewiston-Auburn have risen substantially over the past several years and now sit in the range of $1,100–$1,400 for a two-bedroom unit, still well below the $1,800–$2,200+ that comparable units command in Portland. Vacancy rates are tight — typically in the 3–5% range — and the best units move quickly.
Auburn: The County Seat’s Quieter Profile
Auburn, on the opposite bank of the Androscoggin, has a somewhat different character than its larger twin. As the county seat, Auburn is home to the courthouse, county services, and a commercial and residential mix that is somewhat more suburban in feel than Lewiston’s denser urban core. Auburn has seen its own revitalization — the Baxter Boulevard area, the turnpike corridor, and neighborhoods surrounding downtown have attracted investment and new residents — but its rental market is quieter and more stable than Lewiston’s. Landlords who prefer a more predictable management environment with less tenant turnover often find Auburn a better fit. Rents are comparable to Lewiston, and access to Interstate 95 makes Auburn particularly attractive to commuters.
The Legal Framework: Maine’s FED Process in Androscoggin County
All eviction actions in Androscoggin County are filed at the Lewiston District Court as Forcible Entry and Detainer (FED) proceedings. Maine’s FED process is relatively efficient by northeastern standards. For nonpayment of rent, the landlord serves a 7-day written notice to quit. If the tenant does not pay or vacate within 7 days, the landlord may file the FED complaint at Lewiston District Court, pay the filing fee, and receive a hearing date at least 14 days after the tenant is served. The court conducts the hearing, and if the landlord prevails, a writ of possession is issued. After the writ is served by the sheriff or constable, the tenant has 48 hours to vacate. Uncontested FED cases in Androscoggin County typically resolve in 3–5 weeks from notice to writ.
Maine’s anti-retaliation provisions are among the strongest in New England. There is a rebuttable presumption of retaliation if a landlord files an FED action within 6 months of a tenant asserting protected rights — including complaining to code enforcement, which is particularly relevant in Lewiston where code complaints are not uncommon in older buildings. Landlords must ensure that eviction actions are driven by legitimate grounds and that all required statutory procedures are followed precisely. A procedurally defective notice is grounds for dismissal.
Security Deposits and Move-In Costs
Maine caps security deposits at 2 months’ rent and requires that deposits be held in a separate bank account beyond the reach of the landlord’s creditors. For written leases, deposits must be returned within 30 days of the end of the tenancy; for month-to-month tenancies, within 21 days. Wrongful withholding of a security deposit in Maine results in double damages plus attorney’s fees — a meaningful penalty that landlords should take seriously. Move-in costs are now capped under §6022-A: landlords may not charge more than the first month’s rent plus the security deposit plus any properly disclosed mandatory recurring fees. Application fees are limited to the actual cost of a single screening report, and landlords must provide the applicant a copy of that report.
Rent Increases in Androscoggin County
Maine enacted a statewide rent increase notice requirement in 2023 that landlords must follow regardless of what the lease says. For any rent increase, landlords must provide at least 45 days’ written notice. If the proposed increase is 10% or more above the rent charged at any point in the prior 12 months, the notice period extends to 75 days. There is no cap on the amount of increase — Androscoggin County has no rent control — but the notice requirement is strictly enforced. Landlords who serve a rent increase notice without the required lead time expose themselves to valid lease termination claims by tenants who receive a compliant 30-day notice in response.
The Opportunity in Androscoggin County
For landlords willing to engage with a market that requires active management and genuine knowledge of local conditions, Androscoggin County offers a compelling value proposition. Acquisition prices for multi-family properties in Lewiston remain substantially lower than in Portland or the southern Maine coast, cap rates are higher, and the demand trajectory is positive. The tenant base is diverse and includes a high proportion of working households — healthcare workers at Central Maine Medical Center, employees of the growing manufacturing and distribution sectors, college-affiliated renters connected to Bates, and long-term residents of established neighborhoods who represent the most stable tenancy profiles in the county.
The challenges are real and should not be minimized. Lewiston’s older housing stock means higher maintenance costs, more frequent code enforcement attention, and capital improvement needs that eat into returns if not properly budgeted. Some neighborhoods in the city have higher tenant turnover and more complex management demands. Landlords who succeed in Lewiston-Auburn are those who buy carefully, budget honestly for maintenance, screen rigorously within the constraints of Maine law, and treat compliance with the FED process and security deposit rules as non-negotiable. The legal framework is protective of tenants, and landlords who cut corners on procedure consistently lose in court — while those who follow the rules find a market that works.
Androscoggin County landlord-tenant matters are governed by Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 14, §§6001–6039. Nonpayment notice: 7 days. No-cause termination: 30 days. Security deposit cap: 2 months’ rent; return within 30 days (lease) or 21 days (TAW); double damages for wrongful retention. Rent increase notice: 45 days standard, 75 days for ≥10% increases. No rent control in Androscoggin County. Evictions filed at Lewiston District Court as FED actions. Consult a licensed Maine attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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