A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Crow Wing County, Minnesota
Crow Wing County is perhaps the quintessential Minnesota lake country county — a place where the working-class railroad and manufacturing heritage of Brainerd coexists with one of the most active recreational real estate and tourism economies in the Upper Midwest. For landlords, this dual character creates a market with genuine depth and diversity: a year-round residential market in Brainerd and Baxter anchored by healthcare, manufacturing, and public sector employment, alongside a sprawling seasonal economy across hundreds of lakes that generates both short-term rental opportunity and seasonal workforce housing demand.
Brainerd: Railroad City and Regional Hub
Brainerd was founded in 1870 as a crossing point for the Northern Pacific Railroad over the Mississippi River, and the city’s identity as a railroad town persisted for over a century through the Burlington Northern shops that employed hundreds of skilled tradespeople. While the railroad shop era has largely passed, it left behind a community culture of blue-collar work ethic and civic pride that persists in Brainerd today. The city serves as the commercial, governmental, and healthcare center for a broad region: its downtown, its school district, and its county government anchor the year-round economy alongside Essentia Health St. Joseph’s Medical Center — the region’s primary hospital and one of the county’s largest employers. Central Lakes College, a two-year institution in the Minnesota State system, enrolls several thousand students and generates modest rental demand from students and faculty.
Manufacturing also remains significant in Crow Wing County. Toro Company, the lawn and snow equipment manufacturer headquartered in Bloomington, has manufacturing operations in the Brainerd area that employ skilled production workers. These manufacturing employees represent a stable, middle-income rental segment that complements the healthcare professional market. The combined effect of Essentia Health, manufacturing, county government, and the school district is a year-round rental demand base that is solid enough to support the Brainerd-Baxter market independently of the seasonal tourism economy.
Baxter: The Commercial Retail Hub
Baxter, incorporated as a city in 1975 from what had been Brainerd Township, has grown into the region’s dominant retail and commercial corridor. Highway 371 through Baxter hosts the concentration of big-box retail, national restaurant chains, auto dealers, home improvement stores, and medical clinics that serve the entire Brainerd Lakes Area. Baxter’s population has grown steadily as residential development has pushed outward from Brainerd’s core, and the city’s newer housing stock and access to the regional retail amenities make it attractive for families and professionals. The Baxter rental market tends toward newer construction and higher price points than older Brainerd neighborhoods.
The Lakes Economy: Gull Lake and Beyond
Beyond the Brainerd-Baxter core, Crow Wing County is defined by its hundreds of lakes. Gull Lake — one of the premier recreational lakes in the Brainerd Lakes Area, with a full-service marina economy and several nationally recognized resorts including Madden’s and Grand View Lodge — sits northwest of Brainerd and anchors the high-end resort and second-home market. Pelican Lake, Whitefish Lake, Crosslake and the Whitefish Chain, and dozens of other lakes spread across the county support resorts, cabin communities, fishing operations, and the full spectrum of lake recreation businesses. Golf is also a major draw: the Brainerd area hosts several courses of national stature including Deacon’s Lodge and The Classic at Madden’s, drawing golf tourists throughout the summer and fall.
For landlords, the lakes economy creates both opportunity and complexity. Short-term vacation rental demand on the lakeshores is intense during summer months, and landlords who own lakefront or lake-adjacent properties face the same short-term vs. long-term trade-off familiar in other Minnesota lake counties. Landlords in the resort and lake communities should verify whether Crow Wing County or individual municipalities have enacted short-term rental registration requirements. For year-round leases, seasonal hospitality workers — resort staff, restaurant workers, marina employees — can fill units but represent higher turnover risk than the healthcare and manufacturing workforce in the city core.
Remote Workers and the New Lake Country Demographic
The COVID-era normalization of remote work accelerated a trend that was already underway in the Brainerd Lakes Area: the migration of Twin Cities professionals and families to lake country communities for full-time or hybrid residence. With reliable broadband increasingly available in the Brainerd area and the region’s quality-of-life advantages well established, remote workers who previously only visited on weekends have become year-round residents. This demographic segment — often dual-income households with children, working in technology, finance, or professional services from home offices in lake-adjacent residences — has added demand for higher-quality year-round rentals in communities like Crosslake, Pequot Lakes, and Nisswa that previously had minimal rental markets.
Legal Framework: Clean State Law Throughout
Crow Wing County operates entirely under Minnesota Ch. 504B with no local overlay. No rent control, no just-cause eviction requirement, no landlord licensing (verify with Brainerd city directly for any municipal program). Evictions file at Crow Wing County District Court in Brainerd. Security deposits must be returned within 21 days with interest and an itemized statement. Entry requires 24 hours’ advance notice. Heat must be maintained at 68°F from October 1 through April 30. Self-help eviction is illegal.
Crow Wing County landlord-tenant matters are governed by Minn. Stat. Ch. 504B. Nonpayment notice: 14-Day Pay or Vacate (§504B.285). Lease violation: reasonable time to cure. No-cause termination: one full rental period written notice (§504B.135). Security deposit return: 21 days; up to 2× damages for wrongful retention plus attorney’s fees (§504B.178). Security deposit interest required annually at MN Dept. of Commerce rate. Landlord entry: 24 hours’ advance notice required (§504B.195). Minimum heat: 68°F, Oct. 1–Apr. 30. No rent control. No just-cause eviction requirement. Eviction actions filed at Crow Wing County District Court, Brainerd. Self-help eviction: illegal, up to $500/day civil penalty + misdemeanor (§504B.375). No tribal trust land complications. Minneapolis just-cause ordinance does not apply. Last updated: April 2026.
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