A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Polk County, Minnesota
Polk County operates as two distinct rental sub-markets that happen to share county borders. Crookston, the county seat in the county’s interior, is a classic Red River Valley agricultural and institutional city whose rental market is shaped by a University of Minnesota campus, a regional hospital, and a sugar beet processing operation. East Grand Forks, tucked into the county’s eastern corner on the banks of the Red River, is functionally an extension of the Grand Forks, North Dakota metropolitan area — a city rebuilt almost from scratch after a catastrophic 1997 flood that destroyed it more completely than any American city had been destroyed by flood since Johnstown a century before. Understanding both cities, and the distinct forces that shape each, is the starting point for landlords considering Polk County.
Crookston: College Town at the End of the World
The phrase is affectionate, not dismissive — Crookston sits in one of the more remote corners of Minnesota, in a landscape so flat that the horizon is a perfect line and the sky takes up more of your visual field than the land. But within that landscape, the University of Minnesota Crookston (UMC) has created an institutional anchor that gives Crookston a rental market with more depth than its 7,600 residents would otherwise produce. UMC is a four-year polytechnic university within the University of Minnesota system, emphasizing applied bachelor’s degree programs in agriculture, agronomy, food science, business management, engineering technology, natural resources management, and health sciences. Its enrollment of 1,500 to 2,000 students includes both traditional residential students and a significant online student population. The campus employs faculty and staff at professional salary levels who represent the most stable professional rental segment in the city.
Student rental demand in Crookston follows the academic calendar, with peak demand in August before fall semester and a characteristic vacancy pressure in May when students leave for summer. Landlords serving student tenants should structure leases around the academic year when possible, collect security deposits adequate to cover normal end-of-tenancy wear and damage, and document move-in condition carefully. Faculty and staff are the steadier segment — multi-year tenants with predictable incomes who seek quality housing near campus.
American Crystal Sugar and the Agricultural Economy
American Crystal Sugar Company, the farmer-owned cooperative that dominates sugar beet processing in the Red River Valley, operates a major beet processing facility in Crookston. The plant processes beets harvested from farms across the surrounding region during the fall processing campaign, operating around the clock for several months, and maintains year-round employment for maintenance, administrative, and engineering staff. Crystal Sugar employment provides stable working-class and technical-level income that contributes to the Crookston workforce housing market. The surrounding county’s agriculture — sugar beets, wheat, soybeans, and sunflowers on the ancient Lake Agassiz lakebed soils — provides additional agricultural employment.
East Grand Forks: The City That Rebuilt Itself
On April 18, 1997, the Red River crested at East Grand Forks at a level that overwhelmed the city’s flood protection and inundated more than 90 percent of its residential structures — nearly the entire city. The 1997 Grand Forks/East Grand Forks flood was one of the most dramatic natural disaster events in modern American history, televised nationally as residents were evacuated from rooftops and the Red River swallowed a city of nearly 10,000 people. The rebuilding that followed over the next several years was equally remarkable: East Grand Forks invested in a comprehensive permanent flood protection system and rebuilt its housing stock largely from scratch, resulting in a city whose residential inventory is almost entirely post-1997 construction — significantly newer than comparably sized Minnesota cities.
For landlords, EGF’s post-rebuild housing stock is a genuine advantage: newer construction means better energy efficiency, fewer deferred maintenance issues, and properties that are competitive with anything available in the region. The city’s permanent flood protection (a system of dikes and floodwalls completed in the early 2000s) provides meaningful protection against future events, but landlords should verify FEMA flood zone status for any specific property before acquisition and maintain flood insurance awareness regardless of zone designation, given the Red River’s history.
EGF’s rental demand is driven primarily by spillover from the Grand Forks, ND metro economy. UND (University of North Dakota), Altru Health System, the Grand Forks Air Force Base, and the broader Grand Forks employment base draw workers who may prefer Minnesota residency, Minnesota tax treatment, or simply find housing more affordable or available on the Minnesota side of the river. EGF renters commute across the bridge into Grand Forks for work, shopping, and entertainment with the ease of any city neighborhood.
State Law: Clear and Complete
Polk County has no local landlord-tenant ordinances. Minn. Stat. Ch. 504B governs entirely. The key provisions: 14-Day Pay or Vacate for nonpayment (§504B.285); security deposit return within 21 days with annual interest and itemized deductions, 2x damages for wrongful retention (§504B.178); 24-hour advance notice for non-emergency entry (§504B.195); 68°F minimum heat October 1 through April 30; no rent control; no just-cause eviction; self-help eviction illegal up to $500 per day (§504B.375). All evictions go to Polk County District Court in Crookston.
Polk 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 Polk County District Court, Crookston. Self-help eviction: illegal, up to $500/day civil penalty + misdemeanor (§504B.375). EGF landlords: verify FEMA flood zone status and maintain flood insurance awareness for properties near the Red River. Fair Housing Act applies. No tribal trust land complications. Minneapolis just-cause ordinance does not apply. Last updated: April 2026.
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