A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Brunswick County, North Carolina
Brunswick County has been growing faster than almost any other county in North Carolina for the better part of two decades, and that growth is reshaping what it means to be a landlord here. What was once a quiet coastal county of retirees and fishing communities has become a magnet for Wilmington overflow, remote workers priced out of coastal New Hanover County, and retirees drawn by lower taxes, manageable home prices, and proximity to the beach. The county’s population has roughly doubled since 2000, and the residential rental market has scaled with it. Long-term landlords who have been here through the growth cycle have seen demand strengthen steadily; newer investors are entering a market that is competitive but not overbuilt, with vacancy rates staying moderate despite significant construction activity in communities like Leland, Shallotte, and the beach towns.
The county’s geography creates two meaningfully different rental markets that operate by different rules, attract different tenant profiles, and require different management strategies. Understanding which market you’re in β or which you’re entering β is the first decision a Brunswick landlord needs to make.
Long-Term Residential Rentals: The Inland and Transitional Market
The long-term residential market is concentrated in Leland, Shallotte, Bolivia, Supply, and the inland communities along US-17 and NC-87. Leland is the county’s fastest-growing municipality and sits just across the Cape Fear River from Wilmington β close enough to draw a substantial commuter population that works in New Hanover County but lives in Brunswick for the cost advantage. Rents in Leland for a single-family home or newer apartment run from roughly $1,100 to $1,600 per month depending on size and finishes, which represents a meaningful discount from comparable Wilmington rentals. Shallotte, further south, serves as the commercial hub of the southern part of the county and draws a more locally employed tenant base β retail, healthcare, construction, and service workers who support the growing beach economy.
Long-term residential tenancies in Brunswick County are governed entirely by North Carolina state landlord-tenant law under G.S. Chapter 42. There are no local rent control measures (prohibited statewide under G.S. Β§ 42-14.1), no countywide rental registration requirements, and no local lease addenda required. The landlord-tenant relationship here is about as clean from a regulatory standpoint as you’ll find in any NC county β state law applies, and the courthouse in Bolivia handles disputes. For landlords accustomed to more regulated markets, Brunswick’s relatively straightforward legal framework is a genuine advantage.
Beach Town Rentals: Vacation vs. Long-Term Tenancy
The beach municipalities β Sunset Beach, Ocean Isle Beach, Holden Beach, Oak Island, and Caswell Beach β operate under a different economic logic. Property values along the coast are high, and the dominant rental model is short-term vacation rental: weekly stays during summer season, with properties sitting empty or renting at lower rates in the off-season. Landlords who own in these beach towns are typically in the vacation rental business, not the residential tenancy business, and that distinction matters legally. North Carolina’s landlord-tenant statutes (G.S. Chapter 42) apply to residential tenancies, not transient occupancies. Weekly vacation renters are guests, not tenants, and disputes with them are not handled through Summary Ejectment β they are handled through the terms of the rental agreement and, if necessary, civil court.
Each beach municipality regulates short-term rentals with its own rules covering occupancy limits, noise ordinances, parking requirements, and in some cases permit fees or registration requirements. Holden Beach, for example, has active enforcement on occupancy limits and nuisance issues. Ocean Isle Beach and Sunset Beach each have their own codes that govern how rental properties are managed in season. Landlords operating vacation rentals need to be current with the specific town’s ordinances, not just county or state law. This is an area where consulting with a local real estate attorney or a property manager experienced in the specific beach market is worth the investment β the fines for occupancy violations in beach towns can be significant.
Eviction Process in Brunswick County
For long-term residential tenancies, evictions in Brunswick County proceed under standard NC Summary Ejectment procedures. Nonpayment of rent requires a written 10-day demand under G.S. Β§ 42-3 before filing. If the tenant does not pay within the 10-day window, the landlord files a Complaint in Summary Ejectment at the Brunswick County Courthouse in Bolivia. The filing fee is approximately $96. A magistrate hearing is typically scheduled within 7 to 14 days of filing, and the full process from demand through writ of possession takes approximately three to four weeks in an uncontested case.
Lease violations other than nonpayment can be filed immediately without a cure period under NC law. Month-to-month tenancies require a 7-day written notice to quit before filing. After a judgment in the landlord’s favor, the tenant has 10 days to appeal. If no appeal is filed, the clerk issues a writ of possession, and the Brunswick County Sheriff’s Office handles physical removal. As with all NC counties, self-help eviction β locking out tenants, removing belongings, or cutting utilities to force a departure β is illegal and exposes landlords to civil liability. The formal process exists to protect both parties, and following it precisely is both legally required and practically faster than attempting shortcuts that can be challenged in court.
Coastal Property Maintenance and What It Means for Landlords
Owning rental property in Brunswick County’s coastal zone comes with maintenance obligations that go well beyond what inland landlords typically encounter. Salt air corrodes metal fixtures, fasteners, and HVAC components at an accelerated rate. High humidity drives mold and mildew issues in poorly ventilated units. Storm surge and flooding risk β especially in low-lying beach communities and areas near the Intracoastal Waterway β creates insurance complexity and potential habitability issues after storm events. The state’s implied warranty of habitability requires landlords to maintain rental units in a safe, livable condition, and coastal properties that aren’t actively maintained can fall into violation faster than inland properties.
Practical landlording in the coastal zone means establishing a regular maintenance calendar β not just responding to complaints β and budgeting for higher annual maintenance costs than the NC inland average. Landlords who own near the coast should also carry appropriate flood insurance (standard homeowner’s policies don’t cover flood damage), verify that their properties are not in CAMA buffer zones that would restrict repairs or additions, and document the property’s condition thoroughly at move-in and move-out. The latter is especially important in beach communities where tenants sometimes treat vacation-adjacent rentals more casually than they would a typical suburban apartment. Good documentation protects the deposit deduction process under G.S. Β§ 42-52 and keeps disputes manageable. Security deposits are capped at two months’ rent for annual leases under G.S. Β§ 42-51, and must be held in a trust account and returned β with itemized deductions β within 30 days of lease end.
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