A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Washington County, North Carolina
Washington County is one of those places that most North Carolinians have never visited and many could not locate on a map. It sits in the Inner Banks, that stretch of coastal plain between the Outer Banks barrier islands and the Piedmont, where the Roanoke River empties into Albemarle Sound. The county is flat, rural, and sparsely populated — around 11,500 people spread across 350 square miles of farmland, swamp, and blackwater river bottom. Plymouth, the county seat and only incorporated town, has a population of around 3,500 and serves as the commercial center for the surrounding agricultural region.
For landlords, Washington County represents the far end of the rural spectrum. The rental market is tiny, rents are among the lowest in the state, and demand is limited to the modest working-class population employed in agriculture, timber, fishing, and the small local service economy. This is not a market for investors seeking scale or appreciation. It is a market for those who already have a connection to the area, who can acquire properties at minimal cost, and who understand that managing rentals in a place this remote requires patience and realistic expectations.
Plymouth and the Washington County Economy
Plymouth is a town with history. It was the site of the second-largest Civil War battle in North Carolina, and the downtown retains some historic character from its 19th-century commercial peak. Today, Plymouth functions as a small regional service center for Washington County and parts of neighboring Tyrrell, Martin, and Bertie counties. Basic retail, a hospital, schools, and county government provide the limited employment base.
The broader economy is agricultural. Row crops — corn, soybeans, cotton, peanuts — dominate the landscape. Timber operations harvest the pine plantations that cover much of the county. Commercial fishing on Albemarle Sound adds a modest contribution. These are seasonal, cyclical industries that do not generate the steady employment base that supports robust rental demand.
The result is a rental market that is genuinely small. There are no apartment complexes of any significant size in Washington County. Rental housing consists almost entirely of single-family homes and mobile homes scattered across the county. Many residents own their homes outright, having inherited properties or purchased at prices that make renting unnecessary. Those who do rent tend to be workers in seasonal industries, young families who have not yet accumulated a down payment, or individuals whose circumstances make homeownership impractical.
Rental Market Dynamics
Median rents in Washington County run around $650 — among the lowest in North Carolina. At these price points, the economics of rental investment are challenging. A $650 monthly rent generates $7,800 annually before expenses. Even if acquisition costs are low, the absolute dollar return is modest, and any vacancy hits hard as a percentage of annual income.
The vacancy rate in Washington County runs higher than the state average, reflecting both limited demand and the condition of some of the available housing stock. Properties that are well-maintained and properly priced can find tenants, but the tenant pool is small and landlords must be realistic about the time required to fill vacancies.
Tenant quality varies. The working-class tenant base includes reliable long-term renters who pay consistently and take care of properties. It also includes tenants with limited financial resources who may struggle during agricultural off-seasons or when employment is disrupted. Screening is essential, and landlords should verify income stability rather than just income level.
Legal Framework: Clean and Simple
Washington County applies North Carolina landlord-tenant law without any local modifications. There are no rental registration requirements, no licensing programs, no proactive inspection regimes, and no local ordinances that add obligations beyond state statute. Plymouth has not adopted municipal rental regulations. Landlords operate under G.S. Chapter 42 exclusively.
Security deposits follow state rules: capped at two months’ rent under G.S. § 42-51 for leases longer than month-to-month. At $650 median rent, the maximum deposit is $1,300. This is enough to provide some protection against damage and nonpayment, though at these rent levels even a maximum deposit may not cover extensive repairs or multiple months of lost rent. Deposits must be held in a trust account at a federally insured institution, with written notice to the tenant within 30 days identifying the bank and account type.
Evictions for nonpayment require the 10-day written demand specified in G.S. § 42-3. The demand must state the amount owed and provide at least 10 days for the tenant to pay or vacate before the landlord can file Summary Ejectment. Documentation of proper service is essential. In a small community where landlords and tenants often know each other, the temptation to handle things informally is real — but informal arrangements create legal exposure. Get everything in writing.
The Washington County Courthouse
Summary Ejectment filings go to the Washington County Courthouse in Plymouth. The courthouse is small, the staff is limited, and the eviction docket is among the lightest in the state. Most landlords in Washington County will never need to file an eviction case. When cases do arise, they move quickly — hearings are typically scheduled within days of filing, faster than almost anywhere else in North Carolina.
The filing fee runs approximately $96, and sheriff service costs about $30 per tenant. Magistrates in Washington County handle a minimal volume of eviction cases but are familiar with the straightforward nonpayment and lease violation matters that constitute the standard docket. Landlords who bring complete documentation — signed lease, properly served 10-day notice with proof of delivery, and a rent ledger — can expect efficient proceedings.
After judgment, tenants have 10 days to appeal to District Court. If no appeal is filed, the landlord requests a Writ of Possession and the sheriff executes within five days, providing the tenant with two days’ notice before lockout. The entire process from initial notice to possession can run under two weeks in an uncomplicated case.
Property Considerations
Properties in Washington County face specific challenges related to climate and infrastructure. The coastal plain climate is humid, and moisture control is a constant concern. Older homes may have issues with mold, mildew, and wood rot that require ongoing attention. Roofing, siding, and HVAC systems take a beating from the hot, humid summers and occasional severe weather.
Most properties outside Plymouth rely on well water and septic systems. Wells require periodic testing for water quality, and landlords should ensure tenants understand proper well maintenance. Septic systems need regular pumping and cannot handle certain types of waste — tenant education on proper septic use prevents expensive failures.
Flood risk is a consideration in parts of the county, particularly near the Roanoke River and the numerous creeks and swamps that characterize the landscape. Properties in flood-prone areas require appropriate insurance and may face periodic flooding that disrupts tenancy. Landlords should understand the flood history and insurance requirements for any property they acquire.
The Bottom Line
Washington County is not a market for most rental investors. The numbers are too small, the tenant pool is too limited, and the distance from any significant population center makes management challenging for anyone without local ties. But for landlords who already have a connection to the area — inherited properties, family in the region, or a deliberate strategy focused on ultra-low-cost acquisition — Washington County offers a clean legal environment, minimal regulatory burden, and the fastest court process in the state when eviction becomes necessary. The opportunity exists, but it requires clear eyes about what this market can and cannot deliver.
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