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Lander County Nevada
Lander County · Nevada

Lander County Landlord-Tenant Law

Battle Mountain — the self-proclaimed “Armpit of America” wears its nickname with pride, backed by gold mines, I-80 grit, and Nevada’s landlord-friendly statutes

📍 County Seat: Austin — Lander County Justice Court
👥 ~5K residents — Battle Mountain is the population center; Austin is the seat
⚖️ Justice Court • 315 S. Humboldt St, Battle Mountain, NV 89820
🌵 No rent control • Pipeline & Cortez Hills gold mines drive the local economy

Lander County Rental Market Overview

Lander County achieved a peculiar moment of national fame in 2001 when the Washington Post ran a contest to find the “Armpit of America” — the least glamorous place name in the United States — and Battle Mountain, Nevada won. Local residents, rather than bristling, embraced the title with characteristic Nevada high-desert humor. The town now holds an annual Armpit Festival and has turned the dubious distinction into genuine community identity. Behind the joke is a town that has sustained itself for generations on one of the most reliable economic foundations the Great Basin has to offer: gold. The Pipeline and Cortez Hills mines in the Cortez Mountains south of Battle Mountain are part of the Nevada Gold Mines joint venture and among the most productive gold operations in the western hemisphere.

Lander County’s rental market is small, mining-driven, and concentrated almost entirely in Battle Mountain, which sits on I-80 and serves as the county’s commercial center despite not being the county seat. Austin, the official county seat, is a historic silver mining town of a few hundred residents in the center of the county with minimal rental activity. The Lander County Justice Court is located in Battle Mountain, making filings straightforward for landlords whose properties are in the county’s population center. Nevada’s NRS Chapter 118A and NRS Chapter 40 govern all residential tenancies. There is no local rent control and no good-cause eviction requirement.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Austin (historic; minimal rental market)
Population Center Battle Mountain — I-80 corridor; nearly all rental activity here
Population ~5K — small; mining-dependent economy
Top Employers Nevada Gold Mines (Pipeline & Cortez Hills), Lander County govt, I-80 services
Median Rent ~$700–$1,100/mo; elevated by mining wages for market size
Rent Control None — state law preempts all local rent control
Good-Cause Eviction Not required — proper notice ends tenancy
LLC/Corp Landlord May appear pro se in Justice Court

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment of Rent 7-Day Notice to Pay or Quit (NRS § 40.2512)
Lease Violation 5-Day Notice to Cure or Quit (NRS § 40.2514)
Nuisance/Unlawful Use 3-Day Unconditional Notice (no cure)
No-Cause (<1 year) 30-Day Written Notice (NRS § 40.251)
No-Cause (>1 year) 60-Day Written Notice (NRS § 40.251)
All Notice Periods Count JUDICIAL days only (no weekends/holidays)
Security Deposit Cap 3 months’ rent (NRS § 118A.242)
Deposit Return 30 days with itemized statement
Rent Increase Notice 60 days for month-to-month (NRS § 118A.300)
Writ Executed By Constable (NOT the sheriff)
Justice Court 315 S. Humboldt St, Battle Mountain, NV 89820
Court Phone (775) 635-5175

Lander County — Nevada State Law Highlights & Local Notes

Topic Rule / Notes
Lander County Justice Court 315 S. Humboldt St, Battle Mountain, NV 89820 — (775) 635-5175. Located in Battle Mountain (the population center), not Austin (the county seat). This is convenient for most landlords whose properties are in or near Battle Mountain.
Pipeline & Cortez Hills Mines Nevada Gold Mines (Barrick-Newmont JV) operates the Pipeline and Cortez Hills mines in the Cortez Mountains south of Battle Mountain. Part of the broader Cortez complex, one of the largest gold-producing operations in the world. Gold price cycles directly affect employment and local rental demand.
Court in Battle Mountain, Seat in Austin Austin is the official county seat but has a few hundred residents and minimal rental activity. Virtually all landlord-tenant proceedings in Lander County involve Battle Mountain properties. The Justice Court’s location in Battle Mountain eliminates the county-seat-vs.-population-center travel problem seen in some Nevada counties.
Mining Worker Screening Same direct-hire vs. contractor distinction applies as in Elko, Humboldt, and White Pine. Nevada Gold Mines direct employees have greater job security. Request employment verification letters confirming hire status. Gold price tracking is relevant background context for employment stability risk.
“Armpit of America” — Community Character Battle Mountain embraces its Washington Post-bestowed nickname with genuine good humor. Annual Armpit Festival builds local community identity. Tenants who choose to live in Battle Mountain typically do so deliberately — they want small-town desert life and proximity to the mine. This self-selection tends toward committed, longer-term tenants.
I-80 Position Battle Mountain sits on I-80 between Winnemucca (60 miles west) and Elko (70 miles east). Some mine workers commute from those larger cities. The available local tenant pool is primarily those who prefer Battle Mountain residence for proximity or preference reasons.
Heating & AC as Essential Services Battle Mountain sits at 4,512 ft elevation with cold winters and hot summers. Both heating and cooling are essential services under NRS Chapter 118A depending on the season. Inspect and service HVAC systems annually before each season. Heating failures in winter and AC failures in summer both require prompt response.
Move-In Checklist Required in all written leases (NRS § 118A.200). Document pre-existing conditions thoroughly in Battle Mountain’s older housing stock.
Late Fee Cap Maximum 5% of monthly rent (NRS § 118A.210); cannot be charged until rent is more than 3 calendar days past due.
DV Lease Termination Domestic violence survivors may terminate with 30 days’ notice and documentation, penalty-free (NRS § 118A.345).

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: NRS Chapter 118A — Nevada Residential Landlord and Tenant Act

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🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Nevada

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Nevada
Filing Fee $70-250
Total Est. Range $150-500
Service: — Writ: —

Nevada State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

7 judicial days
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
5 (curable) or 3 (non-curable)
Days Notice (Violation)
14-30
Avg Total Days
$$70-250
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 7-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit (5 judicial days to contest)
Notice Period 7 judicial days days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay full rent within 7 judicial days
Days to Hearing Within 10 judicial days of tenant filing affidavit days
Days to Writ 24-36 hours after order days
Total Estimated Timeline 14-30 days
Total Estimated Cost $150-500
⚠️ Watch Out

CRITICAL: Two-track system - Summary Eviction (fast; most common) vs. Formal Eviction (slower; for complex cases). Summary: landlord serves 7-day notice; if tenant doesn't pay/leave tenant must file Tenant's Affidavit within 5 judicial days or landlord can get lockout order WITHOUT hearing. After lockout order sheriff removes tenant 24-36 hours later. Formal: serves summons + complaint; full trial. 'Rent' includes late fees but NOT court costs; collection fees; or attorney fees (NRS 118A.150). After serving 7-day notice landlord CANNOT refuse tenant's rent. 4-day notice for weekly tenants. Tenants 60+ or disabled get 60-day no-cause notice (instead of 30). Eviction sealing available under NRS 40.455.

Underground Landlord

📝 Nevada Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Justice Court or District Court. Pay the filing fee (~$$70-250).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Nevada eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Nevada attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Nevada landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Nevada — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Nevada's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Battle Mountain: The county’s only meaningful rental market. Mix of Cortez complex miners, county government workers, I-80 service industry employees, and long-term residents. Thin applicant pool; local landlord references are accessible and worth calling. Screen for direct-hire vs. contractor status on all mining applicants.

Nevada Gold Mines workers: Pipeline and Cortez Hills are world-class operations — direct employees are among the most financially stable workers in rural Nevada. Verify hire status with employment letters. Rotational shift patterns (some workers commute from Elko or Winnemucca) mean confirming the applicant genuinely intends to live in Battle Mountain full-time.

Austin: Historic county seat with a few hundred residents. Minimal rental inventory and demand. Month-to-month structures appropriate for the very limited activity in this community. Charms include 19th-century Nevada frontier architecture and Stokes Castle.

I-80 service workers: Battle Mountain hosts truck stops, motels, and service businesses serving the transcontinental highway. Service industry employees with hourly wages represent a more price-sensitive tenant segment — verify income with bank statements showing consistent monthly deposits.

Lander County Landlords

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Lander County Nevada Landlord-Tenant Law: Battle Mountain, the Armpit of America, and What Landlords Actually Need to Know

There is a certain honesty to Battle Mountain, Nevada that other small cities spend marketing budgets trying to manufacture. When the Washington Post ran its tongue-in-cheek contest for America’s least appealing place name in 2001, Battle Mountain won decisively, and rather than issuing indignant press releases, the town threw a party. The annual Armpit Festival celebrates the distinction with genuine good humor — because in a place where gold deposits in the Cortez Mountains have sustained livelihoods for generations, there is no need to pretend to be something you are not. For landlords, this same frankness is useful: Lander County is a small, honest market with clear economic drivers, minimal regulatory complexity, and Nevada’s full landlord-favorable legal framework.

All residential tenancies in Lander County are governed by NRS Chapter 118A and NRS Chapter 40. The Lander County Justice Court, conveniently located in Battle Mountain at 315 S. Humboldt Street rather than in the distant county seat of Austin, handles all eviction filings. There is no local rent control and no good-cause eviction requirement. The legal framework is clean and consistent with the rest of Nevada.

The Cortez Complex: World-Class Gold in a Small-Town Package

The Pipeline and Cortez Hills mines, operated by Nevada Gold Mines (the Barrick-Newmont joint venture), are part of the Cortez complex in the Cortez Mountains roughly 70 miles south of Battle Mountain. The Cortez complex has been one of the most productive gold-mining operations in the world since significant deposits were identified in the 1960s, and ongoing exploration has consistently extended its productive life. The wages paid to direct employees of Nevada Gold Mines are substantial by any measure, and those wages circulate through Battle Mountain’s small economy in ways that keep local rental demand and rental rates meaningfully above what a community of 3,000 people would otherwise sustain.

For landlords, the key screening distinction for mining applicants in Battle Mountain is the same one that applies across Nevada’s gold belt from Elko to Lander County: direct employees of Nevada Gold Mines have established seniority, union or company benefits, and substantially greater job security through gold price downturns than contract workers placed through mining services firms. When gold prices fall and production is scaled back, contract labor is released first. A direct-hire employee with five years of seniority and a union contract is a fundamentally different risk profile from a contract driller on a six-month work order. Always request an employment verification letter that explicitly confirms the applicant’s hire status before signing a 12-month lease with a mining worker applicant.

One Lander County-specific wrinkle is worth noting: Battle Mountain sits on I-80 roughly equidistant between Winnemucca to the west and Elko to the east, each about 60 to 70 miles away. Some Cortez complex workers live in those larger cities and commute to the mine site rather than living in Battle Mountain. When you receive a mining worker application for a Battle Mountain rental, it is worth confirming that the applicant genuinely intends to reside in Battle Mountain full-time rather than using your unit as an occasional crash pad between shifts. Lease terms should specify the property as the tenant’s primary residence, and you can ask directly whether the applicant is currently living in Winnemucca or Elko and what is driving the move to Battle Mountain.

Nevada Law in Practice for Lander County Landlords

The eviction process in Lander County follows Nevada’s uniform statewide framework. A nonpayment of rent eviction begins with a 7-day judicial notice to pay or quit under NRS § 40.2512, counting only court business days — no weekends, no court holidays. A curable lease violation requires a 5-day judicial notice to cure or quit under NRS § 40.2514. Nuisance, waste, or unlawful use of the premises carries a 3-day unconditional notice with no opportunity to cure. No-cause terminations require 30 days’ written notice for tenants under one year and 60 days for tenants over one year under NRS § 40.251.

After a successful judgment at Lander County Justice Court, the writ of restitution is executed by the constable — not the sheriff, which is Nevada’s distinctive procedural difference from most other states. Self-help eviction is absolutely prohibited under NRS § 118A.390. Changing locks, removing a tenant’s belongings, or cutting off utilities to force a tenant out without a court order exposes the landlord to actual damages, up to $1,000 in punitive damages, and the tenant’s attorney’s fees.

Battle Mountain sits at 4,512 feet elevation and experiences genuine high-desert seasons. Winters bring freezing temperatures and occasional snow from November through March. Heating is an essential service under NRS Chapter 118A and must be maintained in working order. Summers push toward and occasionally above 100 degrees Fahrenheit; air conditioning where provided is likewise an essential service with a 48-hour repair obligation. Annual preventive HVAC maintenance before each season is the practical standard for well-managed Battle Mountain properties.

The rental stock in Battle Mountain is predominantly older single-family homes and small multi-unit buildings. Move-in documentation — the signed checklist required by NRS § 118A.200 plus thorough photographs — is especially important in older housing stock where pre-existing wear is common and deposit disputes at move-out are more likely without clear baseline documentation.

Lander County is a market for landlords who appreciate straightforward economics and have no illusions about being in a glamorous location. The “Armpit of America” provides what it promises: a functional small-town market, gold-wage income levels that keep rents honest, Nevada’s favorable legal framework, and tenants who chose to be there on purpose.

This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Residential evictions in Lander County are filed in the Lander County Justice Court, 315 S. Humboldt St, Battle Mountain, NV 89820, (775) 635-5175. Nevada’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (NRS Chapter 118A) and NRS Chapter 40 govern all residential tenancies. Nonpayment: 7-day judicial notice (NRS § 40.2512). Lease violations: 5-day judicial notice (NRS § 40.2514). No-cause termination: 30 days (<1 year tenancy) or 60 days (>1 year tenancy) (NRS § 40.251). All notice periods count judicial days only. Security deposit cap: 3 months’ rent; return deadline: 30 days. No rent control. Writ of restitution executed by constable. Self-help eviction prohibited (NRS § 118A.390). Consult a licensed Nevada attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Residential evictions in Lander County are filed in the Lander County Justice Court, 315 S. Humboldt St, Battle Mountain, NV 89820, (775) 635-5175. Nevada’s RLTA (NRS Chapter 118A) and NRS Chapter 40 govern all residential tenancies. Nonpayment: 7-day judicial notice. Lease violations: 5-day judicial notice. No-cause termination: 30 days (<1 yr) or 60 days (>1 yr). All notice periods count judicial days only. Security deposit cap: 3 months’ rent; return: 30 days. No rent control. Writ of restitution executed by constable. Consult a licensed Nevada attorney for specific legal guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

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