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Washoe County Nevada
Washoe County · Nevada

Washoe County Landlord-Tenant Law

Reno & Sparks — Nevada’s tech-boom rental market where California transplants and university renters meet high-desert living

📍 County Seat: Reno — Reno Justice Court & Sparks Justice Court
👥 ~500K residents — Nevada’s second most populous county
⚖️ Justice Court • Reno: 75 Court St • Sparks: 630 Greenbrae Dr
🌵 No rent control • Fastest-growing major rental market in Nevada

Washoe County Rental Market Overview

Washoe County anchors Nevada’s second-largest metropolitan area, centered on Reno and the adjacent city of Sparks. Long known as “The Biggest Little City in the World,” Reno has undergone a dramatic economic transformation over the past decade. The departure of California businesses seeking lower taxes and costs — most visibly Tesla’s Gigafactory in neighboring Storey County and Apple’s data center in Sparks — combined with remote work migration from the Bay Area, has turned Reno into one of the fastest-growing rental markets in the western United States. The University of Nevada, Reno, with roughly 22,000 students, anchors demand for rental housing in and around the university corridor, and downtown Reno has seen significant apartment development in recent years.

Washoe County’s eviction landscape is served by two Justice Courts: the Reno Justice Court for properties in Reno and unincorporated Washoe County, and the Sparks Justice Court for properties within the City of Sparks. Nevada’s NRS Chapter 118A and NRS Chapter 40 govern all residential tenancies countywide. There is no local rent control, and the county’s rapid growth has pushed rents sharply upward, making Washoe County one of the less affordable rental markets in the state for lower-income tenants despite having no regulatory constraints on landlords.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Reno
Major Communities Reno, Sparks, Sun Valley, Incline Village, Fernley (Lyon Co.), Cold Springs
Population ~500K — fastest-growing major county in NV
Top Employers University of Nevada Reno, Renown Health, Washoe County School District, Amazon, Switch
Median Rent ~$1,350–$1,700/mo (1BR); Incline Village significantly higher
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)
Reno Justice Court 75 Court St, Reno, NV 89501 — (775) 325-6730
Sparks Justice Court 630 Greenbrae Dr, Sparks, NV 89431 — (775) 353-7600

Washoe County — Nevada State Law Highlights & Local Notes

Topic Rule / Notes
Two Justice Courts File in Reno Justice Court for properties in Reno and unincorporated Washoe County. File in Sparks Justice Court for properties within the City of Sparks. Filing in the wrong court results in dismissal.
Reno Justice Court 75 Court St, Reno, NV 89501 — (775) 325-6730. Handles the majority of Washoe County evictions including the high-volume university corridor rental market.
Sparks Justice Court 630 Greenbrae Dr, Sparks, NV 89431 — (775) 353-7600. Serves the City of Sparks; manufacturing and warehouse worker tenant base.
University of Nevada Reno ~22,000 students drive strong demand in the central Reno corridor. Student tenants often require guarantors; shorter lease terms (academic year) are common. Plan for seasonal vacancy in summer unless lease terms are structured to avoid it.
California Tech Spillover Remote workers and tech company relocations from the Bay Area have significantly increased median income in the Reno rental market. Tenants from California frequently have strong credit profiles but may expect California-style tenant protections that do not exist in Nevada.
Incline Village / Lake Tahoe Incline Village on the North Shore of Lake Tahoe is part of Washoe County. It is a luxury market with very high rents and seasonal demand from ski and outdoor recreation. Short-term rental regulation activity has been elevated here — confirm local ordinances before listing.
AC as Essential Service Despite Reno’s higher elevation and cooler climate compared to Las Vegas, air conditioning is still classified as an essential service under NRS Chapter 118A when provided. Landlords must repair within 48 hours. High-desert summers in Reno regularly exceed 100°F.
Move-In Checklist Required in all written leases (NRS § 118A.200). Essential in Reno’s competitive market where tenants may push back on deposit deductions. Document all pre-existing conditions with photos and a signed checklist at move-in.
Late Fee Cap Maximum 5% of monthly rent (NRS § 118A.210); cannot be charged until rent is more than 3 calendar days past due.
Anti-Retaliation 60-day presumption of retaliation if landlord takes adverse action after tenant exercises a legal right (NRS § 118A.510). More relevant in the university corridor where tenants are more likely to know their rights.
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

🏛️ Courthouse Finder

🏛️ 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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📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ 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

Reno (University Corridor): Strong student and young-professional demand near UNR and downtown. Require a co-signer or guarantor for student applicants who lack independent income. Academic-year leases (Aug–May) are common but leave landlords exposed to summer vacancy — structure 12-month leases where possible.

Reno (South/Southwest): Suburban single-family rental market attracting remote workers and California transplants. Strong income, high credit expectations, longer tenancy durations. Demand for home office space and high-speed internet access has become a practical screening differentiator.

Sparks: Manufacturing, warehousing, and logistics workers dominate. Amazon, Tesla, and Switch employ large numbers of hourly wage earners. Stable, predictable rental demand. Income verification via pay stubs is typically straightforward; consider requiring 2–3 recent stubs to confirm consistent hours.

Incline Village / Lake Tahoe: Luxury market; high rents and significant seasonal vacation rental competition. Tenants often have significant financial means but may expect premium service levels. VRBO/Airbnb activity has reduced long-term rental inventory — check Washoe County short-term rental regulations before listing.

Sun Valley / Cold Springs: Affordable suburban communities northwest of Reno with working-class tenant base. More price-sensitive market; late payment rates tend to be higher. Consistent income and prior rental history checks are especially important here.

Washoe County Landlords

Screen Every Applicant Before You Sign →

Background checks, eviction history, credit reports — get the full picture before handing over the keys.

Washoe County Nevada Landlord-Tenant Law: The Reno Landlord’s Complete Guide

Washoe County has quietly become one of the most interesting landlord markets in the American West. A decade ago, Reno was best known as a secondary casino town and a divorce destination. Today it’s a legitimate tech hub, a magnet for California transplants priced out of the Bay Area, and home to one of Nevada’s most competitive rental markets. For landlords, this transformation has been largely positive — rising rents, a deeper qualified applicant pool, and a state legal framework that remains firmly landlord-friendly. But it also means a more sophisticated tenant population that is more likely to know their rights and push back when landlords make procedural errors.

All residential tenancies in Washoe County are governed by Nevada’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (NRS Chapter 118A) and the eviction procedures set out in NRS Chapter 40. There is no local rent control, no good-cause eviction requirement, and no county-level supplement to the state statute. What Washoe County does have that other Nevada counties don’t is a two-court structure — and getting the right court matters before you file a single page of paperwork.

Reno Justice Court vs. Sparks Justice Court: Know Before You File

Washoe County has two Justice Courts with distinct geographic jurisdictions. The Reno Justice Court at 75 Court Street handles evictions for properties within the City of Reno and in the unincorporated areas of Washoe County. The Sparks Justice Court at 630 Greenbrae Drive handles all evictions for properties within the City of Sparks. These are separate municipalities, and filing in the wrong court is a procedural error that results in dismissal. Before you prepare your notice, confirm whether your property address falls within Reno city limits, Sparks city limits, or unincorporated Washoe County.

Both courts follow the same Nevada statutes. A nonpayment eviction begins with a 7-day judicial notice to pay or quit (NRS § 40.2512). A lease violation requires a 5-day judicial notice to cure or quit (NRS § 40.2514). No-cause terminations require 30 days’ written notice for tenants who have lived in the unit less than one year, and 60 days’ written notice for tenants who have lived there more than one year (NRS § 40.251). All notice periods count judicial days — court business days only, excluding weekends and official court holidays. A notice that expires on a weekend must be recalculated to expire on the next judicial day.

The University Market: Screening Student Tenants Effectively

The University of Nevada, Reno enrolls roughly 22,000 students, a significant percentage of whom live off campus in the neighborhoods surrounding the university on the north end of Reno. This creates a dense, high-turnover rental market with specific screening challenges. Most undergraduate students do not have independent income sufficient to meet a standard 2.5x or 3x rent-to-income threshold. The practical solution used by most experienced Reno landlords is to require a financially qualified guarantor — typically a parent or other family member — who signs the lease alongside the student and is jointly liable for rent and damages.

Lease structure matters here too. Students on the academic calendar often want leases that run August through May or August through July. If you sign a 10-month academic-year lease, you will face a re-leasing cycle every spring. Many landlords in this corridor prefer 12-month leases starting in August, which keeps the unit continuously leased and eliminates the summer vacancy gap. A tenant who wants to leave at the end of an academic year is still bound by the lease terms through the end of the 12-month term, though in practice many landlords re-negotiate or find replacement tenants.

The university corridor also skews younger, and younger tenants are statistically more likely to understand tenant rights, contest deposit deductions, and file complaints. The practical response to this is documentation, documentation, documentation. Nevada law requires a signed move-in checklist for all written leases (NRS § 118A.200). In the university market, this is not optional formality — it is your primary defense when a tenant disputes a deposit deduction at the end of the tenancy. Take timestamped photographs of every room at move-in. Have the tenant sign the checklist and keep a copy.

Reno’s broader rental market transformation has been driven largely by the economic boom sparked by Tesla’s Gigafactory in the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center and the subsequent wave of logistics and manufacturing development that followed. Amazon, Switch, Panasonic, and numerous smaller companies have established significant operations in the greater Reno-Sparks area, bringing thousands of well-paid workers who need housing. This has pushed Washoe County rents substantially higher than historical norms and has attracted significant out-of-state investment in rental properties.

For landlords raising rents to match market conditions, Nevada’s 60-day notice requirement for month-to-month rent increases (NRS § 118A.300) is the key compliance step. Fixed-term lease rents cannot be raised mid-lease without a lease modification both parties sign. But when a fixed-term lease expires and converts to month-to-month, or when you choose to offer a renewal at a higher rate, 60 days’ written notice is required before the new rent takes effect. This is longer than the 30-day standard in many other states, so build this into your renewal calendar.

Incline Village, the high-end Lake Tahoe community on the north shore that falls within Washoe County, deserves separate mention. Rents here are significantly above Reno-Sparks market levels, attracting affluent tenants including remote workers, retirees, and seasonal residents. Short-term vacation rental activity in Incline Village has been a point of regulatory tension — Washoe County and the Incline Village General Improvement District have at various points attempted to limit short-term rental permits. If you own property in Incline Village and are considering short-term versus long-term rental strategies, verify current local regulations before committing to either approach.

Regardless of which Washoe County submarket you operate in, the writ of restitution following a successful eviction judgment is executed by the constable, not the sheriff. This is a Nevada-specific procedural detail that differs from most other states and occasionally surprises investors who have managed properties elsewhere. The constable’s office schedules the lockout and accompanies the landlord to oversee the physical removal. Self-help eviction — changing locks, removing belongings, or cutting off utilities without a court order — is prohibited under NRS § 118A.390 and exposes the landlord to significant financial liability including actual damages, up to $1,000 in punitive damages, and attorney’s fees.

This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Residential evictions in Washoe County are filed in the Reno Justice Court (75 Court St, Reno, NV 89501, (775) 325-6730) for Reno and unincorporated Washoe County properties, or the Sparks Justice Court (630 Greenbrae Dr, Sparks, NV 89431, (775) 353-7600) for Sparks properties. 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 Washoe County are filed in the Reno Justice Court, 75 Court St, Reno, NV 89501, (775) 325-6730 (for Reno and unincorporated Washoe County) or the Sparks Justice Court, 630 Greenbrae Dr, Sparks, NV 89431, (775) 353-7600 (for Sparks properties). 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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