A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Bristol County, Rhode Island
Bristol County is Rhode Island in miniature — small, concentrated, and punching well above its weight. The county covers just 25 square miles of land on a narrow peninsula extending south from the Massachusetts border into Narragansett Bay, containing only four communities. But within that compact geography sits one of the most desirable rental markets in the state: high household incomes, very low vacancy, a university driving consistent demand, and the kind of historic East Bay character — waterfront access, Colonial architecture, walkable town centers — that attracts a tenant pool that takes care of properties and pays on time.
Barrington: Rhode Island’s Highest-Income Suburb
Barrington is consistently ranked among Rhode Island’s wealthiest communities and one of the top school districts in New England. It borders East Providence to the north and Bristol to the south, and it sits along the Barrington River with easy access to the East Bay Bike Path and Route 114. The rental market in Barrington is thin — owner-occupancy rates are very high and rental inventory is limited — but what exists commands premium rents and attracts tenants of exceptional quality. Single-family rentals in Barrington routinely fetch $2,000–$3,000 per month, drawing professional families, executives, and physicians who want top school district access without immediate homeownership.
The challenge for landlords in Barrington is acquisition. Cap rates are compressed by high property values and relatively moderate rental income compared to purchase price. Investors in Barrington are typically playing appreciation and tenant quality rather than cash-on-cash returns. The vacancy risk is minimal — well-maintained units in Barrington do not sit vacant long — and the tenant quality makes the management burden light. If you can acquire in Barrington, the operational experience is among the easiest in Rhode Island.
Bristol Town: History, Water, and Roger Williams University
Bristol is the county seat and its most diverse rental submarket. The town stretches along the eastern shore of Narragansett Bay and is one of the oldest continuously settled communities in America — its Fourth of July parade is the longest-running in the country. The historic Federal Hill and Hope Street corridors contain beautiful Colonial and Federal-era architecture that attracts tenants who value character and walkability. Waterfront access and proximity to the East Bay Bike Path add lifestyle amenities that support premium rents for well-maintained units in desirable locations.
Roger Williams University sits in the northern part of Bristol and enrolls approximately 4,500 undergraduate students. RWU is smaller than URI in Washington County and generates a more modest student rental market, but it is a consistent demand driver for the neighborhoods immediately surrounding campus. Student tenants near RWU typically require parental co-signers, lease on academic-year cycles that do not always align neatly with calendar-year leases, and need disciplined end-of-year inspection protocols to capture security deposit deductions for wear that accumulates over a nine-month student occupancy. The upside is high occupancy — student housing near a university rarely sits vacant — and consistent demand regardless of broader economic conditions.
The broader Bristol rental market beyond the immediate university area serves a mix of young professionals commuting to Providence, healthcare workers from Hasbro and Rhode Island Hospital systems who live in the East Bay for lifestyle reasons, RWU faculty and staff, and retirees who have downsized from homeownership. Rents run $1,400–$1,800 for well-maintained two-bedroom units depending on proximity to the waterfront and the quality of the building.
Warren: The Emerging Value Market
Warren is the smallest of Bristol County’s three communities and the most affordable entry point into the East Bay rental market. Bordered by Barrington to the north and Bristol to the south, Warren has undergone meaningful revitalization over the past decade — its Main Street has attracted independent restaurants, breweries, and art galleries that have shifted the town’s character from a quiet former mill town to a destination for younger professionals seeking affordable East Bay living. Acquisition prices in Warren are lower than in Barrington or the prime sections of Bristol, and gross rent multiples are more favorable for investors seeking income returns rather than pure appreciation plays.
The Warren tenant pool increasingly mirrors the broader East Bay demographic shift — younger professionals, remote workers, and people priced out of Barrington and Bristol who want East Bay lifestyle at lower cost. Vacancy rates in Warren are very low, reflecting the county-wide constrained supply of rental housing relative to demand.
Rhode Island Law in Bristol County
Bristol County is as legally straightforward as Rhode Island rental law gets. No rent control, no local ordinances, no just-cause eviction requirements, no complex submarket-specific regulatory overlays. All landlords operate under RIGL Chapter 34-18, and the relevant provisions are identical to every other Rhode Island county.
The 15-day nonpayment notice is shorter than most tenant-protective states, which works in landlords’ favor for cash flow management. Security deposits are capped at one month’s rent and must be held in a federally insured Rhode Island bank account earning interest at the rate set by the general treasurer — commingling deposit funds with personal accounts is a statutory violation. Return of the deposit with an itemized statement of deductions must occur within 20 days of termination and delivery of possession; wrongful withholding results in double damages plus attorney fees. The statewide rental registry (§ 34-18-58) requires registration of all units, and out-of-state landlords must designate a local agent. Convenience fees for any rent payment method are prohibited (§ 34-18-61).
Bristol County’s very low vacancy rate is simultaneously a landlord’s greatest asset and a reminder that screening matters. When quality tenants are plentiful and turnover is costly in a tight market, getting the initial tenant selection right — income verification, eviction history, references, and credit — protects the investment far more effectively than any eviction procedure can after the fact.
Bristol County landlord-tenant matters are governed by RIGL Chapter 34-18. Security deposit cap: 1 month’s rent; interest-bearing RI bank; return within 20 days; double damages for wrongful withholding. Nonpayment notice: 15 days. Lease violation cure: 15 days. Month-to-month termination: 30 days written notice. Entry notice: 2 days. Application fee cap: $50. Statewide rental registry required. Evictions filed in RI District Court. Consult a licensed Rhode Island attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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