Blount County Landlord Guide: Smokies Gateway, Manufacturing Employment, and URLTA Compliance
Blount County is one of the larger and more economically diverse counties in East Tennessee, and its rental market reflects that complexity. At one extreme, the Townsend corridor functions as the quiet entrance to Great Smoky Mountains National Park — “the peaceful side of the Smokies” — drawing cabin renters, hikers, and nature tourists year-round. At the other extreme, the Maryville-Alcoa urban core is a Knoxville suburb with a substantial manufacturing employment base, strong school systems, and a stable professional rental market.
The STR vs. Annual Lease Decision in Blount County
For landlords with properties in the Townsend, Walland, or Wears Valley corridors, the decision between short-term vacation rental and annual lease is the most consequential strategic choice they face. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is the most visited national park in the United States, drawing well over 12 million visitors annually. Unlike Sevier County’s Pigeon Forge-Gatlinburg commercial strip, Blount County’s Smokies access points draw visitors seeking a quieter, more natural experience — and those visitors are often willing to pay premium rates for well-appointed private rentals. Properties with mountain views, proximity to hiking trailheads, or access to Little River can command strong per-night STR rates that exceed annual lease returns in favorable seasons.
The counterargument is volatility and management intensity. STR income in Blount County is seasonally concentrated, with spring wildflower season (April–May), fall foliage (October–November), and summer family vacation periods generating the bulk of revenue. Winter, while still active in the Smokies, is softer. Properties that cannot sustain occupancy in shoulder seasons may find annual leases more reliable on a risk-adjusted basis.
URLTA in a Large URLTA County
Blount County’s population of 135,280 makes URLTA application unambiguous. Landlords must maintain premises under T.C.A. § 66-28-304, respond to maintenance requests within a reasonable time (courts have generally treated 14 days as reasonable for non-emergencies), and understand that tenants may exercise repair-and-deduct rights under T.C.A. § 66-28-502 after proper written notice. The anti-retaliation provision (T.C.A. § 66-28-514) applies — do not begin eviction proceedings within 60 days of a habitability complaint without independent documented cause.
General Sessions Court — Four Divisions
Blount County General Sessions Court operates four divisions at the Blount County Justice Center at 926 East Lamar Alexander Parkway in Maryville. Phone: (865) 273-5450. Hours are Monday through Friday 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Four judges serve the divisions, providing regular docket availability. File the detainer warrant after your 14-day notice period expires without payment or cure. The Blount County Sheriff (940 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy) enforces writs of possession after judgment.
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