Smithville, Center Hill Lake, and the Practical Side of Landlording in DeKalb County
DeKalb County sits in the middle of Tennessee in a geographic and economic position that is easy to overlook. It is not growing as fast as the Nashville suburbs to its west, not as scenic as the Cumberland Plateau counties to its north and east, not as agricultural and flat as West Tennessee. What it is is a stable, affordable Middle Tennessee county with a manufacturing base, a county seat that has been growing steadily, and a reservoir that draws weekend visitors from around the region. For the right landlord, those characteristics combine into a workable investment environment with low entry costs and manageable competition.
Smithville’s growth between 2010 and 2020 — from under 4,000 to just over 5,000 — reflects trends common across smaller Middle Tennessee towns within a commutable distance of Nashville. Workers employed in Nashville’s healthcare, retail, and logistics sectors increasingly live in counties like DeKalb where housing costs are significantly lower, even accepting longer commutes. Highway 70 provides a direct connection toward Nashville, and Interstate 40 is reachable through neighboring Putnam County. This suburban-spillover effect has supported rental demand in Smithville without creating the price pressure that has made closer-in Nashville suburbs challenging for investors.
DeKalb County’s Economic Base and What It Means for Tenants
Manufacturing is the backbone of DeKalb County’s formal employment. Several industrial facilities operate in and around Smithville, including plastics, auto parts supply, and light assembly. These jobs typically pay hourly wages in the range that supports renting a modest single-family home or apartment. County government, K-12 education, and healthcare support add a stable professional-class layer. The result is a tenant pool that skews toward working adults and families rather than students or transient workers — a relatively favorable profile for buy-and-hold landlord investors.
The caveat is that manufacturing employment carries cyclical risk. When a plant reduces hours or shuts a line, multiple tenants in the same building can be affected simultaneously. Landlords with concentrated exposure to any single employer’s workforce should carry adequate cash reserves and screen for secondary income sources — a spouse’s government or healthcare job, for instance, can be the stabilizing factor when manufacturing income fluctuates.
Center Hill Lake: Recreational Draw and Rental Opportunity
Center Hill Lake is a major Army Corps of Engineers reservoir that spans DeKalb, White, and Putnam counties, with significant shoreline in DeKalb County’s southeastern portion near the Edgar Evins State Park. The lake draws fishing, boating, and camping visitors from Middle Tennessee and beyond. For landlords, this creates two distinct opportunities: traditional residential rentals in Smithville and the surrounding towns that serve lake visitors, and short-term or vacation rentals on or near the lake itself.
DeKalb County has not established a formal STR ordinance as of March 2026. This means no permit requirement, no zoning-based restrictions, and no regulatory framework to navigate — but also no enforcement infrastructure and no clarity on how disputes between neighbors are handled. Waterfront vacation rental properties in DeKalb County are effectively governed by their listing platform rules, deed restrictions if any exist, and state law on landlord-tenant relations for any tenancy that extends long enough to create a tenancy relationship. For short weekend stays, standard Tennessee premises liability and contract principles apply rather than landlord-tenant law.
Eviction Procedure in DeKalb County
Evictions in DeKalb County are filed in General Sessions Court in Smithville. Because URLTA does not apply, the governing procedure is T.C.A. § 66-7-109 — the pre-URLTA eviction statute. Written notice is the critical first step: 14 days for nonpayment of rent, 30 days for material lease violations. Serve the notice in writing, keep a copy, and document service. Without proper notice, the detainer warrant will be dismissed.
Filing fees in DeKalb County run approximately $75 to $105. The court is modest in size and the docket is manageable. Judges in smaller courts often appreciate brevity and preparation — arrive with your lease, a rent ledger showing what was owed and what was paid, and a copy of the notice you served. After a judgment is entered, the tenant has 10 days to appeal. If no appeal is filed, the DeKalb County Sheriff enforces the writ of possession. Physical removal typically follows within a week to two weeks of the writ being issued.
One practical note: in DeKalb County, as in most small Tennessee counties, the General Sessions clerk is often your best source of current information about filing procedures, court dates, and any local practices that are not reflected in the statutes. Call before you file and confirm the current process — it saves time and avoids preventable mistakes.
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