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Obion County
Obion County · Tennessee

Obion County Landlord-Tenant Law

Tennessee landlord guide — county ordinances, courthouse info & local rules

📍 County Seat: Union City
👥 Pop. 30,069
⚖ General Sessions Court
❌ URLTA Does Not Apply
🌾 NW Tennessee / Delta Agriculture / Reelfoot Lake / UT Martin Fringe / Union City

Obion County Rental Market Overview

Obion County sits in the far northwestern corner of Tennessee, a flat and productive agricultural county in the Mississippi River delta region where the land has been farmed for generations and the towns that grew up to serve that farming economy remain the centers of a rural but stable community. Union City, the county seat with a population of around 10,000, is the commercial and governmental hub of the region — a city that functions as the regional center for healthcare, retail, and services across a multi-county area that includes parts of western Kentucky just across the state line. Troy, Obion, Trimble, Kenton, and South Fulton are the county’s smaller communities, each with its own modest economic identity.

At 30,069 residents in 2020, Obion County falls well below the URLTA threshold, and Tennessee common law governs all residential landlord-tenant matters countywide. The rental market reflects the county’s economic character: agricultural at its base, manufacturing-inflected, institutionally grounded in healthcare and education, and touched by the proximity of the University of Tennessee at Martin just across the county line in Weakley County. Reelfoot Lake, a remarkable natural feature created by the New Madrid earthquakes of the early nineteenth century, adds a modest tourism and seasonal recreation dimension to the county’s southwestern corner.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Union City
Population 30,069 (2020)
Key Communities Union City, Troy, Obion, Trimble, Kenton, South Fulton
Court System General Sessions Court, Union City
URLTA Status ❌ Does Not Apply (pop. under 75,000)
Rent Control None (state preemption)
Just-Cause Eviction Not required statewide

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 14-Day Pay or Vacate (T.C.A. § 66-7-109)
Lease Violation Notice 30-Day Notice to Vacate
Filing Fee ~$70–$100
Court Type General Sessions Court
Answer Deadline Set by court at time of filing
Writ Enforcement Obion County Sheriff
Self-Help Eviction ❌ Prohibited statewide

Obion County Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
Rent Control None. T.C.A. § 66-35-102 prohibits local rent control statewide.
URLTA Coverage ❌ Does not apply. Population (30,069) is below the 75,000 threshold. Tennessee common law governs all residential landlord-tenant matters in Obion County.
Security Deposit No statutory cap under common law. Best practice: return within 30 days of lease end with itemized written deductions.
Habitability Tennessee’s common law implied warranty of habitability applies. Properties in low-lying areas near the Obion River or Reelfoot Lake should account for flood zone status and moisture management in lease disclosures.
Repair-and-Deduct Not available. Statutory repair-and-deduct rights apply only in URLTA counties.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited statewide. Lockouts, utility shutoffs, or removal of tenant belongings without a court order expose landlords to civil liability.
Late Fees No statutory cap. Must be clearly specified in the written lease to be enforceable.
Agricultural Income Applicants Obion County has a substantial farming community. Agricultural income is seasonal and does not appear on standard pay stubs. Request two years of Schedule F (farm profit/loss) tax returns and look for consistent net farm income across multiple years. Off-farm employment income should be documented separately with pay stubs.
Cross-Border Tenants (KY) Obion County borders three Kentucky counties. Applicants who live in Tennessee but work in Kentucky may have cross-state income and credit profiles. Tennessee law governs the tenancy regardless of where the tenant works — apply standard Tennessee common law procedures throughout.

🏛 Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Tennessee

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Tennessee
Filing Fee 130
Total Est. Range $175-$400
Service: — Writ: —

Tennessee State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

14
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
14
Days Notice (Violation)
30-45
Avg Total Days
$130
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 14-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate
Notice Period 14 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes
Days to Hearing 6-14 days
Days to Writ 10 days
Total Estimated Timeline 30-45 days
Total Estimated Cost $175-$400
⚠️ Watch Out

Tennessee has a dual-track eviction system. The URLTA (§66-28-505) applies to counties with population over 75,000 (covering ~75% of the population including Nashville, Memphis, Knoxville, Chattanooga). Non-URLTA counties use §66-7-109. Notice periods are 14 days for both tracks for nonpayment. Tenants have a mandatory 5-day grace period (§66-28-201(d)). The 14-day notice cannot be sent until after the 5-day grace period expires. If the same nonpayment recurs within 6 months, landlord can issue a 7-day unconditional quit notice (§66-28-505(a)(2)(B)). Filing fees vary by county ($100-$200).

Underground Landlord

📝 Tennessee 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 General Sessions Court. Pay the filing fee (~$130).
  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 Tennessee 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 Tennessee attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Tennessee landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Tennessee — 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 Tennessee'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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🏙 Local Market & Screening Tips

Union City as regional hub: Baptist Memorial Hospital – Union City is a major employer and generates nursing, technical, and administrative staff who are among the most reliable tenant profiles in the county. County government and the Union City school system add institutional employment depth. Screen healthcare and government applicants with standard pay stubs and employer confirmation.

Manufacturing applicants: Verify direct-hire versus staffing agency status explicitly — a pay stub bearing a manufacturer’s name does not guarantee direct employment. Direct-hire manufacturing workers with multi-year tenure are strong tenants; agency-placed workers on short-term assignments carry significantly more income risk.

Flatlands, Delta Farms, and a Lake Born from Earthquakes: Renting in Obion County

Northwestern Tennessee does not look much like the rest of the state. There are no mountains here, no dramatic river gorges, none of the rolling limestone hills of Middle Tennessee horse country. This is the Mississippi Embayment — flat, dark-soiled, enormously productive agricultural land that stretches from the river itself eastward across a broad swath of the state’s northwestern corner. Obion County is squarely in the middle of this region, a county whose character has been shaped for two centuries by the rhythms of row crop agriculture, the small cities that grew up to serve the farming economy, and the quiet self-sufficiency that comes with being a long distance from anywhere that gets written about in national publications.

Union City is the center of things in Obion County — not a large city by any measure, but large enough to anchor the regional commercial and medical economy for a multi-county area that pulls in patients and shoppers from three Kentucky counties across the state line. The city’s Baptist Memorial Hospital campus, its retail corridors, and its professional services sector give it an economic footprint that extends well beyond the county line. For landlords, that regional reach matters because it means Union City’s employment base draws workers from a wider geography than the county’s raw population figures suggest.

The Agricultural Foundation

Farming defines the visual landscape and the cultural identity of Obion County in ways that are immediately apparent to anyone who drives through it. Corn, soybeans, and cotton dominate the flat fields stretching to the horizon in every direction. The families that farm this land have been doing so across generations, and the agricultural infrastructure — grain elevators, co-ops, implement dealers, and the web of suppliers and service businesses that support large-scale row crop agriculture — is woven into the economic fabric of every community in the county.

But farming does not feed residential rental demand in the same way that wage employment does. Farm families own their operations and their homes. The rental market in Obion County draws primarily from the non-farm workforce: healthcare workers, manufacturing employees, county and city government staff, school system personnel, and the retail and service sector that supports Union City’s regional economy. Agricultural income applicants do appear — farmhands, tenant farmers, and seasonal agricultural workers do rent — but the appropriate screening tool for this population is two years of Schedule F tax returns showing consistent net farm income, not pay stubs that the agricultural income structure does not generate.

Healthcare and the Baptist Memorial Anchor

Baptist Memorial Hospital – Union City operates as a genuine regional medical center, drawing patients and employing staff from across a multi-county area on both sides of the Tennessee-Kentucky border. A hospital of this regional significance employs registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, radiology and laboratory technicians, respiratory and physical therapists, pharmacists, case managers, billing specialists, and a full administrative and support workforce — collectively one of the most stable and well-compensated employment pools available in the Obion County rental market.

Healthcare workers at a regional hospital tend to produce some of the best tenant outcomes by the metrics landlords care about most. Their income is institutional — it does not disappear when a single employer closes a facility — their pay schedules are predictable, and professionals with several years of hospital tenure have demonstrated both stability and earning trajectory. Nurses and allied health professionals with established tenure at Baptist Memorial Union City represent a low-risk, high-retention tenant profile for landlords with well-maintained properties anywhere near Union City’s medical corridor.

Manufacturing: A Shifting Picture

Manufacturing has been part of Obion County’s economy for decades. The county’s industrial history includes significant large employers that shaped the working-class prosperity of Union City and the surrounding communities during the mid-twentieth century. The manufacturing landscape today is more fragmented than it once was, with a mix of continuing industrial operations and the staffing agency arrangements that have become ubiquitous across Tennessee’s manufacturing sector in the decades since the decline of direct-hire industrial employment.

The direct-hire versus staffing agency question applies as consistently in Union City as anywhere else in Tennessee’s manufacturing belt. A pay stub showing a recognizable manufacturer’s name as the work location does not resolve the actual employment relationship — the worker may be placed by a staffing agency at that facility on a short-term assignment. Ask the question explicitly: “Are you a direct employee of the company, or are you placed through a staffing agency?” Verify the answer with the employer. Direct-hire manufacturing workers with multi-year tenure are solid tenants. Agency-placed workers on short assignments carry significantly more income risk, and qualifying them on the same standards as permanent employees overstates their financial stability.

Reelfoot Lake and the Western Edge

Reelfoot Lake lies mostly in Lake County, which borders Obion County to the west, but its gravitational pull on the regional economy touches the western communities of Obion County. The lake itself is geologically remarkable — it was created by the catastrophic New Madrid earthquake sequence of 1811 and 1812, when the ground dropped and the Mississippi River briefly reversed its flow to fill the new depression with water. The result is a shallow, cypress-studded lake that has evolved into one of Tennessee’s premier wildlife and fishing destinations, famous for winter bald eagle concentrations and exceptional crappie fishing that draws anglers from across the mid-South.

The tourism economy centered on Reelfoot creates modest but real seasonal rental and short-term accommodation demand in the Obion County communities nearest the lake. Long-term residential rental demand in these western communities is thin — the population base is small and primarily owner-occupied — but property owners with well-situated accommodations near the lake have found value in the fishing season tourism market and the growing winter eagle-watching visitor economy. Short-term rental arrangements in this context operate outside the residential landlord-tenant framework and require their own regulatory and platform-specific approach.

South Fulton and the Kentucky Border

South Fulton, one of Obion County’s incorporated towns, sits immediately adjacent to Fulton, Kentucky — two municipalities sharing a downtown across a state line, a configuration that makes cross-border living and working arrangements entirely routine. A resident of South Fulton may work in Fulton or elsewhere in Kentucky. A Union City employer may draw workers who live across the line in Hickman or Graves County. For landlords, this cross-border reality means that tenant applications may include credit histories, rental histories, and employment records that span both states, and that references from Kentucky-based landlords or employers are entirely normal and should be followed up on the same way Tennessee references would be. Tennessee law governs the tenancy regardless of where the tenant was previously located or where they work now.

Common Law Framework and Practical Operations

All Obion County residential tenancies operate under Tennessee common law. URLTA does not apply, so tenants have no statutory repair-and-deduct right, and the security deposit return framework relies on common law best practices rather than a statutory deadline. Returning the deposit with an itemized deduction statement within 30 days of lease termination is the appropriate standard regardless. Evictions file through General Sessions Court in Union City. Serve the 14-day pay or vacate notice for nonpayment under T.C.A. § 66-7-109, document service, and file a detainer warrant if the notice period expires without resolution. The Obion County Sheriff handles writ enforcement. Written leases, move-in inspection documentation, and consistent maintenance response records are the practical foundation of every well-managed tenancy — not because URLTA requires them, but because they are the difference between disputes that resolve clearly and ones that don’t.

🗺 Neighboring Counties
⚠ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Tennessee attorney or contact the Obion County General Sessions Court for guidance on specific matters. Last updated: March 2026.

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