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Overton County
Overton County · Tennessee

Overton County Landlord-Tenant Law

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

📍 County Seat: Livingston
👥 Pop. 22,241
⚖ General Sessions Court
❌ URLTA Does Not Apply
🏠 Upper Cumberland / Dale Hollow Lake / Livingston / Agriculture & Small Manufacturing

Overton County Rental Market Overview

Overton County occupies the northeastern edge of the Upper Cumberland plateau region in Tennessee, a county of rolling farmland, cedar glades, and forested ridges anchored by Livingston — a county seat of approximately 4,000 residents that serves as the commercial and governmental center for a largely rural county of 22,241 people. The county is bounded on multiple sides by similarly rural neighbors: Pickett and Clay to the north, Fentress to the east, Cumberland and Putnam to the south, and Jackson to the west. Dale Hollow Lake, which straddles the Tennessee-Kentucky border to the north, provides a recreation and tourism draw that distinguishes the county’s northern edge from the purely agricultural interior.

Overton County’s population falls well below the 75,000-resident URLTA threshold, and Tennessee common law governs all residential tenancies countywide. The rental market is modest in scale — Livingston anchors most of the county’s rental activity, with smaller pockets of demand in Rickman, Allardt, and a handful of communities along the county’s rural road network. The tenant base is anchored by county government, school system, and healthcare employment at Livingston Regional Hospital, with manufacturing and agricultural workers rounding out the profile.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Livingston
Population 22,241 (2020)
Key Communities Livingston, Rickman, Allardt, Hilham
Court System General Sessions Court, Livingston
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 ~$65–$95
Court Type General Sessions Court
Answer Deadline Set by court at time of filing
Writ Enforcement Overton County Sheriff
Self-Help Eviction ❌ Prohibited statewide

Overton 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 (22,241) is below the 75,000 threshold. Tennessee common law governs all residential landlord-tenant matters.
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 countywide. Older rural housing stock should be inspected for structural soundness, heating, and water supply before lease execution. Well and septic systems are common outside Livingston — define maintenance responsibilities explicitly in the lease.
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.
Dale Hollow Lake Properties Properties near Dale Hollow Lake in the county’s northern sections may be subject to Army Corps of Engineers shoreline management regulations. Confirm any applicable shoreline setback or dock permitting requirements before advertising lake-adjacent rentals. Flood zone status should be disclosed in the lease.
Rural Lease Provisions Private road maintenance, well and septic responsibilities, outbuilding access, and firewood or small livestock policies should be addressed explicitly in leases for rural Overton County properties.

🏛 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 Calculator

📋 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

Livingston anchors demand: Livingston Regional Hospital, Overton County government, and the school system generate the most stable tenant income in the county. Healthcare workers, teachers, and county staff are low-turnover tenants with verifiable institutional income. Screen with standard pay stubs and employer confirmation.

Dale Hollow area: The lake corridor in northern Overton County attracts a mix of retirees, seasonal residents, and outdoor recreation households. Long-term rental demand is thin but stable when present. Retiree applicants require Social Security award letters and pension or distribution statements rather than pay stubs.

Upper Cumberland Roots: Understanding the Overton County Rental Market

Overton County does not make headlines. It is not on anyone’s list of fast-growing Tennessee communities, it has not been discovered by remote workers seeking mountain aesthetics at affordable prices, and it has not built a tourism industry around a single famous attraction. What Overton County has is something rarer in the modern Tennessee landscape: a stable, self-contained community whose economy has evolved slowly and whose rental market reflects the steady rhythms of agricultural, institutional, and small manufacturing employment rather than the boom-and-bust cycles of rapid growth or industry consolidation.

Livingston has been the center of county life for as long as there has been a county, and it remains exactly that — a working county seat with a courthouse, a hospital, a school system headquarters, and the commercial strip that serves the county’s households. It is not a destination. It is a functional small city that serves its community, and that functionality is its most important quality for a landlord trying to understand the rental demand it generates.

Livingston Regional Hospital and the Healthcare Core

Livingston Regional Hospital is the county’s single most important employer for rental market purposes. A community hospital serving a rural multi-county area employs a workforce whose income is institutional, predictable, and relatively recession-resistant — qualities that translate directly into the reliable rent payment and lease stability that landlords value most. Registered nurses, radiology technicians, respiratory therapists, lab personnel, and the administrative staff that keeps a hospital running all represent tenant profiles that are straightforward to screen and historically stable to retain.

Rural hospitals like Livingston Regional also tend to attract healthcare professionals who are specifically choosing to live and work in a smaller community environment rather than rotating through a series of urban hospital systems. That self-selection matters: a nurse who chose Livingston, Tennessee for their career is not restlessly looking for the next opportunity in a larger city. They moved here on purpose, they are embedded in the community, and they are more likely to renew a lease than a tenant whose presence in the county is purely circumstantial.

Dale Hollow Lake and the Northern County

Dale Hollow Lake straddles the Tennessee-Kentucky border in the northern portion of Overton County, a reservoir created by the Dale Hollow Dam on the Obey River that has earned a national reputation for exceptional water clarity and trophy smallmouth bass fishing. The lake draws anglers, boaters, and outdoor recreation households from a wide geography, and the communities along its Tennessee shoreline — including portions of Overton County — have developed a modest recreation and tourism economy around the lake access.

For landlords, the Dale Hollow area creates a small but distinct rental segment: retirees and semi-retired households who have chosen the lake corridor for quality of life, seasonal recreation residents who rent a base for extended fishing or boating seasons, and the occasional outdoor-focused remote worker who values the lake access and the quieter pace of Upper Cumberland life. None of these populations generate deep applicant pools — this is genuinely rural and sparsely populated terrain — but the tenants who do land in the Dale Hollow corridor tend to be stable, treat properties well, and renew when satisfied.

Retiree applicants in the Dale Hollow area require documentation that reflects fixed-income reality: current Social Security award letters showing the monthly benefit, pension benefit statements from the plan administrator, and bank or brokerage statements confirming that distributions are actually flowing through at the stated amounts. Applying a pay stub requirement to a retired applicant who has no employer is not just impractical — it is a fair housing risk if applied inconsistently across different applicant income types.

Small Manufacturing and the Working-Class Core

Overton County has a modest manufacturing base spread across Livingston and the county’s smaller communities, with small to mid-size industrial operations employing production workers in positions that are not glamorous but are often quite stable. The county’s location in the Upper Cumberland, away from the interstate corridors that attract major distribution and logistics investment, means the manufacturing employers here tend to be established operations with long histories in the community rather than newly arrived facilities chasing cheap land and state incentives.

That established character is actually a screening advantage. A production worker with six years at the same Livingston manufacturer is a fundamentally more reliable tenant prospect than a worker at a newly opened facility who has been on the job for four months. In a small county where word travels quickly and most employers are known quantities, verifying employment tenure and confirming that the operation is a going concern is not difficult. Call the employer, confirm the hire date and position status, and note whether the facility has a history of workforce stability or periodic layoffs.

Cookeville Commuters

Putnam County and Cookeville, its county seat, border Overton County to the south. Cookeville is home to Tennessee Technological University and a substantially larger employment base than Livingston can offer, and some Overton County residents commute southward to Cookeville jobs rather than working locally. For landlords screening commuter applicants, the same sustainability assessment applies here as in any rural commuter market: verify current employer and tenure, confirm the commute arrangement is established rather than theoretical, and assess transportation reliability in a geography where vehicle failure is not a minor inconvenience but a direct threat to employment continuity.

Operating Under Common Law

Every residential tenancy in Overton County is governed by Tennessee common law. URLTA’s statutory protections — repair-and-deduct rights, specific deposit return timelines, formal habitability codes — do not apply here. What does apply is the implied warranty of habitability at common law, which requires that the landlord maintain the unit in a condition fit for human habitation throughout the tenancy, and the notice requirements of T.C.A. § 66-7-109, which set the 14-day pay or vacate period for nonpayment proceedings. Written leases that clearly address the rural property considerations specific to Overton County — well and septic responsibilities, private road access, outbuilding use, heating system maintenance — protect landlords from the disputes that ambiguous or generic lease forms consistently produce. Evictions proceed through General Sessions Court in Livingston, with the Overton County Sheriff handling writ enforcement. In a county where the courthouse is the center of civic life and everyone in the room likely knows everyone else, a professionally managed and legally correct process is both good practice and good community standing.

🗺 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 Overton County General Sessions Court for guidance on specific matters. Last updated: March 2026.

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