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Bland County Virginia
Bland County · Virginia

Bland County Landlord-Tenant Law

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

📍 County Seat: Bland
👥 Pop. ~6,200
⚖️ 27th Judicial District — Combined Court
🚌 I-77 Corridor & Appalachian Highlands

Bland County Rental Market Overview

Bland County is one of Virginia’s smallest and most rural counties, tucked into the Appalachian Highlands of southwestern Virginia along the West Virginia border. With a population of approximately 6,200 and a land area of around 359 square miles, Bland is defined geographically by Interstate 77 — the highway cuts nearly 22 miles north-south through the middle of the county, passes through two notable road tunnels, and connects Bland to the I-77/I-81 interchange in neighboring Wythe County just 13 miles to the south. That interstate access gives the county a logistical advantage that its small population might not suggest, and has shaped its industrial and manufacturing employer base over time. The county seat is the unincorporated community of Bland (pop. ~433). The largest community is Bastian (pop. ~373). Both are small even by rural Virginia standards.

The rental market in Bland County is among the smallest in Virginia by unit count — approximately 254 rental units exist in the entire county, representing just 7.93% of the total housing stock. Median rent sits at approximately $702 per month, one of the lowest in the state. The dominant employment sectors are manufacturing (566 workers), healthcare and social assistance (269), and other services. The county’s population has been essentially flat for several years, with a modest 1% increase from 2018 to 2023, and 23.7% of residents are 65 or older — significantly above Virginia’s 16.8% statewide share. This combination of a thin rental market, low rents, and an aging population means that landlord decisions carry significant weight: finding and retaining quality tenants matters more here than in markets where new applicants are plentiful.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Bland (unincorporated CDP)
Population ~6,200 (est. 2026)
Key Communities Bland, Bastian, Rocky Gap, Mechanicsburg, Ceres
Total Rental Units ~254 (7.93% of housing stock)
Median Rent ~$702/mo
Median HH Income ~$61,375 (2023)
Top Employment Manufacturing, Healthcare, Services
Rent Control None
Just-Cause Eviction Not required

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 5-Day Pay or Quit
Lease Violation 30-Day Notice to Cure (21 days to fix)
Month-to-Month Term. 30-Day Written Notice
Filing Fee ~$25–$50 (confirm with clerk)
Civil Hearings 1st, 2nd, 4th & 5th Wed. — 11:00 a.m.
No Civil Court 3rd Wednesday (JDR day)
Court Type Combined GD & JDR Court
Eviction Timeline 4–8 weeks typical
Security Deposit Return 45 days after termination
Statute Va. Code Ann. §§ 55.1-1200 et seq.

Bland County Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
⚠ Combined Court Note Bland County uses a Combined General District and Juvenile & Domestic Relations Court. All Unlawful Detainer (eviction) filings go to this court. The GD and JDR functions share the same clerk, building, and phone number. Filing procedures for landlord evictions are unchanged — file at the clerk’s office as you would any other GDC.
Rental Licensing No county-level rental registration or license required. Virginia has no statewide landlord licensing statute. Contact Bland County Building, Planning & Zoning at (276) 688-3541 for any requirements on multi-unit or rental conversion properties.
Rent Control None. Virginia law prohibits local rent control ordinances (Va. Code § 55.1-1322). No statewide caps as of 2026. Landlords may raise rents freely with proper written notice.
Security Deposit Capped at 2 months’ rent (Va. Code § 55.1-1226). Must be returned with written itemization of deductions within 45 days of tenancy termination. Missing the 45-day deadline forfeits the landlord’s right to retain any portion. In a county where median rent is ~$702, documenting deductions carefully is especially important given the small dollar margins involved.
Fee Disclosure (2024) Va. Code § 55.1-1204.1 requires all charges — security deposit, monthly rent, pre-move-in fees — to be itemized on the first page of every written rental agreement. No undisclosed fees may be charged unless added by separately executed written addendum.
Bland Combined Court (Eviction Venue) 27th Judicial District. Address: 612 Main Street, Suite 106, P.O. Box 157, Bland, VA 24315. Clerk: Vicky Graham Reedy. Phone: (276) 688-4433. Fax: (276) 688-4789. Office Hours: Mon–Fri 8:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. GD Judges: Hon. Gerald Eugene Mabe II (Chief Judge), Hon. J.D. Bolt, Hon. Erin J. DeHart, Hon. Randal J. Duncan, Hon. Gino W. Williams (Presiding Judge).
Civil Hearing Schedule Civil cases including Unlawful Detainers: 1st, 2nd, 4th & 5th Wednesdays at 11:00 a.m. The 3rd Wednesday of each month is reserved for Juvenile & Domestic Relations court — no civil GDC hearings that day. Most months offer three civil Wednesdays; months with a 5th Wednesday offer four. Contact clerk’s office for continuance assistance: (276) 688-4433.
Bland Circuit Court 27th Judicial Circuit. Same courthouse building: 612 Main Street, Bland, VA 24315. Circuit Court Clerk: contact (276) 688-4433 (GDC number; GD and Circuit share courthouse). Handles GDC appeals and complex civil matters. Court convenes 9:00 a.m.
Landlord Entry Notice Minimum 72 hours’ advance written notice before entering for non-emergency purposes (Va. Code, 2024 update). Emergency entry or tenant-requested maintenance may proceed without prior notice.
Late Fees Capped at 10% of monthly rent or 10% of balance due, whichever is smaller. Must be expressly written into the lease agreement. At median rents of ~$702, the maximum late fee is approximately $70 — must still be in the lease to be enforceable.
Self-Help Eviction Strictly prohibited under Va. Code § 55.1-1245. Lockouts, utility shutoffs, and removal of tenant property without a court order and Sheriff’s Writ of Eviction are illegal regardless of the rural setting or small unit count.
Legal Aid / Resources Blue Ridge Legal Services serves southwestern Virginia including Bland County. Phone: (540) 342-3900. Statewide legal aid: (866) 534-5243. Virginia Lawyer Referral Service: (800) 552-7977. Bland County Administration: (276) 688-3541. DHCD Handbook: dhcd.virginia.gov.

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: Bland Combined Court — 27th Judicial District

🏛 Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Virginia

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Virginia
Filing Fee 58
Total Est. Range $150-$400
Service: — Writ: —

Virginia State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

5
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
21
Days Notice (Violation)
45-75
Avg Total Days
$58
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 5-Day Pay or Quit Notice
Notice Period 5 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes
Days to Hearing 21-30 days
Days to Writ 10 days
Total Estimated Timeline 45-75 days
Total Estimated Cost $150-$400
⚠️ Watch Out

Virginia requires 5-day written pay-or-quit notice (§55.1-1245(F)). No statutory grace period, but rent must be 5 days late before late fees apply (§55.1-1204.1). Tenant can redeem tenancy by paying all rent, late fees, attorney fees, and court costs on or before the court return date (§55.1-1250). Tenant may also present a "redemption tender" - a written commitment from a government or nonprofit entity to pay within 10 days of return date. Late fee cap: 10% of periodic rent. The Eviction Diversion Program was renewed and expanded in 2025, allowing qualifying lower-income tenants to be placed on court-ordered payment plans.

Underground Landlord

📝 Virginia 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 District Court. Pay the filing fee (~$58).
  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 Virginia 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 Virginia attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Virginia landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Virginia — 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 Virginia's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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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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🏠 Communities & Screening Tips

Key communities: Bland (county seat, courthouse area), Bastian (southern I-77 corridor), Rocky Gap, Mechanicsburg, Ceres (western county).

Manufacturing workers: Dominant tenant income source. Request 3 months of consecutive pay stubs plus W-2. Verify employment directly with the employer — manufacturing jobs in this region can be subject to production slowdowns. Base pay rather than overtime is the reliable figure to use for income qualification.

Thin market reality: With only ~254 rental units countywide, vacancy is a real cost. Thorough upfront screening is your best investment. Clear written leases, documented move-in inspections, and consistent enforcement protect you in a market where replacement applicants take longer to find.

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Bland County Virginia Landlord-Tenant Law: A Guide for Property Owners in Southwestern Virginia’s Appalachian Highlands

Bland County sits in the Appalachian Highlands of southwestern Virginia along the West Virginia border, covering approximately 359 square miles of mountainous terrain in the 27th Judicial District. Established in 1861 from portions of Giles, Tazewell, and Wythe counties, the county is named for Richard Bland, a colonial Virginia statesman. With a population of approximately 6,200, Bland is one of Virginia’s smallest counties by both population and economic footprint. Its defining geographic and economic feature is Interstate 77, which runs nearly 22 miles north-south through the county, passes through two mountain tunnels at its northern and southern ends, and connects Bland to the I-77/I-81 interchange in Wythe County 13 miles south — a strategic position that has shaped the county’s industrial character and gives it access to East Coast and Great Lakes markets that a county of its size would not otherwise enjoy.

For landlords, Bland County presents the most concentrated version of the challenges common to rural Virginia markets: a very small total rental inventory (~254 units, roughly 7.93% of the county’s housing stock), low median rents (~$702 per month), a declining and aging population (23.7% age 65 or older versus Virginia’s 16.8% statewide average), and a tenant pool drawn almost entirely from a handful of local employers. This is not a market where vacancies fill quickly or where applicants are abundant. Every leasing decision carries more weight here than in a county with thousands of rental units and a deep applicant pool.

The I-77 Corridor Economy and Tenant Income Profiles

Manufacturing is Bland County’s largest employment sector, accounting for 566 workers in the most recent data — a significant share of the county’s total civilian workforce of approximately 2,250. The I-77 corridor and the county’s industrial park infrastructure have attracted manufacturing and logistics operations that draw on the region’s traditional work ethic and relatively low labor costs. Healthcare and social assistance (269 workers) and other services (195 workers) round out the top employment sectors. The county school system, Bland County Public Schools, and the county government itself contribute a small but stable government employment base.

For income verification in Bland County, the practical reality is that most applicants will be manufacturing workers, healthcare support staff, county or school system employees, or service workers — often with hourly wages and some degree of income variability. The median earnings for the county’s civilian workforce are approximately $40,733 annually. At a median rent of $702 per month, the 3x gross rent income threshold works out to roughly $25,200 per year in required gross income — a bar that is achievable for most full-time workers in the county’s primary employment sectors, but that part-time workers, seasonal employees, or those with multiple small income sources may struggle to document cleanly. Request pay stubs for all income sources, and if an applicant has multiple part-time jobs rather than one full-time position, verify each employer separately and consider the stability of each income stream before combining them for qualification purposes.

The Small Rental Market and What It Means for Landlord Strategy

Approximately 254 rental units in an entire county means that Bland County’s landlords largely know each other, know the local tenant pool, and operate in a market where word of mouth travels fast. This has advantages — a well-maintained property with a fair landlord will not stay vacant for long if it becomes available — but it also means that shortcuts in screening, inconsistent lease enforcement, or handling of security deposits can damage a landlord’s local reputation in ways that affect future tenancy. The landlord community in Bland County is small enough that peer review screening (contacting prior landlords directly, not just those listed as references) is both more practical and more valuable here than in larger markets. Most prior landlords in the county are reachable and will speak candidly.

The low median rent of ~$702 also means that the financial math on an eviction is particularly unfavorable. A contested eviction in Virginia, including notice periods, court filing, service by the Sheriff, hearing dates, and potential Writ of Eviction execution, can easily consume four to eight weeks of rent at minimum. For a unit renting at $702 per month, that is a meaningful percentage of annual rental income lost to a single eviction proceeding, before factoring in any unit damage or cleaning costs. Thorough upfront screening, clear written leases with all required fee disclosures, and responsive maintenance are the most cost-effective tools available to landlords at these rent levels.

Bland Combined Court: The Wednesday Civil Docket

Bland County uses a Combined General District and Juvenile & Domestic Relations District Court — the same combined court structure found in Bath County and a handful of other small Virginia counties. All Unlawful Detainer eviction filings go to Bland Combined Court at 612 Main Street, Suite 106, P.O. Box 157, Bland, VA 24315. Clerk Vicky Graham Reedy can be reached at (276) 688-4433. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. GD judges are Chief Judge Gerald Eugene Mabe II, Judges J.D. Bolt, Erin J. DeHart, and Randal J. Duncan, and Presiding Judge Gino W. Williams.

Civil hearings including Unlawful Detainers are held on the 1st, 2nd, 4th, and 5th Wednesdays of each month at 11:00 a.m. The 3rd Wednesday is reserved for JDR (Juvenile & Domestic Relations) proceedings and does not include civil GDC hearings. This means most calendar months have three civil Wednesdays available; months with a 5th Wednesday offer four. The schedule is more frequent than Bath County’s bi-monthly docket but requires landlords to track which Wednesday each month is a civil day and which is not. Call the clerk’s office at (276) 688-4433 to confirm your hearing date and to ask about continuance procedures, as the court’s posted continuance policy simply directs parties to contact the clerk for assistance.

The eviction process follows Virginia’s standard VRLTA framework. For nonpayment, serve a 5-Day Notice to Pay or Quit as soon as rent is overdue per the lease. For lease violations, serve a 30-Day Notice to Comply or Vacate (21 days to cure, 9 days to vacate). Month-to-month tenancies require 30 days’ written notice. After the notice period expires, file the Unlawful Detainer at Bland Combined Court, await service by the Bland County Sheriff, attend the 11:00 a.m. Wednesday civil hearing, and follow through to the Writ of Eviction if the landlord prevails and the tenant does not appeal within 10 days. The Sheriff delivers the tenant at least 72 hours’ advance notice before the physical removal. Timeline from initial notice to removal: four to eight weeks under normal conditions. Virginia’s 2024 HB 1482 emergency hearing provision applies in unauthorized occupancy situations with 72 hours’ prior written notice to the occupant before filing.

Self-help eviction is prohibited in Virginia without exception. Lockouts, utility cutoffs, and property removal without a court order and Sheriff’s Writ violate Va. Code § 55.1-1245. This applies fully in Bland County regardless of the rural setting or the informal nature of any tenancy arrangement.

VRLTA Habitability Standards and Older Housing Stock

All Bland County residential tenancies fall under the Virginia VRLTA (Va. Code Ann. §§ 55.1-1200–55.1-1262). Landlords must maintain fit and habitable units, comply with building and housing codes, provide working utilities, and respond to repairs in a reasonable timeframe. The county’s housing stock skews older — much of it predates the 1980s — and the Appalachian climate (cold winters, potential for ice and road closure conditions) means heating system reliability is not merely a comfort issue but a habitability one. Respond to heating failures immediately; Virginia courts treat heat as an essential service. Document all maintenance requests and responses in writing, photograph units at move-in and move-out with timestamps, and have tenants sign written checklists. In a county where the courthouse and the landlord are likely both well-known, a clean paper trail is the fastest path to a resolved dispute.

This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant law is subject to legislative change. Consult a licensed Virginia attorney or contact Blue Ridge Legal Services at (540) 342-3900 or the statewide legal aid line at (866) 534-5243 for situation-specific guidance. Bland Combined Court: 612 Main Street, Suite 106, Bland, VA 24315 — (276) 688-4433. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant law is subject to change and may vary based on individual circumstances. Consult a licensed Virginia attorney or contact Bland Combined Court at 612 Main Street, Suite 106, Bland, VA 24315 — (276) 688-4433. Blue Ridge Legal Services: (540) 342-3900. Last updated: March 2026.

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