Carroll County Virginia Landlord-Tenant Law: A Complete Guide for Property Owners on the Blue Ridge
Carroll County sits on the crest of the Blue Ridge Mountains at the southwestern end of Virginia, where the Appalachian ridges give way to the Piedmont near the North Carolina border. Its 478 square miles encompass a landscape that is roughly four-fifths mountain and one-fifth Piedmont — the only county in Virginia with that particular topographic split. Interstate 77 runs directly through the county, connecting it 12 miles north to the I-81 interchange at Wytheville and extending south into North Carolina toward Charlotte. This highway access, combined with a deeply affordable cost of living (index 82.6, compared to the national average of 100), makes Carroll County an attractive location for manufacturing investment and a practical home base for working families in far southwestern Virginia.
The county’s 2020 census population of 29,155, with a median age of 48.7 years, reflects a community that has aged in place through the economic transitions of the past three decades. The manufacturing sector that defines Carroll County’s employment base — Parkdale Mills (textiles), Mohawk Industries (flooring and carpets), Vanguard Furniture, and Aerial Machine & Tool — has provided relatively stable employment through cycles that devastated similar manufacturing economies elsewhere in Appalachia. The Wildwood Commerce Park, a 273-acre regional industrial site at I-77 jointly owned by Carroll, Grayson, and the City of Galax under a revenue-sharing agreement, continues to attract new industrial tenants. Carroll County also operates its own natural gas system — a unique distinction among Virginia counties — providing service to businesses in the Carroll County Industrial Park.
The Galax Jurisdiction Line: The Most Important Thing Carroll County Landlords Must Know
Before anything else, every Carroll County landlord must understand one jurisdictional fact: the City of Galax is not part of Carroll County. Galax is an independent Virginia city — a separate jurisdiction from Carroll County in every legal, tax, and governmental sense. The city is bounded to the northeast by Carroll County and to the southwest by Grayson County, but it is its own entity. Properties within the Galax city limits are taxed by the City of Galax, zoned under Galax city ordinances, and — critically for landlords — have their eviction cases heard at Galax General District Court, not Carroll General District Court in Hillsville.
This matters practically because the Galax/Carroll boundary runs through a commercially and residentially developed area, and a landlord who files an Unlawful Detainer at the wrong court will have the case dismissed for improper venue and must start the process over. Before you file anything, verify the property’s jurisdiction by checking the Carroll County Commissioner of Revenue records (276-730-3090) or the Galax City Assessor’s Office. A property address on a highway that crosses the county/city line could fall in either jurisdiction. Do not assume based on mailing address or zip code.
No County Zoning: What It Means for Landlords
Carroll County operates without county-wide zoning — one of the relatively few Virginia counties that has chosen not to adopt a comprehensive zoning ordinance. In practical terms, this means there are no county-level restrictions on where you may operate a rental property, what you may convert for rental use, or how many units may be placed on a parcel, subject to applicable state building code and health regulations. This creates a more permissive regulatory environment than most Virginia counties. However, the Town of Hillsville does maintain its own town-level zoning within the incorporated town limits. If your property is within Hillsville, check with the Hillsville town office for applicable zoning requirements. Properties outside Hillsville in the unincorporated county are not subject to county zoning, though state building codes and septic/well regulations administered by the Virginia Department of Health still apply.
Carroll General District Court: The 1st, 3rd & 5th Thursday Civil Docket
All eviction filings for Carroll County properties are made at Carroll General District Court, 27th Judicial District, located at 605 Pine Street, P.O. Box 698, Hillsville, VA 24343. Clerk Donna Webb Ayers can be reached at (276) 730-3050 or dwayers@vacourts.gov. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The five-judge panel consists of Chief Judge Gerald Eugene Mabe II (Presiding), Judge J.D. Bolt, Judge Erin J. DeHart, Judge Randal J. Duncan, and Judge Gino W. Williams — the same panel that serves Bland County under the 27th Judicial District.
Unlawful Detainers, Small Claims, and Warrants in Debt are heard on the 1st, 3rd, and 5th Thursdays of each month beginning at 9:00 a.m. Garnishments and Contested Civil Trials are heard the same days at 1:00 p.m. Most calendar months provide two civil Thursdays; months with a 5th Thursday — roughly four per year — provide three hearings. Carroll County’s continuance policy is notably more straightforward than some neighboring counties: the first continuance is granted by the Clerk upon request (no requirement for opposing party consent), and subsequent continuances require a motion or cause shown to the Judge. This gives landlords a reasonable degree of schedule flexibility in genuine emergency situations without requiring tenant agreement.
The Carroll County Circuit Court, 27th Judicial Circuit, shares the same courthouse at 605 Pine Street (P.O. Box 218, Hillsville, VA 24343) and can be reached at (276) 730-3070. Circuit Court handles appeals from GDC decisions (heard de novo), complex civil matters, and felony cases. All civil cases at the Circuit Court level are scheduled through the Judge’s office, with the Clerk’s Office notified by letter from counsel of all civil hearings. Court convenes at 9:00 a.m.
The VRLTA Eviction Process in Carroll County
All Carroll County residential tenancies are governed by the Virginia Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Va. Code Ann. §§ 55.1-1200–55.1-1262). The process for nonpayment of rent begins with a 5-Day Notice to Pay or Quit. The notice must be served in accordance with Va. Code § 55.1-1245 — hand delivery to the tenant or a member of the household, or posted on the front door with a copy mailed by first-class mail. After five days, if the tenant has neither paid nor vacated, the landlord files an Unlawful Detainer at Carroll GDC and pays the filing fee (~$50–$75 plus approximately $12 per defendant for sheriff service). The Carroll County Sheriff will serve the summons, and the case will be set for the next available 1st, 3rd, or 5th Thursday civil docket at 9:00 a.m.
For lease violations other than nonpayment, serve a 30-Day Notice to Comply or Vacate (tenant has 21 days to cure the violation; if uncured, the tenancy terminates at the 30-day mark). Terminate month-to-month tenancies with a minimum 30 days’ written notice. After prevailing at the GDC hearing, the landlord requests a Writ of Eviction if the tenant does not appeal within 10 days or fails to vacate voluntarily. The Carroll County Sheriff executes the writ, providing the tenant at least 72 hours’ notice before physical removal. Total end-to-end timeline from notice service to physical eviction: typically four to eight weeks. Virginia’s 2024 HB 1482 emergency hearing provision applies for unauthorized occupancy situations with 72 hours’ prior written notice to the occupant.
Self-help eviction is strictly prohibited under Va. Code § 55.1-1245. Changing locks, shutting off utilities, removing the tenant’s belongings, or otherwise forcing a tenant out without going through the court process and obtaining a Writ of Eviction exposes the landlord to significant civil liability. The informality of some rural tenancy arrangements in Carroll County — verbal leases, handshake deals, long-standing arrangements with no written documentation — does not create any exception to this rule. Virginia law protects all tenants, documented or not, from self-help eviction.
Tenant Screening in a Manufacturing and Rural Economy
Carroll County’s tenant pool is primarily composed of manufacturing workers, agricultural and service sector employees, retirees and near-retirees, and a modest seasonal component tied to Blue Ridge Parkway tourism and the Hillsville flea markets. For manufacturing workers at Parkdale Mills, Mohawk, Vanguard Furniture, or Aerial Machine & Tool, the standard verification approach applies: request three months of consecutive pay stubs, prior-year W-2, and contact the employer HR department directly to confirm full-time status and tenure. Manufacturing employment in Carroll County tends to be stable and long-tenured; a worker with two or more years at one of these employers represents a reliable income source.
For self-employed tenants — which may include tradespeople, small farmers, and craftspeople in this rural economy — request two years of federal tax returns (Schedule C or Schedule F for farm income) and verify the self-employment income against bank statements. Do not accept a single year of returns for a self-employed applicant; income can vary year to year, and the tax return alone does not confirm the pattern of income stability that predicts rent payment reliability. Apply the 3x gross monthly income threshold consistently across all applicants. Carroll County’s low rent levels ($715 median) mean that the absolute income bar is relatively accessible — a full-time manufacturing worker earning $15/hour at 40 hours per week clears the 3x threshold for the median rent level.
VRLTA Habitability in Carroll County’s Housing Stock
Carroll County’s housing stock is predominantly older and rural. Many rental properties in the county are older single-family homes, mobile homes, and small multi-unit buildings without modern HVAC systems, updated plumbing, or energy-efficient windows. The Blue Ridge Mountain climate imposes real seasonal demands: cold, wet winters with significant snowfall at elevation, and warm humid summers. Heating system reliability is the most critical maintenance issue for Carroll County landlords — a failed furnace in January on the Blue Ridge is a genuine habitability emergency, not a minor inconvenience. Respond to heating failures within 24 hours. Have your heating systems professionally inspected and serviced before each heating season. Keep documentation of all service calls, replacement parts, and contractor invoices.
The VRLTA requires landlords to maintain units in a fit and habitable condition, comply with all applicable building and housing codes, provide working utilities, and address repair requests within a reasonable timeframe (generally 30 days for non-urgent items). Photograph units at move-in and move-out, use written move-in checklists signed by the tenant, and document all maintenance requests and responses in writing. In a market with a median age of 48.7 years, many tenants are long-term, established residents who know the property’s history and will notice deferred maintenance quickly. Build a maintenance record that reflects genuine stewardship of the property.
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) 343-9140. Carroll General District Court: 605 Pine Street, Hillsville, VA 24343 — (276) 730-3050. Last updated: March 2026.
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