Floyd County Virginia Landlord-Tenant Law: A Guide for Property Owners in the Blue Ridge Highlands
Floyd County is unlike virtually any other rental market in Virginia. Perched on the Blue Ridge Plateau at elevations between 2,000 and 3,500 feet, with the Blue Ridge Parkway running along its eastern ridge and US-221 connecting it to Montgomery County and the New River Valley to the north, Floyd has cultivated a national reputation as a creative, intentional, and community-oriented small county that punches far above its 15,800-resident weight. The Town of Floyd itself — with a population of roughly 500 — hosts the Floyd Country Store, one of the country’s most celebrated roots music venues, a thriving independent business district, and a farmers market that draws buyers and visitors from across the region. This cultural identity shapes the rental market in fundamental ways that landlords in Floyd County need to understand before placing tenants.
Rents in Floyd County run $900 to $1,400 per month for most single-family homes, with some premium for properties with mountain views, acreage, or distinctive features. The county’s rental stock is eclectic: older farmhouses, log cabins, off-grid cottages, converted outbuildings, and more conventional suburban-style homes. A meaningful portion of Floyd’s rental inventory is non-standard by mainstream real estate definitions — properties with composting toilets, spring-fed water systems, solar or wood heat, and no connection to public utilities. These properties offer distinctive appeal to Floyd’s tenant market but require careful attention to VRLTA habitability obligations and lease specificity before renting.
Floyd County Combined Court: Weekly Thursdays with One Exception
All Floyd County eviction filings go to Floyd Combined General and JDR District Court, 27th Judicial District, at the Courthouse, 100 E. Main Street, Room 208, Floyd, VA 24091. Clerk Nikki Douthat King can be reached at (540) 745-9327, fax (540) 745-9329, email nking@vacourts.gov. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The five GDC judges assigned to the 27th District are Chief Judge Gerald Eugene Mabe II, J.D. Bolt, Erin J. DeHart, Presiding Judge Randal J. Duncan, and Gino W. Williams. The 27th District covers Floyd, Montgomery, and Pulaski counties, plus the Cities of Radford and Galax.
Civil cases are heard every Thursday at 11:00 a.m., with one exception: there is no court on the 5th Thursday of any month. Before filing or counting on a specific Thursday hearing date, verify with the Clerk at (540) 745-9327 that the date falls on a 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th Thursday. Criminal and traffic matters precede civil on the Thursday docket: General Public at 9:00 a.m., Attorney cases at 9:30 a.m., then civil at 11:00 a.m. The weekly Thursday civil schedule is a significant operational advantage over Floyd’s monthly-docket neighbors: filing promptly can result in a hearing within three to five weeks of the notice expiration.
Floyd GDC’s continuance policy is not publicly posted on the court’s vacourts.gov page — the court instructs parties to contact the Clerk’s office directly. Call (540) 745-9327 or email nking@vacourts.gov to ask about the current continuance policy before your first civil hearing. Appear prepared on your scheduled Thursday regardless of continuance policy expectations.
Leasing Non-Standard Properties in Floyd County
The single most important lease-drafting issue for Floyd County landlords with non-standard properties is VRLTA habitability. Virginia law requires landlords to maintain rental units in a fit and habitable condition, comply with applicable housing codes affecting health and safety, and keep all facilities and systems in working order. This obligation applies regardless of whether the property uses conventional or alternative systems.
For properties with alternative water systems (spring boxes, collected rainwater, gravity-fed systems): disclose the water source to the tenant in writing at move-in, provide a water quality test result, specify in the lease who is responsible for monitoring and maintaining the system, and address what happens if the system fails. A spring that runs dry in late summer, or a water quality test that reveals contamination, creates a habitability issue that the landlord must address promptly regardless of any lease language attempting to shift that responsibility to the tenant.
For properties with composting toilets or alternative waste systems: verify that the system is permitted under Floyd County and Virginia DEQ regulations before renting. An unpermitted composting toilet system is a potential building code violation that could create both regulatory and VRLTA liability. Specify in the lease the tenant’s responsibility for proper use of the system and define what “proper use” means in operational terms.
For properties with off-grid solar or wood-heat-only systems: specify clearly in the lease what the energy system consists of, what its capacity is, and who is responsible for firewood supply, battery maintenance, or generator fuel. If the property has no backup heat source and the primary system fails in January at 3,000 feet elevation, a habitability emergency exists. Have a local repair person’s contact information ready to give to the tenant.
Tenant Screening in Floyd’s Creative Economy
Floyd County’s tenant pool includes a higher-than-average proportion of self-employed, freelance, and mixed-income households. Artists, musicians, craftspeople, small farmers with CSA income, and remote workers with project-based revenue are all common applicants in this market. Standard W-2 income verification alone will not capture the full financial picture for many Floyd applicants. For self-employed applicants, request two to three years of federal tax returns (Schedule C or Schedule F for farm income), recent bank statements showing average monthly deposits, and any 1099 forms. Apply a consistent 3x monthly income threshold across all income types, annualizing self-employment income from tax returns for comparison.
Run full credit, background, and eviction history checks on all adult applicants. Virginia Fair Housing law prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, elderliness, familial status, and disability — and in many contexts also source of funds. Apply your screening criteria consistently and document every application decision in writing. Floyd County’s community-oriented culture means that landlord-tenant relationships often have a personal dimension, but the legal framework applies equally regardless of how well you know your tenant.
The 2024 VRLTA updates apply in full: 72-hour minimum landlord entry notice, all fees on the first page of the lease, late fees capped at 10% of monthly rent, and the HB 1482 emergency occupancy pathway. Self-help eviction is prohibited. Security deposits capped at two months’ rent, returnable with itemization within 45 days. Blue Ridge Legal Services serves Floyd County tenants at (540) 343-0010.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Virginia attorney or Blue Ridge Legal Services at (540) 343-0010. Floyd County Combined District Court: 100 E. Main Street, Room 208, Floyd, VA 24091 — (540) 745-9327. Last updated: March 2026.
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