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Addison County Vermont
Addison County · Vermont

Addison County Landlord-Tenant Law

Vermont landlord guide — Superior Court info, local rules & Champlain Valley rental market

📍 County Seat: Middlebury
👥 Pop. ~38,000
⚖️ Addison Superior Court • Civil Division
🏔️ Champlain Valley — Green Mountains

Addison County Rental Market Overview

Addison County occupies the western half of Vermont, nestled between Lake Champlain to the west and the Green Mountains to the east in the scenic Champlain Valley. Its shire town and commercial center is Middlebury — a college town of approximately 9,000 residents anchored by Middlebury College, one of the most prestigious liberal arts colleges in the country and the county’s single largest employer. The county also includes the City of Vergennes, recognized as one of the oldest and smallest cities in the United States, the vibrant small town of Bristol, and a network of rural farming communities including Ferrisburgh, New Haven, Shoreham, Lincoln, Starksboro, and Orwell. Amtrak’s Ethan Allen Express stops at both Middlebury and Ferrisburgh–Vergennes, providing rail connections to Burlington, Albany, and New York City — a genuine amenity that distinguishes this county from most rural Vermont markets.

The county’s economy rests on education (Middlebury College and the Community College of Vermont), healthcare (UVM Health Network Porter Medical Center in Middlebury), dairy farming and specialty agriculture, light manufacturing, and a growing tourism sector centered on outdoor recreation, Lake Champlain waterfront access, and the Green Mountain National Forest. Average one-bedroom rents in Middlebury run approximately $1,200–$1,250/month, which is above the Vermont state average but well below Burlington. Unlike Texas counties in this series, Vermont evictions are handled exclusively through the Superior Court Civil Division — there are no Justice of the Peace courts — and Vermont’s tenant-protective statutes set strict timelines and notice requirements that landlords must follow precisely.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Middlebury
Population ~38,000 (2025 est.)
Key Communities Middlebury, Vergennes, Bristol, Ferrisburgh, New Haven, Shoreham, Lincoln, Orwell, Starksboro
Court System Addison Superior Court — Civil Division (all evictions filed here)
Avg. Rent (1BR Middlebury) ~$1,200–$1,250/mo
Major Employers Middlebury College, Porter Medical Center, JP Carrara & Sons, dairy/agriculture sector
Rent Control None
Just-Cause Eviction Not required statewide

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 14-Day Actual Notice
Lease Violation 30-Day Actual Notice
Criminal / Violence 14-Day Actual Notice
No-Cause (≤2 yrs, monthly) 60-Day Actual Notice
No-Cause (>2 yrs, monthly) 90-Day Actual Notice
Security Deposit Return 14 days after vacancy
Eviction Filing Fee ~$270 (confirm with court)
Statute 9 V.S.A. §§ 4451–4475; 12 V.S.A. ch. 169

Addison County — Local Rules & Vermont Law Highlights

Topic Rule / Notes
Rental Licensing No county-level rental licensing required. Vermont has no statewide landlord licensing statute. Middlebury, Vergennes, and Bristol do not require general residential rental registration for standard long-term leases. Landlords operating short-term rentals should verify any applicable local zoning or permit requirements with the individual town or city clerk before listing on STR platforms.
Rent Control None. No municipality in Addison County has enacted rent stabilization or rent control. Vermont has no statewide rent control statute. Landlords must provide at least 60 days’ actual notice before a rent increase takes effect at the start of a new rental period (9 V.S.A. § 4455(b)).
Security Deposit No statutory cap on deposit amount. Must be returned with a written itemized statement within 14 days after the landlord learns of vacancy or receives tenant’s notice of move-out date (9 V.S.A. § 4461(c)). Seasonal units: 60 days. Normal wear and tear is not deductible. Willful failure to return: double the wrongfully withheld amount plus reasonable attorney’s fees. After 14 days without return, the landlord forfeits all right to withhold any portion.
Where to File Evictions All residential evictions in Addison County are filed in the Addison Superior Court — Civil Division at 7 Mahady Court, Middlebury, VT 05753. Vermont uses a unified Superior Court system — there are no separate Justice of the Peace courts handling evictions as in Texas. The Civil Division handles all ejectment (eviction) actions under 12 V.S.A. chapter 169, subchapter 3.
Addison Superior Court — Civil Division Address: 7 Mahady Court, Middlebury, VT 05753
Phone: (802) 388-7741
Email: AddisonUnit@vtcourts.gov
Hours: Monday–Friday 8:00 AM–4:30 PM (closed first Friday of each month 8:00 AM–noon for in-service training; closed on observed state holidays)
Presiding Judge: Hon. Alison Arms • Superior Judge: Hon. David Barra
Parking: Off-street available
Confirm current information at vermontjudiciary.org.
Vermont Notice Requirements Vermont’s notice rules are stricter than many states. Every termination notice must state a specific termination date. Notices that fail to state the date are legally defective. The landlord must file an ejectment action within 60 days of the stated termination date or the notice expires and becomes insufficient to support eviction. “Actual notice” means hand-delivery or certified/first-class mail; mailed notice carries a rebuttable presumption of receipt three days after mailing.
Habitability & Repairs Vermont’s implied warranty of habitability cannot be waived by any lease provision. Landlords must maintain safe, clean, habitable premises throughout the tenancy — including functioning heat and adequate hot/cold water. Tenants who provide actual notice of a material health-and-safety defect may withhold rent if the landlord fails to repair within a reasonable time. Tenants may also repair-and-deduct for minor defects if the landlord fails to act within 30 days — capped at one-half of one month’s rent (9 V.S.A. § 4459).
Landlord Entry Landlord must give at least 48 hours’ advance notice and may only enter between 9:00 AM and 9:00 PM for inspections, repairs, showings, or agreed services (9 V.S.A. § 4460). Entry without notice is permitted only when the landlord has a reasonable belief of imminent danger to persons or property. Tenant consent may not be unreasonably withheld.
Application Fees Prohibited. Vermont law (9 V.S.A. § 4456a, as amended 2025) prohibits charging any application fee for a residential rental unit. Landlords must also accept a government-issued ID or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) in lieu of a Social Security number for background/credit check purposes — a Social Security number cannot be required.
Illegal Evictions Self-help evictions are strictly prohibited in Vermont. Landlords may not shut off utilities, change locks, remove doors or windows, or deny access to a tenant’s personal property to force a vacate (9 V.S.A. § 4463). All evictions require a court-issued writ of possession. Violations entitle the tenant to injunctive relief, damages, costs, and attorney’s fees (§ 4464).
Anti-Retaliation Landlords may not retaliate against tenants for reporting code violations, complaining about habitability, or joining a tenant organization. A termination notice served within 90 days of a government health/safety notice creates a rebuttable presumption of illegal retaliation (9 V.S.A. § 4465).
Flood Hazard Disclosure Required since June 17, 2024. Landlords must disclose in writing — before lease signing — whether any portion of the premises is in a FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Area (9 V.S.A. § 4466). Addison County includes significant Lake Champlain waterfront and floodplain areas; verify flood zone status for any property near the lake or Otter Creek before leasing.
Middlebury College Rental Market Middlebury College’s undergraduate enrollment of approximately 2,800 students creates sustained demand for off-campus housing near the campus. The College provides on-campus housing for most students but upperclassmen and grad students seek private rentals. The academic calendar (August/September move-in, May move-out) drives a distinct seasonal rental rhythm in Middlebury. Landlords renting to students should use written leases and collect deposits promptly; student tenants receive the same full protections under Vermont law as any other tenant.
Housing Shortage Context Addison County has a rental vacancy rate of approximately 5% — below the national average — meaning available units are scarce and rents trend upward. Vermont’s statewide housing targets call for 1,296 to 1,978 new units in Addison County by 2030. New developments like Stonecrop Meadows in Middlebury (245-unit project) are beginning to add inventory, but the overall market remains tight for renters and favorable for landlords managing well-maintained properties.

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: Vermont Judiciary — Addison Civil Division

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💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Vermont
Filing Fee $295
Total Est. Range $400-800+
Service: — Writ: —

Vermont State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

14
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
30 (material lease violation - no cure required); 14 (criminal activity/health-safety threats)
Days Notice (Violation)
60-120
Avg Total Days
$$295
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 14-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit
Notice Period 14 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay all rent due through end of rental period within 14 days to stop termination; also can defeat ejectment by paying all rent + interest + costs (once per 12 months)
Days to Hearing 21+ (tenant has 21 days to file answer after service; hearing scheduled after answer) days
Days to Writ 14 days after Writ of Possession served (7 days if missed rent escrow payment) days
Total Estimated Timeline 60-120 days
Total Estimated Cost $400-800+
⚠️ Watch Out

VERY tenant-friendly. 14-day notice for nonpayment (longest initial notice in batch 10). Tenant pays within 14 days = tenancy continues. CRITICAL: Tenant can defeat ejectment at ANY TIME during proceedings by paying all rent in arrears + interest + court costs - BUT only once per 12 months (12 V.S.A. § 4773). Acceptance of partial rent does NOT waive landlord's right to pursue eviction (§ 4467(a)). Landlord must file complaint within 60 days of termination date in notice (§ 4467(k)). Filing fee is HIGH: $295 flat regardless of county. RENT ESCROW: landlord can file motion requiring tenant to pay rent into court during proceedings; if tenant misses escrow payment = immediate judgment for possession + only 7-day writ. Multiple notices on different grounds can be relied upon simultaneously. Burlington: just cause eviction ordinance; security deposit capped at 1 month.

Underground Landlord

📝 Vermont 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 Superior Court - Civil Division - Ejectment Action (9 V.S.A. Ch. 137; 12 V.S.A. Ch. 169). Pay the filing fee (~$$295).
  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 Vermont 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 Vermont attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Vermont landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Vermont — 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 Vermont's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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⚠️ 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: Middlebury (county seat, Middlebury College, Porter Medical Center), Vergennes (smallest city in the U.S., northern corridor), Bristol (Five Town area, Mt. Abraham schools), Ferrisburgh (Amtrak stop, Lake Champlain access), and rural towns including New Haven, Shoreham, Lincoln, and Orwell.

Middlebury / College area: Middlebury College employment is highly stable — faculty, staff, and administrative employees make excellent long-term tenants. Student rental demand peaks in August–September; use a full 12-month lease with clear move-out dates to avoid seasonal gaps. Verify income with an offer letter or pay stub for new hires.

Vergennes / Ferrisburgh corridor: Growing as a Burlington commuter suburb (30 miles north via Route 7). Amtrak access at Ferrisburgh–Vergennes attracts remote workers and commuters who want small-town Vermont living with rail connectivity. Screen for stable remote employment or Burlington commute income.

Bristol / Five Town area: Serves families employed in the Bristol–Middlebury corridor and in Mountain Community Health. Strong community identity; lower tenant turnover historically than the college market. Well-maintained two-bedroom units attract long-term family renters.

Agricultural / rural towns: Farm employee housing operates under separate rules under 9 V.S.A. § 4469a — standard termination notice, rent payment, and security deposit rules do not apply when housing is provided as a no-cost employment benefit. If you are a farm employer providing tied housing, consult Vermont law carefully before taking any action.

Addison County Landlords

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Addison County Vermont Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in Middlebury, Vergennes, and the Champlain Valley

Addison County stretches across Vermont’s scenic Champlain Valley, pressed between Lake Champlain to the west and the Green Mountain National Forest to the east. With approximately 38,000 residents spread across 24 towns and the small city of Vergennes, it is a quintessentially Vermont county — rural in character but economically anchored by strong institutions. Middlebury College, founded in 1800 and consistently ranked among the top liberal arts colleges in the nation, is the county’s dominant employer and the engine of its rental market. Porter Medical Center, part of the UVM Health Network, serves as the county’s primary healthcare anchor. Together, these two institutions provide Addison County landlords with a stable, well-credentialed tenant pool that is largely absent in comparable rural Vermont markets.

One Court, No Precincts: Vermont’s Unified System

One of the most important things an Addison County landlord needs to understand is that Vermont operates nothing like Texas when it comes to eviction court structure. There are no Justice of the Peace courts, no precinct boundaries to navigate, and no risk of filing in the wrong court. All residential evictions in Addison County are filed in a single place: the Addison Superior Court Civil Division at 7 Mahady Court in Middlebury. The phone is (802) 388-7741 and the court is open Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM, except on state holidays and the first Friday morning of each month when it closes at noon for staff training.

Vermont does have its own procedural complexity, however — it just takes a different form than the multi-precinct Texas model. The state’s tenant-protective statutes under Title 9 V.S.A. Chapter 137 impose strict notice requirements that, if not followed precisely, will cause an eviction case to fail. Every termination notice must state a specific termination date. The landlord must then commence the ejectment action within 60 days of that stated date, or the notice expires and cannot support a judgment of eviction. These are not technicalities — they are substantive requirements that Vermont courts enforce. Get the notice right before anything else.

Vermont’s Tiered No-Cause Notice System

Vermont’s no-cause termination notice system is more tenant-protective than most states, and Addison County landlords should internalize it before making any tenancy decisions. For a month-to-month tenancy without a written lease, the required notice period depends on how long the tenant has continuously occupied the same premises. For tenants who have been there two years or less, 60 days’ actual notice is required. For tenants who have been in the same unit for more than two years, that increases to 90 days. These are not arbitrary numbers — they reflect Vermont’s policy judgment that long-term tenants deserve more stability and time to find alternative housing.

If you are using a written lease, the no-cause notice rules are slightly different: 30 days before the end of the lease term for tenancies of two years or less, and 60 days before the end of the lease term for tenancies over two years. In Addison County, where tenant turnover at Middlebury College tends to be annual and tenants in Vergennes and Bristol often stay for multiple years, knowing which rule applies to each tenancy is a practical operational matter, not an abstract legal one.

The College Rental Market: Rhythms and Risks

Middlebury College’s approximately 2,800 undergraduates create a distinct seasonal rental dynamic that does not exist anywhere else in the county. The College provides on-campus housing for most students, but upperclassmen and graduate students do seek private rentals in the surrounding neighborhoods. This creates a relatively predictable annual cycle: units near campus get snapped up in the spring for the following academic year, with move-in concentrated in late August and move-out in May.

For landlords, the student market has real advantages — predictable turnover, parents who often co-sign leases and provide a practical backstop against unpaid rent, and the ability to price units based on per-bedroom rates common in the student market. The risks are also real: end-of-year damage is more common in student rentals than in the professional-tenant market, the 14-day security deposit return window starts ticking the moment the tenant vacates, and the burden of proof for any deductions beyond normal wear and tear sits squarely with the landlord. Document everything with timestamped move-in and move-out photography. The double-damages-plus-attorney’s-fees penalty for willful failure to return a deposit is not theoretical — it is routinely awarded in Vermont courts.

Vergennes and the Burlington Commuter Effect

Vergennes sits about 30 miles south of Burlington on U.S. Route 7 and has been quietly developing as a commuter satellite for Burlington’s professional workforce. The City of Vergennes — with just over 2,600 residents, one of the smallest incorporated cities in the United States — offers a genuine small-town Vermont character with a historic downtown, Lake Champlain access at Basin Harbor and Kingsland Bay State Park, and real estate prices significantly below those in the Burlington metro area. The addition of Amtrak Ethan Allen Express service at the Ferrisburgh–Vergennes station in 2022 gave the corridor genuine rail connectivity to Burlington, Albany, and New York City for the first time since the 1950s, and that access has attracted remote workers and hybrid commuters who want Vermont living without full-time Burlington rent prices.

For landlords in Vergennes and the northern Addison County corridor, this commuter dynamic means the tenant pool has diversified beyond the traditional local-employment base. Remote workers and hybrid commuters often bring above-average and verifiable incomes, make excellent long-term tenants, and care about internet reliability and home office space. Screen for verified income, confirm employment type (stable remote vs. project-based contractor), and ensure your lease handles home-based business use in a way you are comfortable with.

Flood Disclosure, Otter Creek, and Lake Champlain

Addison County’s geography creates genuine flood risk considerations for landlords. Otter Creek — Vermont’s longest river — runs north through the county from Rutland to Lake Champlain, passing through or near Middlebury, Vergennes, and Ferrisburgh. Lake Champlain’s western shoreline forms the entire western boundary of the county. Significant portions of the county near these waterways are in FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas, and Vermont law now requires landlords to disclose flood hazard area status in writing before any lease is signed (9 V.S.A. § 4466, effective June 17, 2024).

This is not merely a legal compliance matter — it is a material factor in investment decisions and property management. If you own or are considering purchasing rental property near Otter Creek or along the Lake Champlain waterfront in Addison County, verify the property’s flood zone designation on FEMA’s Flood Map Service Center before closing. Flood insurance requirements, lender conditions, and the practical costs of flood events can significantly affect the economics of a rental investment in these areas. Use the DHCD model disclosure form, keep a copy signed by the tenant before lease execution, and retain it in the tenant’s file.

The No-Application-Fee Rule and ITIN Acceptance

Two Vermont requirements stand out as distinctly different from most other states and deserve explicit attention from every Addison County landlord. First, Vermont law flatly prohibits charging any application fee for residential rental units. This is not a limitation — it is a prohibition. If you currently charge an application fee, stop immediately. Second, for background and credit check purposes, you must accept a government-issued ID or an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) as an alternative to a Social Security number. You may not require an SSN and may not reject an application because the applicant lacks one. These provisions were reinforced and amended by 2025, No. 69, effective July 1, 2025. Addison County’s small but growing immigrant agricultural worker community — many of whom hold ITINs but not Social Security numbers — is a practical context in which these rules will apply.

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Vermont landlord-tenant law is subject to change by the Legislature each session. Flood hazard disclosure is required before lease signing for properties in FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas under 9 V.S.A. § 4466 — verify flood zone status for all properties near Otter Creek or Lake Champlain. Application fees for residential units are prohibited under Vermont law. All evictions in Addison County are filed with the Addison Superior Court Civil Division at 7 Mahady Court, Middlebury — (802) 388-7741. Consult a licensed Vermont attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Vermont landlord-tenant law is subject to change. Landlords must provide a written flood hazard disclosure before lease signing for properties in FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas — verify flood zone status for properties near Otter Creek or Lake Champlain. Application fees for residential rentals are prohibited under Vermont law. All evictions in Addison County are filed at the Addison Superior Court Civil Division, 7 Mahady Court, Middlebury, VT — (802) 388-7741. Every termination notice must state a specific termination date and an ejectment action must be filed within 60 days of that date. Consult a licensed Vermont attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

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