A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Forest County, Wisconsin
Forest County presents a landlord with two simultaneous realities that must be understood independently: the thin but conventional residential rental market in Crandon and the county’s non-tribal communities, and the wholly separate legal framework governing properties on Forest County Potawatomi tribal trust land. Getting these two realities confused — or failing to determine which one applies to a specific property — is the single most consequential mistake a landlord can make in Forest County. This guide covers the non-tribal Wisconsin law framework; properties on tribal trust land are outside state court jurisdiction and require consultation with a Wisconsin attorney who has tribal law expertise.
The Forest County Potawatomi Community
The Forest County Potawatomi Community is a federally recognized tribe with a significant land base within Forest County, primarily located in the southern portion of the county around the communities of Crandon and Carter. The tribe operates the Potawatomi Carter Casino and Hotel in Carter, a full-service casino and hotel complex that is the county’s largest employer by a substantial margin. The casino employs hundreds of workers in gaming operations, hospitality, hotel services, food and beverage, and administrative functions, providing year-round employment income that supports both tribal and non-tribal worker households in the county.
For non-tribal landlords in Forest County, the casino creates a specific tenant demand opportunity: non-tribal casino employees who need housing in Crandon or surrounding communities and who are paid steady year-round hospitality sector wages. This segment is more financially stable than the seasonal recreation workers who dominate employment in many other Northwoods counties, and casino employment provides year-round income rather than the seasonal patterns of tourism-dependent work. Identifying and targeting this tenant segment is a practical strategy for Forest County landlords seeking reliable year-round tenants in what would otherwise be a very thin market.
The Non-Tribal Residential Market
Outside tribal trust land, Forest County’s residential rental market is a small, rural market serving county government employees, Nicolet National Forest workers, forestry and logging industry employees, casino workers living off the reservation, and the handful of other permanent-employment workers who maintain year-round residency in the county. Crandon, as the county seat, has the county’s most meaningful concentration of year-round rental units — a modest number by any measure, but sufficient to serve the permanent workforce. Wabeno, Laona, and the other small communities in the county have even thinner rental inventories.
Rents in Forest County are among the lowest in Wisconsin, typically in the $550 to $700 range for a two-bedroom unit, reflecting both the limited demand and the extremely low acquisition costs that make even modest cash flows viable for patient long-term investors. For landlords who acquire properties at appropriately low prices and manage expectations for return timelines, the market’s thin character is a known constraint rather than a surprise.
Tribal Land Jurisdiction: The Critical Issue
The most important legal issue for any landlord considering property in Forest County is determining whether a specific parcel is on tribal trust land, fee land within the reservation boundary but not in trust status, or non-tribal fee land entirely. These three categories can produce properties that appear geographically proximate or intermingled but are subject to completely different legal frameworks. Tribal trust land is not subject to Wisconsin state court jurisdiction — the Forest County Circuit Court has no authority over landlord-tenant disputes on tribal trust land, Ch. 704 does not apply, and ATCP 134 does not govern. Potawatomi tribal law and the Potawatomi Tribal Court govern those relationships.
A landlord who rents a property on tribal trust land without understanding this distinction and then tries to file an eviction in Forest County Circuit Court will have their case dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. The practical risk is serious enough that any landlord considering acquiring or renting property anywhere in the Forest County Potawatomi reservation area — particularly in the Carter, Crandon, and southern Forest County areas where tribal land is concentrated — should obtain a legal opinion from a Wisconsin attorney with tribal jurisdiction expertise before entering into any rental arrangement.
Wisconsin Legal Framework on Non-Tribal Land
On confirmed non-tribal fee land, the standard Wisconsin Ch. 704 and ATCP 134 framework applies in Forest County exactly as in every other Wisconsin county. The 5-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate for nonpayment, 5-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate for lease violations, and 28-Day Written Notice for no-cause month-to-month termination apply. Eviction actions are filed at the Forest County Circuit Court in Crandon. ATCP 134 security deposit requirements — 21-day return, itemized deductions, check-in sheet, double damages for wrongful withholding — apply on non-tribal land with full force regardless of how informal the local rental market may feel. The 12-hour advance entry notice, rent control prohibition under §66.1015, and absence of just-cause eviction requirements all apply. Written leases and documented move-in condition are essential professional practice baselines even in a market this small.
Forest County landlord-tenant matters on non-tribal fee land are governed by Wis. Stat. Ch. 704 and ATCP 134. Properties on Forest County Potawatomi tribal trust land are NOT subject to Wisconsin state court jurisdiction or Ch. 704; consult a Wisconsin attorney with tribal jurisdiction expertise. Nonpayment notice: 5-day pay or vacate. Lease violation: 5-day cure or vacate. No-cause termination: 28-day written notice. Security deposit return: 21 days; double damages for wrongful retention. Landlord entry: 12 hours’ advance notice required. No rent control (Wis. Stat. §66.1015). No just-cause eviction requirement on non-tribal land. Eviction actions filed at Forest County Circuit Court, Crandon. Milwaukee just-cause ordinance (MCO §200-51.5) does not apply. Last updated: April 2026.
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