A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Lafayette County, Wisconsin
Lafayette County is Wisconsin’s most agricultural county by disposition if not always by acreage — a county of rolling Driftless Area ridges and valleys where dairy farming and row crops define the landscape, where the communities are small and historically rooted, and where the rental market reflects the economy honestly: thin, affordable, and serving a workforce that is employed primarily in agriculture and county government rather than the manufacturing, healthcare, or university employment that drives larger Wisconsin county markets.
Darlington: County Seat on the Pecatonica
Darlington, seated on the Pecatonica River in the county’s center, is both the county’s governmental hub and its most significant community. The Pecatonica River gives the city a modest recreational character — canoeing, fishing, and the riverside setting that makes Darlington’s downtown slightly more distinctive than a county seat of its size might otherwise be. The courthouse, county government employment, local schools, and the agricultural supply and service businesses that serve the surrounding farm economy provide Darlington’s modest but year-round employment base. For landlords, Darlington’s rental market is a small stock of older homes and apartments serving county employees, agricultural workers who prefer town living to farm housing, and the handful of service sector workers who support the local commercial economy.
Shullsburg: Wisconsin’s Best-Preserved Mining Town
Shullsburg is one of Wisconsin’s most historically significant and visually intact small communities — a former lead-mining town of approximately 1,200 residents whose Gravity Hill district, preserved 19th-century commercial architecture, and the Wisconsin Mining Museum in the Badger Mine attract heritage visitors from throughout the upper Midwest. The town was founded in the 1820s as part of Wisconsin’s early lead-mining boom and was one of the first communities in what would become Wisconsin’s southwest corner. The mining heritage — the underground tunnels, the surface equipment, the distinctive character of a community built around extractive industry — has been carefully maintained and interpreted in ways that give Shullsburg a tourism character that supplements the agricultural economy of the surrounding area.
For landlords in Shullsburg, the rental market is very small — a handful of properties serving local workers and the occasional heritage tourism sector employee. The community’s strong local identity and distinctive character attract residents who are genuinely committed to the town and who tend toward longer tenancies than transient workers in more economically generic communities.
The Platteville and Monroe Commuter Connection
Lafayette County’s most meaningful external economic connection is its proximity to Platteville in adjacent Grant County — home of UW–Platteville and a broader commercial economy — and to Monroe in Green County. Lafayette County residents who work at UW–Platteville, at Grant County agricultural operations, or in the Monroe cheese manufacturing economy may choose to live in Lafayette County for its lower housing costs while commuting to adjacent county employment. This cross-county commuter dynamic is modest in scale but represents a meaningful component of the county’s residential demand beyond its own employment base.
Wisconsin Legal Framework in Lafayette County
All residential tenancies in Lafayette County follow the standard Wisconsin Ch. 704 and ATCP 134 framework without variation. 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 are the operative notice timelines. Eviction actions are filed at the Lafayette County Circuit Court in Darlington, which likely sees only a handful of eviction filings in any given year given the county’s small population and thin rental market.
ATCP 134 security deposit compliance applies with full legal force regardless of market scale or community informality. The 21-day return deadline, itemized written deduction statement, check-in sheet at move-in, and double damages for wrongful withholding are not optional regardless of how small the county or how informal the relationship between landlord and tenant. Wisconsin’s rent control prohibition under §66.1015 and the absence of just-cause eviction requirements outside Milwaukee both apply. For landlords in Lafayette County who operate with written leases and basic documentation discipline, the county’s very thin market can generate modest but reliable returns on low-cost acquisition properties.
Lafayette County landlord-tenant matters are governed by Wis. Stat. Ch. 704 and ATCP 134. 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. Eviction actions filed at Lafayette County Circuit Court, Darlington. Milwaukee just-cause ordinance (MCO §200-51.5) does not apply. Consult a licensed Wisconsin attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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