Fayette County West Virginia Landlord Guide: Gateway to the Gorge
When New River Gorge was elevated from a national river to a full national park in December 2020 — becoming America’s 63rd national park — it changed the trajectory of Fayette County’s rental market in ways that are still playing out. The designation brought national media attention, a surge in visitor interest, and an influx of out-of-state buyers and renters who had been visiting for rock climbing, rafting, and hiking and decided they wanted to stay. Fayetteville, the county seat and primary gateway community, has seen hotel occupancy tax revenues nearly quadruple between 2020 and 2025. Property values near the gorge have risen. Short-term rental listings have multiplied. And a genuine tension has emerged between the county’s long-standing resident population and the new economic forces reshaping what it costs to live here.
For landlords, this tension creates real opportunity alongside real complexity. Fayette County is no longer a simple rural WV market where rents are low, vacancies are high, and tenants are local. It is a market in active transition — and the decisions landlords make now about long-term versus short-term rentals, which communities to invest in, and how to price their units will have long consequences.
The Short-Term Rental Question
The most consequential choice facing Fayette County landlords near the gorge is whether to operate as a short-term or long-term rental. West Virginia imposes no state-level regulation on short-term rentals. Fayette County has no county-level STR ordinance. The practical result is that a property owner near the gorge can list on Airbnb or VRBO with minimal regulatory friction, and in a county that draws over a million visitors annually, nightly rates can substantially exceed what a long-term tenant would pay. Bridge Day alone — held annually on the third Saturday in October since 1980, attracting over 100,000 visitors to watch BASE jumpers leap from the New River Gorge Bridge — can generate a week’s revenue in a single weekend.
The trade-off is management intensity and long-term housing supply effects. STR operators manage cleaning, guest communication, maintenance, and turnover at a frequency that long-term landlords do not. Economists studying gateway communities have documented the “amenity trap” — the process by which tourism-driven STR growth reduces available long-term housing, driving up prices and displacing the working families, teachers, and healthcare workers who keep a community functional. Fayetteville residents and local advocates have raised exactly these concerns. For landlords with long-term investment horizons, the community’s long-term viability as a place people can actually afford to live in matters — not just as an ethical concern, but as a practical one that affects property values and tenant quality over time.
The Remote Worker Migration
West Virginia’s Ascend WV remote worker relocation program has actively marketed the New River Gorge region as a destination for remote workers seeking outdoor recreation access at a fraction of what they pay in coastal metros. The program offers financial incentives for relocation. Fayetteville has been rated among the coolest small towns in America by national publications. The result is a growing class of new Fayette County residents who work remotely for employers in other states, earn above-average incomes relative to local norms, and are seeking quality long-term rentals near the gorge.
This tenant class represents a significant opportunity for landlords with quality housing in or near Fayetteville. Remote workers who moved specifically for the outdoor recreation lifestyle tend toward multi-year tenancies — they came for the gorge, not for a job that might relocate them. Their incomes are typically verifiable via pay stubs or tax returns even if they work for out-of-state employers. The risk is that remote work arrangements are more fragile than traditional employment — a company’s return-to-office policy or a job loss can precipitate an abrupt departure. Verify employment stability, not just current income, when screening remote worker applicants.
The Traditional Employer Base
Beneath the tourism and remote worker story, Fayette County has an institutional employment base that provides long-term stable tenants. Fayette County Schools is the largest single employer. Oak Hill Hospital and Montgomery General Hospital are major healthcare employers. The Mount Olive Correctional Complex, West Virginia’s only maximum-security state prison, employs corrections officers and support staff who tend toward long, stable tenancies. The National Park Service employs rangers, maintenance workers, and administrative staff who often rent in the county year-round. WVA Manufacturing and Georgia Pacific’s lumber mill add industrial employment. These institutional tenants — teachers, healthcare workers, corrections staff, NPS employees — represent the foundation of the most predictable long-term rental portfolio in Fayette County.
Geographic Variation Within the County
Fayette County spans 668 square miles across dramatically varied terrain. The rental market in Fayetteville — the gorge gateway with the national park welcome center visible across the bridge — operates very differently from Oak Hill (the county’s largest city, more commercially developed), from Montgomery (a small college and industrial town on the Kanawha River), or from rural communities like Ansted and Mount Hope. Proximity to the gorge drives a premium in Fayetteville-area properties. Oak Hill offers a more traditional WV small-city market. Montgomery, home to West Virginia University Institute of Technology, has a student and faculty rental component. Landlords should not assume a single rent level or tenant pool applies across the county.
Filing Evictions in Fayette County
Fayette County Magistrate Court is located at 100 Church Street, Suite 3, in Fayetteville. Clerk Erin Akers handles civil filings at (304) 574-4279. Four magistrates — Jeffries, Pannell, Parsons, and Young — serve the county. With four magistrates, Fayette County has more hearing capacity than most WV counties, and the eviction docket moves at a reasonable pace. The WV eviction process is the same statewide: file Form MLTPTWR, pay $50–$70 plus service fees, the sheriff serves the summons, the tenant has five days to respond, hearings are scheduled as expedited proceedings. After judgment, the Fayette County Sheriff executes the Writ of Possession.
One distinction worth noting: STR guests who overstay their booking are NOT residential tenants and the Wrongful Occupation eviction process does not apply to them. A guest who refuses to leave a vacation rental after their booking ends is a lodging trespass matter, not a residential eviction. Landlords operating STRs who encounter this situation should contact local law enforcement rather than filing a Wrongful Occupation petition. The eviction process applies only to tenants with a residential lease or month-to-month tenancy.
Security deposits must be returned within 60 days of tenancy end or 45 days of new occupancy with a written itemized accounting. Contact Magistrate Clerk Erin Akers at (304) 574-4279. Legal Aid of West Virginia: 1-866-255-4370.
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