Kings County Landlord-Tenant Law: The Navy’s Jet Base, State Prisons, and a Dairy Valley Rental Market
Kings County does not attract much attention in California housing conversations, which is perhaps the most useful thing to know about it as a landlord. It is not a county where tenant advocates have enacted protective local ordinances, where tech-sector demand has inflated rents beyond worker incomes, or where regulatory complexity requires layers of legal analysis before signing a lease. It is a county where dairy cows outnumber people in significant portions of the landscape, where the sound of jet fighters from NAS Lemoore is part of the daily acoustic environment, and where state prison employment anchors two communities with predictable, recession-resistant incomes. For landlords who understand these three tenant segments — military families, correctional staff, and agricultural workers — Kings County offers a straightforward rental market with persistent demand and one of the simplest regulatory frameworks in the state.
NAS Lemoore: The West Coast’s Largest Master Jet Base and Its Housing Demand
Naval Air Station Lemoore is not a facility that most people outside the military community know by name, but it is one of the most significant military installations on the West Coast. As the Navy’s largest master jet base in the Pacific theater, NAS Lemoore is home to multiple carrier air wing squadrons flying F/A-18 Super Hornets and F-35C Lightning IIs, along with the training pipelines, maintenance organizations, and support commands that enable carrier aviation operations. The base employs several thousand active-duty sailors and officers, and its operational tempo — with squadrons regularly deploying to carrier strike groups in the Western Pacific — means that the base population is in constant rotation, with departing families creating vacancies and arriving families creating immediate demand.
For landlords in Lemoore and throughout Kings County, the NAS Lemoore military community is among the most desirable tenant segments available in the market. Military families on permanent change of station orders typically arrive with verified income (Leave and Earnings Statements provide complete pay documentation), BAH calibrated to the local market, and a demonstrated pattern of stable rental tenancy — military families are among the most frequently screened and creditworthy tenant populations in any market where they appear in significant numbers. The typical PCS assignment length of two to three years means lease terms align well with the standard 12-month renewal cycle, and military families generally take care of properties because their conduct as tenants is part of their professional profile. The primary operational consideration for landlords is the SCRA early termination right: when a sailor receives orders for a new duty station, deployment, or release from active duty, they have the federal right to terminate their lease with 30 days’ notice plus a copy of the qualifying orders. This is not a tenant flaw — it is an expected feature of military tenancy that responsible landlords plan for rather than resist.
Corcoran and Avenal: Prison Employment and Residential Stability
The cities of Corcoran and Avenal have economies built almost entirely around state prison employment, and their rental markets reflect the character of that workforce. California State Prison-Corcoran and the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility together employ hundreds of correctional officers, sergeants, lieutenants, captains, healthcare professionals, teachers, counselors, and administrative staff who live in Corcoran and the surrounding area. Avenal has the California Correctional Institution adding another employment anchor on the county’s western I-5 corridor.
California correctional officer employment is, by most measures, among the most financially stable employment available to working-class and middle-class Californians. CDCR correctional officers are represented by the California Correctional Peace Officers Association (CCPOA), one of the most politically influential public employee unions in the state, and their compensation reflects that influence: base salaries, overtime opportunities, uniform allowances, and defined benefit pensions combine to produce total compensation packages that significantly exceed what most private-sector workers with comparable education and experience receive. The state employer’s stability — California has never failed to meet its payroll obligations — means that a correctional officer’s income is as close to guaranteed as any employment income can be. For landlords in Corcoran and Avenal, a CDCR employee applicant with several years of service is about as low-risk a tenant as the market can offer.
Dairy Agriculture, Seasonal Workers, and the Hanford-Corcoran MSA CPI
Beyond the military and prison employment anchors, Kings County’s economy is agricultural in character, dominated by large-scale dairy operations and cotton, alfalfa, and row-crop farming across the flat San Joaquin Valley floor. The county’s dairy industry is industrial in scale, with operations employing dozens to hundreds of workers each in milking, feeding, reproduction management, and facility maintenance roles. As with Merced County’s dairy sector, Kings County dairy employment is year-round and relatively consistent in monthly income — cows require the same care regardless of season, and the large dairy operations that dominate Kings County’s landscape operate 365 days a year. Pay stubs combined with annual W-2 documentation provide a reliable income picture for dairy workers with stable single-employer history.
Cotton, alfalfa, and other field crop workers have more seasonal income patterns, with planting and harvest periods creating income peaks that monthly pay stubs can misrepresent as reliable annual averages. The prior year’s W-2 or complete tax return, divided by twelve, gives the correct monthly income equivalent for agricultural applicants with seasonal employment. The Hanford-Corcoran MSA CPI — the Bureau of Labor Statistics index for this county — reflects the economic conditions of this agricultural and institutional economy, and tends to run at moderate inflation levels that keep the AB 1482 rent cap formula well below the statutory 10% ceiling in most years. Given Kings County’s already-low rent levels, the dollar amount of any AB 1482-permitted increase is modest in absolute terms even when the percentage is meaningful.
This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Kings County landlord-tenant matters are governed by California Civil Code §§ 1940–1954.071 and the AB 1482 Tenant Protection Act (Civil Code §§ 1946.2 and 1947.12). The applicable CPI for AB 1482 calculations is the BLS CPI-U for the Hanford-Corcoran metropolitan statistical area. Kings County has no local rent control ordinances as of early 2026. The federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act applies to active-duty military personnel at NAS Lemoore; verify status at scra.dmdc.osd.mil. Unlawful detainer actions are filed in Kings County Superior Court, 1426 S Drive, Hanford, CA 93230. Security deposit cap: 1 month’s rent (Civil Code § 1950.5; effective July 1, 2024). Deposit return: 21 calendar days. AB 1482 rent cap: 5%+CPI (Hanford-Corcoran MSA), max 10%; expires January 1, 2030. Just cause required after 12 months for covered units. Consult a licensed California attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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