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Fayette County · Indiana

Fayette County Landlord-Tenant Law

Indiana landlord guide — eviction rules, courthouse info & local regulations

🏛️ County Seat: Connersville
👥 Population: ~23,400
🏭 Connersville • Indiana’s Little Detroit • Whitewater Railroad • Stant Mfg.

Landlord-Tenant Law in Fayette County, Indiana

Fayette County is a small east-central Indiana county of approximately 23,400 residents with one of the most layered and poignant economic histories of any county in the state. Connersville, the county seat and sole incorporated city, was known for much of the first half of the 20th century as “Indiana’s Little Detroit” — a manufacturing powerhouse that produced automobiles including the McFarlan, Lexington, Cord 810 and 812, and Duesenberg bodies, and at its peak claimed more manufacturing jobs per capita than almost any other American city. That era ended gradually through corporate consolidation, the departure of major plant operations to larger industrial centers, and the broader decline of Midwest manufacturing. Today Fayette County is among Indiana’s lower-income counties, with a median household income around $49,000 and a poverty rate approaching 23%. The county’s economy is now anchored by healthcare (Fayette Regional Health System), remaining manufacturers including Stant Corporation and Howden-Roots, and retail. Despite the economic challenges, Fayette County offers an extremely affordable rental market with two-bedroom rents around $900 per month, a second-oldest continuously used courthouse in Indiana (built 1849), the Whitewater Valley Railroad scenic line connecting Connersville to historic Metamora, and a population of skilled manufacturing workers who represent durable rental demand. All landlord-tenant matters are governed by Indiana Code Title 32, Article 31. Evictions are filed in Fayette Circuit or Superior Court at 401 N. Central Avenue in Connersville. Indiana has no rent control and no Fair Rent Commissions.

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📊 Fayette County Quick Stats

County Seat Connersville — only incorporated town in the county
County Population ~23,400 — slow decline, east-central Indiana
Key Employers Fayette Regional Health, Stant Corp., Howden-Roots, retail
Median HH Income ~$49,000 — among Indiana’s lower-income counties
Poverty Rate ~23% — among Indiana’s highest
Fair Rent Commission None — Indiana has no Fair Rent Commissions

⚖️ Eviction At-a-Glance

Eviction Action Eviction — filed in Fayette Circuit or Superior Court
Nonpayment Notice 10-day pay or quit (IC 32-31-1-6)
No Grace Period Indiana has no statutory grace period
Fayette Circuit Court 401 N. Central Ave., Connersville • (765) 825-1331
Court Hours Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri 8:30am–4:30pm; Wed 8am–6pm (closed daily 12–1pm)
Avg Timeline 30–60 days start to finish

Fayette County Local Regulations

Indiana state law governs all landlord-tenant relationships in Fayette County. There are no county-level landlord-tenant ordinances, no Fair Rent Commissions, and no rent control anywhere in Indiana.

Category Details
No Rent Control Indiana law prohibits local rent control statewide (IC 32-31-1-20). Connersville may not regulate rental rates. Landlords may raise rents with 30 days written notice for month-to-month tenancies (IC 32-31-5-4).
No Fair Rent Commission Indiana has no Fair Rent Commissions. Tenant habitability complaints route to Connersville code enforcement and the courts under IC 32-31-8-6.
Security Deposit No statutory cap (IC 32-31-3-12). No escrow or interest requirement. Return within 45 days after: (1) termination of the rental agreement; (2) delivery of possession; and (3) tenant provides written mailing address. All three conditions must occur before the 45-day clock begins. Itemized written deduction statement required with any withheld amount.
Older Housing Stock Connersville’s housing stock is predominantly older, with substantial inventory built before 1940 and 1978. Pre-1978 properties require federal lead paint disclosure. Pre-1940 properties may have knob-and-tube wiring, galvanized plumbing, and other systems requiring attention. Landlords acquiring older Connersville properties should conduct thorough inspections and budget for deferred maintenance. The city’s poverty rate means tenants may have limited means to absorb poor conditions — maintaining habitability is both a legal and practical priority.
Required Disclosures At or before lease commencement: (1) property manager and agent for service of process, both Indiana residents (IC 32-31-3-18); (2) smoke detector acknowledgment (IC 32-31-5-7); (3) lead paint disclosure for pre-1978 properties; (4) flood plain disclosure if applicable — portions near the Whitewater River have flood risk (IC 32-31-1-21); (5) utility charge itemization if landlord passes through water or sewer costs (IC 8-1-2-1.2).
Distinctive Court Hours Fayette Circuit Court has non-standard hours: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday 8:30am–4:30pm; Wednesday 8:00am–6:00pm (extended); closed daily for lunch 12pm–1pm. Plan filings accordingly. The extended Wednesday hours provide additional filing windows for landlords unable to access the courthouse during regular business hours.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited Indiana law expressly prohibits self-help eviction (IC 32-31-5-6). All Fayette County evictions must proceed through Fayette Circuit or Superior Court. Lock changes, utility shutoffs, or removal of personal property without a court order are illegal.

Last verified: 2026-04-01

🏛️ Fayette Circuit / Superior Court

401 N. Central Avenue, Courthouse 2nd Floor, Connersville, IN 47331 • (765) 825-1331

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Indiana

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Fayette County eviction

💰 Eviction Costs: Indiana
Filing Fee $35-160
Total Est. Range $100-400
Service: — Writ: —

Indiana Eviction Laws

State statutes that apply throughout Fayette County

⚡ Quick Overview

10
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
Reasonable (typically 14-30 days); 45 days for illegal activity
Days Notice (Violation)
21-60
Avg Total Days
$$35-160
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 10-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit
Notice Period 10 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay all rent within 10 days to stop eviction
Days to Hearing 10-21 days
Days to Writ Immediate after judgment; 24 hours to vacate days
Total Estimated Timeline 21-60 days
Total Estimated Cost $100-400
⚠️ Watch Out

10-day notice must use specific statutory language per IC § 32-31-1-6: 'You are notified to vacate the following property not more than ten (10) days after you receive this notice unless you pay the rent due...' No state-mandated grace period - rent is late the day after due date. Accepting partial payment during eviction can jeopardize case unless written partial payment agreement exists. Emergency/expedited eviction available within 3 days for waste/severe property damage (IC § 32-31-6-5). 45-day unconditional quit for illegal activity. No cure required for waste or holdover tenants (IC § 32-31-1-8). Senate Enrolled Act 142 (2025): allows sealing/nondisclosure of dismissed/favorable eviction records.

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📝 Indiana 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 Small Claims Court (under $6000) or Circuit/Superior Court. Pay the filing fee (~$$35-160).
  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 Indiana 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 Indiana attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Indiana landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Indiana — 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 Indiana's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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⏱ Notice Period Calculator

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📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ 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 in Fayette County

Connersville is the only incorporated town

Connersville
Glenwood (unincorp.)
Everton (unincorp.)
Milton (unincorp.)
Fayette County

Connersville — Indiana’s Little Detroit, Affordable Rents, Skilled Workforce

No rent control. 10-day pay-or-quit. 45-day deposit return. 2BR ~$900. High poverty — maintain habitability, screen income carefully. Lead paint: most stock pre-1978. Court: Wed extended hours 8am–6pm. File Fayette Circuit Court, 401 N. Central Ave.

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Fayette County Landlord Guide: Indiana’s Little Detroit, the Cord and Duesenberg Legacy, and a Rental Market Shaped by Industrial History

Fayette County carries more industrial history per square mile than almost any comparable Indiana county. Connersville was not simply a participant in the early American automotive industry — it was a genuine center of it, a city that designed, built, and shipped automobiles that are now collected by museums and wealthy enthusiasts around the world. The Cord 810 and 812, the Baby Duesenberg that preceded them, the bodywork for the 1940 Packard Darrin, and the 500,000 Jeep bodies manufactured during World War II all came out of Connersville factories. The Chamber of Commerce’s manufacturing history website documents a lineage that locals refer to as “Indiana’s Little Detroit” with a pride that is entirely earned, even if that era ended more than half a century ago. For landlords, understanding that history is essential to understanding the current market — because the economic trajectory that followed explains why Fayette County is now one of Indiana’s lower-income counties, and why the rental market looks the way it does.

The Automotive Era and Its Aftermath

Connersville’s automotive history began in 1909 when the McFarlan went into production, making it one of the earliest automotive manufacturing cities in Indiana. Over the following decades, manufacturers including Lexington, Empire, Auburn, and the Cord Corporation operated in Connersville, drawing skilled workers, machinists, and engineers to the city. The Central Manufacturing Company produced bodywork for luxury cars and military vehicles, including the Jeep bodies that played a role in World War II. At the peak of this era, Connersville had among the highest concentrations of manufacturing employment per capita in the United States — a distinction that shaped the city’s physical form, its housing stock, its neighborhood structure, and the expectations of its workforce.

The decline began in the postwar period and accelerated through the 1960s and 1970s as the automotive industry consolidated geographically around Detroit and its immediate satellite communities. Local entrepreneurial manufacturers were bought out by larger corporations, which subsequently closed or relocated the Connersville operations when national manufacturing strategies shifted. Unlike Kokomo or Anderson, which had sufficiently large General Motors or Chrysler operations to sustain manufacturing employment even through consolidation, Connersville’s manufacturers were smaller and more vulnerable to corporate restructuring. By the 1980s and 1990s, the economic base had shifted dramatically toward healthcare, retail, and the remaining manufacturers who stayed.

Current Employers: Healthcare, Stant, and Remaining Manufacturing

Fayette Regional Health System is among Connersville’s largest current employers, reflecting the pattern common across post-industrial Indiana small cities where healthcare has replaced manufacturing as the dominant employment sector. Hospitals and health systems are structurally stable employers — demand for healthcare services is population-driven and recession-resistant — which provides the rental market with a base of healthcare worker tenants whose employment is reliable regardless of economic cycles.

Stant Corporation, a global manufacturer of fuel system components and caps, maintains operations in Connersville and represents the most prominent survivor of the city’s automotive supply chain heritage. Howden-Roots, a manufacturer of rotary equipment including industrial blowers and compressors, and several smaller fabricators round out the manufacturing base. These employers provide production jobs with wages that qualify workers for Connersville’s affordable housing market without being dramatically above it, meaning that standard income verification and rent-to-income screening works predictably in this market.

The Whitewater Valley Railroad

The Whitewater Valley Railroad is a 19-mile scenic railroad and museum that operates excursion trains between Connersville and Metamora, a preserved 1830s canal town in Franklin County. The railroad uses restored 1950s-era diesel locomotives and vintage passenger equipment to carry tourists through the Whitewater River valley on a route that was part of the original Whitewater Canal transportation system. Thousands of visitors travel the line annually, making it one of Fayette County’s most successful heritage tourism attractions and a genuine draw that brings outside visitors to Connersville’s businesses.

The Railroad operates as a nonprofit and is staffed largely by volunteers with deep railroading enthusiasm. Its presence contributes modestly to the local economy and tourism sector, and the destination town of Metamora draws its own visitors to its canal and artisan shops. For the rental market, the Railroad’s significance is primarily as a quality-of-life amenity and civic asset that gives Connersville an identity beyond its economic struggles.

The Rental Market: Deeply Affordable, High Poverty Context

Fayette County’s rental market is among Indiana’s most affordable, with two-bedroom rents averaging approximately $900 per month and acquisition costs for rental properties well below state medians. The county’s median household income of approximately $49,000 and poverty rate approaching 23% mean that a significant portion of Connersville’s population faces genuine housing cost pressure even at these low rent levels. For landlords, the practical implications are several.

Income verification is especially important in a high-poverty market. The combination of lower median wages and higher poverty rates means a higher-than-average percentage of prospective tenants may have incomes that do not support the rent requested or may have histories of housing instability. Consistent, documented income-based screening criteria — applied uniformly to all applicants — protects landlords legally while providing a defensible basis for tenancy decisions. The county’s poverty rate does not mean that qualified tenants are unavailable — healthcare, manufacturing, and service workers in Connersville earn wages that support $900 rents — but it does mean that screening discipline matters more here than in higher-income markets where income qualification is rarely an issue.

Fayette Circuit Court and Its Distinctive Hours

All Fayette County evictions are filed in Fayette Circuit Court or Fayette Superior Court at 401 N. Central Avenue, Courthouse 2nd Floor, Connersville, IN 47331. The Circuit Court phone is (765) 825-1331. Fayette Circuit Court has distinctive hours that landlords should note: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday from 8:30am to 4:30pm; Wednesday from 8:00am to 6:00pm; and closed daily for lunch from 12pm to 1pm. The extended Wednesday hours provide additional filing flexibility for landlords with regular business day scheduling constraints. The court is closed on weekends and Indiana state holidays.

The eviction process follows Indiana’s standard IC 32-31 framework. A 10-day notice to pay or quit must be properly served with no grace period. After 10 days without payment or voluntary vacation, the landlord files the Eviction complaint. The court schedules a hearing, and if the landlord prevails, a Judgment for Possession is entered. The Writ of Assistance directing the Fayette County Sheriff follows if needed. An uncontested eviction from notice through Writ typically resolves in 30 to 60 days.

Neighboring Indiana Counties

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Disclaimer: This page provides general information about landlord-tenant law in Fayette County, Indiana and is not legal advice. Always verify current requirements with Fayette Circuit or Superior Court or a licensed Indiana attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

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