Gibson County Landlord Guide: Toyota TMMI, the Largest Employer in the Evansville Area, and Southwestern Indiana’s Manufacturing Renaissance
Gibson County is one of Indiana’s more dramatic economic transformation stories. For most of the 20th century, the county’s identity was built on coal — its mines, the railroad lines that carried coal to market, and the Gibson Generating Station, one of Duke Energy’s largest coal-fired power plants, which was completed in the early 1980s and drew on local coal supplies to generate electricity for much of the Midwest. That coal economy provided stable blue-collar employment for generations of Gibson County families even as many Indiana counties struggled through the industrial transitions of the postwar decades. Then, in 1996, Toyota broke ground on a manufacturing facility between Princeton and Fort Branch that would change the county permanently. Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indiana — known regionally as TMMI — is now the largest single employer in the Evansville metropolitan area and one of the most significant automotive manufacturing facilities in the American Midwest. For landlords, Gibson County offers a market shaped by that transformation: blue-collar manufacturing wages that support rents above what purely agricultural counties can sustain, an international workforce creating demand for quality housing, and a trajectory of continued investment that points toward long-term employment stability.
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indiana: The County’s Economic Anchor
TMMI opened in 1998 producing full-size pickup trucks and has expanded repeatedly in the decades since. As of 2024, the facility employs more than 7,650 workers and produces the Toyota Sienna minivan, Highlander SUV, and Lexus TX on a 1,160-acre campus between Princeton and Fort Branch. The plant produced 328,136 vehicles in 2024, making it one of Toyota’s highest-volume North American facilities. In 2024, Toyota announced a $1.4 billion expansion at TMMI specifically to produce a new three-row battery-electric SUV, with up to 340 additional jobs expected by the end of 2025. This BEV expansion represents a significant commitment to the Princeton facility’s long-term role in Toyota’s electrification strategy and signals that TMMI will remain a major employer for the foreseeable future rather than being wound down as the automotive industry transitions.
For landlords, TMMI’s scale has direct implications. A single employer with 7,650 workers represents a substantial share of the entire county’s population of 33,000 — meaning that TMMI and its supplier ecosystem are the dominant drivers of housing demand in Princeton and the surrounding communities. Production workers, engineers, skilled trades employees, and management personnel all need housing, and the wage levels at an automotive assembly plant support rents well above what rural Indiana agricultural wages can sustain. The announced BEV expansion provides additional confidence that this demand will persist and potentially grow.
The Japanese Supplier Cluster
When Toyota established TMMI, it attracted a cluster of Japanese-owned automotive supplier companies that located near the plant to provide components just-in-time. Toyota Boshoku America manufactures seating components, Vuteq Corporation produces interior plastic parts, TISA (Total Interior Systems of America) and Millennium Steel are among others that operate facilities in the Princeton area. Toyota Tsusho, Toyota’s trading and logistics arm, also has a presence in the county.
Like the Decatur County situation with Honda’s Japanese supplier cluster, Gibson County’s Japanese-owned companies bring their own complement of Japanese management and engineering personnel on multi-year assignment rotations. These tenants are typically highly creditworthy — their compensation packages are substantial and often include employer housing allowances — but their documentation may not follow standard US formats. Japanese credit histories, bank account statements in yen, and employer housing letters from Toyota Japan or supplier parent companies are all legitimate documentation for income verification. Landlords should apply consistent, FHA-compliant screening criteria that accommodate international documentation and avoid de facto barriers based on documentation format rather than creditworthiness.
Coal Heritage and the Gibson Generating Station
Before Toyota, Gibson County’s economy was anchored by coal. The county sits atop the Illinois Coal Basin, and underground coal mining shaped the county’s communities from the late 19th century through much of the 20th. The Gibson Generating Station in northern Montgomery Township was constructed between the mid-1970s and early 1980s by what is now Duke Energy, using local coal to power one of the largest coal-fired generating complexes in the Midwest. The plant’s five generating units had a combined capacity exceeding 3 gigawatts, making it one of the most significant power generation facilities in Indiana.
The coal industry’s legacy is woven into Gibson County’s community identity. Workforce training programs through Vincennes University and Ivy Tech in the county have historically included mining safety certification alongside manufacturing training. The transition from coal to automotive manufacturing in the late 1990s was a significant economic shift that preserved blue-collar employment even as national coal production declined, and many current TMMI workers come from families with coal mining backgrounds.
Princeton’s Rental Market
Princeton’s rental market reflects its manufacturing economy. Median rents run approximately $775 per month, with a homeownership rate of around 63% and median home values near $134,000. These figures place Princeton well below statewide medians for both rents and home values, reflecting the county’s rural southwestern Indiana position despite its major employer. The $775 median rent represents genuine value for manufacturing workers earning Toyota production wages, which are substantially above the county median income. This gap between wages and housing costs means that TMMI-employed tenants typically have strong rent payment capacity relative to what they pay — a favorable dynamic for landlords.
The market has seen steady appreciation, with property values rising approximately 6% annually in recent years as Toyota’s continued investment has bolstered confidence in the local economy. The announced BEV expansion adds further upward pressure on housing demand that may push rents modestly higher as new workers seek accommodation near the plant.
Gibson Circuit and Superior Court
All Gibson County evictions are filed in Gibson Circuit Court or Gibson Superior Court, both located in the Gibson County Courthouse at 101 N. Main Street, Princeton, IN 47670. The Circuit Court phone is (812) 385-4885 and the Clerk’s office is (812) 386-6474. Court hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00am to 4:00pm. The Gibson County Courthouse is a Romanesque Revival limestone structure on the National Register of Historic Places, rebuilt after a 1935 fire. 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, the landlord files the Eviction complaint, receives a hearing, and proceeds to Judgment for Possession and, if needed, a Writ of Assistance directing the Gibson County Sheriff to execute the judgment. An uncontested eviction from notice through Writ typically resolves in 30 to 60 days.
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