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Grant County · Indiana

Grant County Landlord-Tenant Law

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

🏛️ County Seat: Marion
👥 Population: ~65,000
🏭 Marion • Indiana Wesleyan • Post-GM/Thomson • Mississinewa

Landlord-Tenant Law in Grant County, Indiana

Grant County is an east-central Indiana county of approximately 65,000 residents whose rental market, like those of Madison and Delaware counties to its south and southwest, has been shaped by the long aftermath of 20th-century industrial peak and subsequent deindustrialization. The county seat and dominant population center is Marion, a city of approximately 27,000 whose population has declined from a mid-20th-century peak of nearly 40,000 as successive waves of manufacturing departure reduced the industrial base that built the community. Marion’s mid-century economy was anchored by GM’s Fisher Body stamping plant (later Marion Metal Center, producing truck bed and body components for GM) and Thomson Consumer Electronics, a major television picture tube manufacturer that was once among the county’s largest employers. Both operations have closed in the intervening decades, leaving behind housing stock that was built for a more prosperous and populous community and a local economy that has never fully replaced what those employers provided. The counterweight to Marion’s post-industrial narrative is Indiana Wesleyan University, a private evangelical Christian university in Marion with approximately 13,000 students across its residential and online programs, making it one of Indiana’s larger private universities and by far the largest employer and economic anchor in Grant County today. Gas City and Upland are the other notable communities, with Taylor University in Upland adding a second, smaller private Christian university to the county. All landlord-tenant matters in Grant County are governed by Indiana Code Title 32, Article 31. The eviction action is called an Eviction and is filed in Grant Circuit or Superior Court. Indiana has no Fair Rent Commissions and no statewide rent control. The 10-day pay-or-quit notice applies to nonpayment. Security deposits have no statutory cap. Deposit return is required within 45 days after termination, delivery of possession, and tenant’s written mailing address.

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📊 Grant County Quick Stats

County Seat Marion (~27,000) — post-industrial city
Largest Employer Indiana Wesleyan University — ~13,000 students
County Population ~65,000 — east-central Indiana
Key Employers Indiana Wesleyan, Taylor University (Upland), Marion General Hospital, VA Medical Center
Renter Share ~36% of housing units renter-occupied
Fair Rent Commission None — Indiana has no Fair Rent Commissions

⚖️ Eviction At-a-Glance

Eviction Action Eviction — filed in Grant 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
Grant County Courthouse 101 E. 4th Street, Marion • (765) 668-8121
Court Hours Mon–Fri 8:00am–4:00pm
Avg Timeline 30–60 days start to finish

Grant County Local Regulations

Indiana state law governs all landlord-tenant relationships in Grant County. There are no county-level landlord-tenant ordinances, no Fair Rent Commissions, and no rent control anywhere in Indiana. Marion and other municipalities enforce their own housing codes.

Category Details
No Rent Control Indiana law prohibits local rent control statewide (IC 32-31-1-20). No Grant County municipality may regulate rental rates. Landlords may raise rents freely with 30 days written notice for month-to-month tenancies (IC 32-31-5-4). Marion rents are among the lowest in the Indianapolis-adjacent corridor, reflecting the depressed underlying market.
No Fair Rent Commission Indiana has no Fair Rent Commissions anywhere in the state. Grant County landlords operate under Indiana state law exclusively. Habitability complaints are directed to Marion’s code enforcement office.
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 required before the clock starts. Itemized written deduction statement required. Failure forfeits right to retain any portion and triggers attorney’s fee liability (IC 32-31-3-16).
Marion Housing Code Marion enforces its housing code through its building and code enforcement operations. The city’s extensive older housing stock and history of property abandonment in weaker submarkets have produced ongoing code enforcement activity. Marion has pursued rental registration and vacant property programs at various points. Landlords operating in Marion should verify current rental registration requirements. Marion Code Enforcement: (765) 382-3050.
Indiana Wesleyan Student Rentals Indiana Wesleyan University’s approximately 13,000 students span traditional residential undergraduates and a much larger online/adult degree-completion population. Residential undergraduate enrollment (several thousand students) generates off-campus rental demand in the neighborhoods adjacent to the IWU campus on Marion’s south side. IWU maintains religious and lifestyle standards (IWU Community Lifestyle Statement) that shape student housing choices. Parent co-signers are standard for student leases. Taylor University in Upland similarly generates smaller student rental demand in that community.
Lead Paint Compliance Marion’s industrial-era housing stock means pre-1940 structures are concentrated in the older near-downtown neighborhoods and the residential areas surrounding the former Fisher Body/GM Marion Metal Center and Thomson plant sites. Federal law requires lead paint disclosure and the EPA pamphlet for all pre-1978 rental properties. The Grant County Health Department investigates lead exposure cases. Landlords with older Marion properties must maintain disclosure documentation.
Mississinewa River Flood Plain The Mississinewa River runs through Marion. FEMA flood zone designations cover portions of the Marion riverfront and low-lying areas. The Mississinewa Reservoir upstream provides flood control for the watershed. Landlords with properties in designated zones must provide flood plain disclosure before lease execution (IC 32-31-1-21).
VA Medical Center and Veteran Tenants The VA Northern Indiana Health Care System operates a Marion campus that is among the city’s significant employers and produces a tenant segment of veterans receiving VA benefits and/or disability compensation. VA benefits represent a reliable and legally protected source of income under Indiana fair housing practice. Screening should evaluate income stability standards applied consistently across applicant income sources.
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 for Mississinewa-adjacent properties (IC 32-31-1-21); (5) water/sewage service itemization if landlord passes through utility charges (IC 8-1-2-1.2).
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited Indiana law expressly prohibits self-help eviction (IC 32-31-5-6). Lock changes, utility shutoffs, removal of doors or windows, or removal of tenant’s personal property without a court order is illegal. Grant County landlords must file through Grant Circuit or Superior Court in Marion.

Last verified: 2026-04-01

🏛️ Grant County Courthouse

101 E. 4th Street, Marion, IN 46952 • (765) 668-8121

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Indiana

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Grant County eviction

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

Indiana Eviction Laws

State statutes that apply throughout Grant 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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⚠️ 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 Grant County

Cities and towns

Marion
Gas City
Upland
Fairmount
Jonesboro
Swayzee
Matthews
Grant County

Marion & Indiana Wesleyan — Post-Industrial City and University Anchor

No rent control. No deposit cap. 10-day pay-or-quit. 45-day deposit return. Marion: post-GM Fisher Body/Thomson market, elevated vacancy in weaker submarkets, active eviction docket. Indiana Wesleyan: ~13K students, residential undergrads near campus. Taylor University in Upland. VA Medical Center tenants. Mississinewa flood zone. File Grant Circuit or Superior Court, Marion.

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Grant County Landlord Guide: Marion’s Post-Industrial Challenge, the Indiana Wesleyan Anchor, and Operating a Distressed but Stable Rental Market

Grant County is a hard market that rewards disciplined landlords and punishes the undisciplined. Marion’s long post-industrial decline has produced a rental environment where affordable housing prices coexist with elevated vacancy risk, concentrated poverty, code enforcement pressure, and an applicant pool whose income volatility exceeds what landlords in stronger Indiana markets typically encounter. It has also produced a market where skilled operators have carved out genuinely profitable portfolios by applying the specific operational disciplines that distressed urban markets demand: rigorous screening, active maintenance, financial reserves adequate to weather turnover and vacancy periods, and an operational posture that treats every rental as a business rather than a passive asset.

The GM Fisher Body and Thomson Legacy

To understand Marion’s rental market you have to understand what left. GM’s Fisher Body stamping plant, which later operated as the Marion Metal Center producing stamped metal components for GM truck and body operations, was one of Marion’s largest employers through much of the 20th century. The plant’s workforce at peak represented thousands of UAW-represented workers whose wages built Marion’s residential neighborhoods and sustained its commercial downtown. Thomson Consumer Electronics operated a large television picture tube manufacturing facility in Marion that similarly employed thousands at its peak and was closed in the mid-2000s as CRT television technology was displaced by flat-panel displays.

The aggregate impact of these closures and other manufacturing losses has been a population decline from Marion’s mid-20th-century peak of nearly 40,000 to approximately 27,000 today, significant property abandonment in weaker neighborhoods, a housing stock that substantially exceeds current demand in some submarkets, and an economic base that has never fully replaced what manufacturing provided. Elevated poverty rates, significant Housing Choice Voucher utilization, income instability, and an active eviction docket reflecting genuine distress all characterize Marion’s rental market today. None of this precludes profitable landlording in Marion, but it defines the operating environment within which any Marion rental business must function.

Indiana Wesleyan University: The Economic Counterweight

Indiana Wesleyan University is the reason Marion’s story is not simply one of decline. IWU has grown from a small Wesleyan denomination college into Indiana’s largest private university by total enrollment, with approximately 13,000 students combining traditional residential undergraduates, graduate students, and a very large online and adult degree-completion program. The university employs roughly 1,500-2,000 faculty and staff, making it the county’s largest single employer and a stable economic anchor whose influence on Marion grows as manufacturing employment has diminished. The residential undergraduate enrollment produces a student rental segment in the neighborhoods adjacent to the campus on Marion’s south side, though IWU maintains institutional standards that shape student behavior and housing choices in ways different from the secular student markets in Bloomington, Muncie, or West Lafayette.

IWU’s growth has also produced a professional workforce tenant segment that supports a higher-end rental market in the neighborhoods near the campus and in the newer residential areas of southern Marion and Upland. Faculty housing, graduate student rentals, and rentals for adult-program and online-program staff contribute a stability element that pure post-industrial markets lack. Taylor University in Upland adds a smaller but similar institutional anchor at the county’s northern edge.

The VA Medical Center and Institutional Employment

The VA Northern Indiana Health Care System Marion campus is a significant medical and institutional employer whose workforce contributes another reliable tenant segment. VA employees, like other federal workers, represent stable government employment with collectively protected wages and benefits. The facility also produces a tenant segment of veterans receiving VA medical care and benefits whose income profiles — disability compensation, pension, and VA healthcare access — are stable and legally protected sources of income that must be evaluated fairly in screening. Income discrimination based on source is not a specific Indiana state prohibition, but applying consistent standards across income sources is both legally prudent and operationally sensible given the reliability of federal benefit payments.

Fairmount, James Dean, and the Rural Town Segment

Grant County contains a cultural footnote that doesn’t much affect rental economics but is worth knowing about: Fairmount, a small town south of Marion, was the childhood home of James Dean, and the community maintains an active cultural tourism presence around his memory including the annual Fairmount Museum Days and the James Dean Memorial. This tourism produces modest short-term rental demand during peak events but is too small and too concentrated to meaningfully shape year-round rental operations. Fairmount, Gas City, Jonesboro, Swayzee, Matthews, and the other smaller communities outside Marion operate as classic small-town rural Indiana rental markets: smaller inventories, longer average tenancies, more single-family detached stock, limited multifamily supply. Tenant profiles in these communities skew toward working families with employment in Marion, agricultural services, or commute relationships to surrounding counties (particularly Howard County’s Stellantis operations). Rental rates are low by any statewide standard, and the properties that perform best are those owned by local landlords with on-the-ground maintenance relationships rather than absentee investors expecting to remotely manage what is fundamentally a relationship business.

Grant, Madison, Delaware: The East-Central Post-Industrial Triangle

It is worth understanding Grant County in the context of its neighbors. Grant, Madison, and Delaware counties together form a triangle of east-central Indiana post-industrial cities — Marion, Anderson, and Muncie respectively — that share substantial economic and demographic history. All three experienced mid-20th-century manufacturing peaks anchored by major employers (GM in Anderson, Ball Corporation and related industries in Muncie, Fisher Body and Thomson in Marion), all three have lost substantial population from peak, all three now depend significantly on educational and healthcare institutional anchors (Anderson University, Ball State University, Indiana Wesleyan University, plus the various hospital systems), and all three present similar rental market operational profiles. A landlord who understands one of these markets generally understands the others, with the distinctive twist in Grant County being IWU’s Christian-university character and its large adult and online student populations that differ from the more traditional undergraduate profile of Ball State or the state university alternatives. Regional operators who build scale across the three counties can capture operational efficiencies that single-county operators cannot.

Grant Circuit and Superior Courts and the Eviction Process

All Grant County eviction actions file in Grant Circuit Court or Grant Superior Court, with the courthouse at 101 E. 4th Street, Marion, IN 46952, phone (765) 668-8121. The 10-day pay-or-quit notice must be properly served before filing any nonpayment eviction. Total timeline in an uncontested case from notice service through sheriff execution of a Writ of Possession typically runs 30 to 60 days. Grant County’s eviction docket is relatively active on a per-capita basis, reflecting the concentrated-poverty character of portions of the Marion rental market and the income volatility of the applicant pool. Indiana Legal Services maintains a regional presence and represents tenants in eviction defense.

Operating Principles for Grant County Landlords

Successful Grant County landlording requires accepting the market’s difficulty as a precondition rather than fighting it. Acquisition prices are genuinely low, and cap rates on Marion rental property can be attractive relative to stronger Indiana markets. The price reflects the operating environment, and buyers who underestimate that environment typically underperform. Three operational disciplines matter most. First, income verification must be rigorous — three times rent in verifiable gross income is a floor not a ceiling, and employment stability (trailing twelve months of verified pay) matters more than point-in-time income. Second, screening must include thorough eviction history and credit checks; prior evictions in an applicant pool where evictions are common is a significant signal about likely future behavior. Third, maintenance cannot be deferred — older Marion housing stock requires active management and the cost of deferred maintenance compounds quickly. Landlords who apply these disciplines and accept that some portion of any Marion portfolio will experience vacancy and turnover can build genuinely durable businesses. Landlords who acquire cheap and hope for the best often find the operating environment more demanding than anticipated. Indiana’s pro-landlord statutory framework — no rent control, 45-day deposit return, 10-day pay-or-quit, prohibition of self-help eviction — applies consistently across all Grant County operations.

Neighboring Indiana Counties

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

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