Iron Furnaces, the Gorge, and HB128: Estill County Kentucky Landlord Law
The name Estill belongs to Captain James Estill, who died on March 22, 1782, in a fight that history has preserved under the unsparing label “Estill’s Defeat.” His militia company had tracked a Wyandot war party across the Kentucky frontier, caught up with them at a place called Little Mountain in present-day Montgomery County, and then fought to a near-standstill before Estill himself was killed and his men fell back. It was one of the last significant armed engagements of the Revolutionary War era on Kentucky soil. The county organized in his memory in 1808 out of Clark and Madison counties. Its county seat, Irvine, was named for a Pennsylvania general and planted along the Kentucky River, which cuts a dramatic course through the limestone knobs of this part of the state.
Two centuries later, Estill County has a population of roughly 14,300 spread across 254 square miles of terrain that ranges from bottomland along the Kentucky River to the steep ridges of the western Cumberland Plateau. The county’s industrial past included iron furnace production — the Estill Steam Furnace was a significant mid-19th century operation — and fire clay mining that supplied ceramics manufacturers for decades before both industries declined. What remains is a public-sector-heavy economy, a small but functional healthcare infrastructure anchored by Estill County Medical Center, and something newer: a growing current of outdoor recreation activity fed by the county’s proximity to one of the most famous natural areas in the eastern United States.
The Red River Gorge Effect on Estill County Rentals
The Red River Gorge Geological Area in neighboring Powell and Wolfe counties is one of the premier rock climbing destinations east of the Mississippi. Hundreds of established routes, a federally designated Wild and Scenic River corridor, the Natural Bridge State Resort Park, and an interconnected trail network draw climbers, hikers, and backcountry campers by the tens of thousands, particularly in the spring and fall seasons. Estill County sits at the informal western approach to this corridor, and the spillover is real. Rural properties — cabins, farmhouses, and vacation homes — within reasonable driving distance of Miguel’s Pizza (the unofficial basecamp of the climbing community at the Gorge) and the major trailheads command meaningful short-term rental premiums on platforms like Airbnb and VRBO.
For landlords operating in this space, the critical legal question is whether Kentucky’s Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act applies to your arrangement. URLTA — as updated by HB128 — governs residential tenancies, but transient or vacation occupancy of 30 days or fewer is generally considered outside the scope of KRS Chapter 383. If your property is marketed primarily as a short-term vacation rental and your guests stay for a weekend or a week at a time, your arrangement almost certainly operates outside URLTA. That changes the legal framework significantly: you are likely operating as a lodging provider rather than a landlord, and a guest who refuses to leave at the end of their stay may require a different legal remedy than the standard Forcible Detainer process. Consult a Kentucky attorney before you encounter that situation rather than after.
Also check whether Estill County or any applicable local jurisdiction has adopted short-term rental registration, licensing, or zoning requirements. As vacation rental platforms have become mainstream, more Kentucky jurisdictions have begun requiring registration and imposing occupancy tax collection obligations on short-term rental hosts. Verify current requirements with the county and any relevant municipal authority.
Filing at the Estill County Justice Center
For traditional year-round residential tenancies, all evictions in Estill County are Forcible Detainer actions filed in District Court at the Estill County Justice Center, 130 Main Street, Irvine, KY 40336, phone (606) 723-5156. Call ahead to confirm current civil hearing dates, office hours, and clerk contact before making the trip. Irvine is a small county seat, and the justice center operates with limited staff; walk-in filing without prior contact can result in delays. Bring the original lease, the written notice with proof of service, and a complete payment and communication record. The 14-day nonpayment notice must fully expire before filing; for lease violations, both the 14-day cure window and the minimum 30-day termination period must run first.
Tenant Profile: Commuters, County Employees, and Healthcare Workers
Estill County’s permanent rental market is anchored by a fairly predictable set of tenant types. The county school system and county government are major employers. Estill County Medical Center provides local healthcare employment for nurses, technicians, and administrative staff. The Daniel Boone National Forest employs both permanent and seasonal personnel at ranger district operations in and around the county. A significant share of renters commute to Richmond (Madison County, roughly 25 miles west on US-52) where Eastern Kentucky University and a broader manufacturing and retail economy provide employment, or to Berea (also Madison County, roughly 30 miles west), which has a growing arts and manufacturing community.
Apply your screening criteria consistently across tenant types. For salaried employees, recent pay stubs spanning two to three months are the standard. For seasonal USFS personnel, request an employment appointment letter specifying start and end dates, and consider whether a term lease aligned with the employment period makes practical sense. For Richmond or Berea commuters, verify employment at the distant workplace the same way you would for a local applicant — the commute distance is not a legitimate screening criterion, and many rural-to-urban commutes in Kentucky are fully routine.
HB128 Essentials: What Every Estill County Landlord Must Know
Kentucky’s HB128, enacted in the 2023 legislative session, applies to all residential leases made on or after its effective date statewide — including in Estill County. The law does not make exceptions for rural counties, small landlords, or informal arrangements. The major operational requirements are as follows.
Notice requirements: For nonpayment of rent, serve a 14-day written notice to pay or vacate specifying the termination date. For lease violations, serve a 14-day written notice to cure or quit specifying the exact breach; if uncured, the lease terminates no sooner than 30 days from the original notice. To end a month-to-month tenancy, provide one full month’s written notice. For week-to-week tenancies, provide at least 5 days’ written notice. All notices should be served in a manner you can document — personal delivery with a witness, certified mail, or a combination.
Security deposits: Capped at two times monthly rent, held in a dedicated account separate from operating funds, returned within 30 days of tenancy termination with an itemized written deduction statement. The penalty for improper withholding is $250 or twice the amount wrongfully withheld, whichever is greater. In a market with relatively modest rents, the $250 floor can represent a significant portion of the deposit itself — a strong incentive to comply scrupulously. Document the unit’s condition at move-in and move-out with a signed checklist and dated photographs of every room.
Habitability: The nonwaivable duty covers 13 categories including weatherproofing, heating, plumbing, electrical systems, pest and hazardous substance control, and required safety equipment. In a county where older housing stock sits in hill country that sees genuine winter weather, heating system maintenance is not a negotiable item — it is a legal obligation. Respond to written maintenance requests within 14 days, or 5 days for essential services. No lease provision can waive this duty.
Entry: Standard entry requires 24 hours’ advance written notice at a reasonable time. Routine maintenance or scheduled pest control requires 72 hours’ notice or a written maintenance schedule provided at least 72 hours before the first entry. Emergency entry requires only reasonable notice given the circumstances.
Lead paint: For any dwelling built before 1978 — which describes a large portion of Estill County’s housing stock — federal law requires written disclosure of known lead paint hazards and delivery of the EPA pamphlet “Protect Your Family from Lead in Your Home” before lease signing. Document this with a signed acknowledgment.
Self-help eviction: Absolutely prohibited under KRS 383.690. Changing locks, cutting utilities, or removing tenant belongings without a court order exposes you to three times periodic rent or three times actual damages, whichever is greater. File your Forcible Detainer at 130 Main Street and let the process work.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. HB128 applies to leases made on or after its effective date; prior Kentucky law governs older leases. Short-term vacation rentals of 30 days or fewer may not be covered by URLTA — consult a licensed Kentucky attorney. Last updated: March 2026.
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