Coal Camps, the Mountain Arts Center, and HB128: Floyd County Kentucky Landlord Law
To understand Floyd County as a rental market, you have to understand what coal did to eastern Kentucky and what happened when it left. For most of the 20th century, Floyd County was coal country in the full sense of the phrase — underground mines, surface operations, company towns, the whole dense infrastructure of an extractive economy that organized daily life around the mine shift. At its peak, coal employment in eastern Kentucky was the dominant source of income across dozens of counties, and Floyd was among the more productive. The physical evidence is still everywhere: the narrow hollows and creek bottoms where coal camp housing was built, the straight-cut ridgelines left by surface mining, the railroad grades that once carried loaded coal cars down the Levisa Fork toward the Ohio River.
The contraction that began in the 2010s was steep and fast. Mining employment in eastern Kentucky dropped by more than half in less than a decade. Floyd County felt it acutely — the population declined, businesses closed, and the housing market softened in ways that are still working themselves out. But the county has not collapsed. Prestonsburg, the county seat, has actively cultivated a post-coal identity centered on healthcare, education, and the arts. The Mountain Arts Center — a performing arts venue that would look impressive in any mid-sized city — sits in Prestonsburg and regularly hosts major touring acts alongside traditional Appalachian music and the popular Kentucky Opry series. Jenny Wiley State Resort Park draws visitors to the ridge above the city year-round. Highlands ARH Regional Medical Center is a genuine regional hospital. Big Sandy Community and Technical College provides workforce training and credential programs. The transition is ongoing and incomplete, but it is real.
The Geography of Floyd County Housing
Floyd County covers 394 square miles of the eastern Kentucky coalfields, and almost none of it is flat. The county is a maze of ridge and hollow — narrow creek valleys bordered by steep hillsides, with communities strung along the creek bottoms and the state routes that follow them. Prestonsburg sits at the confluence of Johns Creek and the Levisa Fork of the Big Sandy River, which gives it more flat ground than most Floyd County communities, but even here the ridgelines close in quickly. Communities like Martin, McDowell, Betsy Layne, Harold, Allen, Langley, and Drift are strung along creek hollows where the only buildable land is the narrow strip between the creek bank and the hillside.
This geography has direct implications for landlords. Properties in creek bottoms along the Levisa Fork and its tributaries carry real flood risk — the Big Sandy watershed has a history of significant flooding events, and climate patterns in recent decades have produced notable flood years across eastern Kentucky. Before renting a property in a flood-prone hollow location, understand your flood zone status, consider flood insurance, and be honest with prospective tenants about flood risk. HB128’s habitability standards include structural integrity and weatherproofing, which in flood-prone locations requires attention to foundation conditions, drainage, and moisture management. Properties on steep hillside lots carry their own risks — slope stability, drainage, and the structural effects of seasonal freeze-thaw cycles on foundations.
Coal camp-era housing — much of it built in the early-to-mid 20th century — is another category that requires particular attention. Company housing built for mine workers was often constructed quickly and to minimal standards, and a great deal of it is still in the rental market. For any dwelling built before 1978, federal law requires written disclosure of known lead paint hazards and delivery of the EPA pamphlet before lease signing. Given the age of much of Floyd County’s rental stock, this requirement applies to a large proportion of the market. Radon is also worth noting: eastern Kentucky’s geology, particularly in areas with coal and limestone formations, produces elevated radon levels in some properties. HB128’s habitability requirements cover radon and other hazardous substances; testing is straightforward and inexpensive.
Filing at the Floyd County Justice Center
All residential evictions in Floyd County are Forcible Detainer actions filed in District Court at the Floyd County Justice Center, 149 S. Central Avenue, Prestonsburg, KY 41653, phone (606) 889-0900. Prestonsburg is the regional hub of the Big Sandy area and has a more active court docket than the smaller counties in this guide; verify current civil hearing dates and filing requirements with the clerk before traveling. Parking is generally available on and near Central Avenue in downtown Prestonsburg. Bring the original lease, your written notice with documented proof of service, and a complete record of rent payments and all communications since the notice was served. The 14-day nonpayment notice must fully expire before you file; for lease violations, both the 14-day cure window and the 30-day minimum termination period must run.
Tenant Screening in a Post-Coal Economy
Screening tenants in Floyd County requires awareness of the county’s economic transition. The most stable tenant segments today are healthcare workers at Highlands ARH and its affiliate practices, Floyd County Schools employees, Big Sandy CTC staff and faculty, and state and county government workers. These are salaried or hourly positions with predictable income — verify with recent pay stubs or employer letters.
A smaller but still present segment of the tenant pool works in remaining coal operations or coal-adjacent industries: underground and surface mining, coal hauling and trucking, equipment maintenance, and reclamation work. These positions carry more income volatility than they once did — layoffs, mine idlings, and market-driven shutdowns are real risks in the current coal environment. For applicants in these categories, prior-year tax returns in addition to current pay documentation give you a more complete picture of annual income stability. Apply your income ratio criterion (typically 2.5 to 3 times monthly rent in gross monthly income) consistently regardless of industry.
Floyd County also has a meaningful population receiving disability, Social Security, and other transfer payments. These can be stable income sources for rental purposes — Social Security disability income, for example, does not fluctuate with employment conditions. Apply your screening criteria to these income types the same way you would to employment income: verify the amount and source with official documentation (award letters, bank statements), and apply the same income ratio.
HB128 Compliance in Floyd County
Kentucky’s HB128 applies fully and uniformly in Floyd County. The operational requirements for landlords with leases made on or after the law’s effective date are: a 14-day written notice to pay or vacate for nonpayment; a 14-day notice to cure or quit for lease violations with termination no sooner than 30 days from the original notice; one full month’s written notice for month-to-month terminations; security deposits capped at two times monthly rent, held in a separate account, returned within 30 days with itemized deductions, with a penalty of $250 or twice the withheld amount, whichever is greater for noncompliance; a nonwaivable habitability duty across 13 categories with 14-day (or 5-day for essentials) response obligations; 24-hour advance notice for standard entry and 72 hours for routine maintenance; and an absolute prohibition on self-help eviction with a penalty of three times periodic rent or actual damages.
In a market navigating economic transition, where housing conditions vary widely and tenant income stability is more uncertain than in prior decades, strict documentation is your best protection. Written leases. Signed move-in checklists with photographs. Documented maintenance requests and responses. Written notices with verifiable proof of service. These practices are not bureaucratic burdens — they are the evidentiary foundation of any successful eviction action at the Floyd County Justice Center if it comes to that.
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. Consult a licensed Kentucky attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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