General Greene, the Green River, and HB128: Green County Kentucky Landlord Law
There is a particular kind of quiet that belongs to Green County. It is not the quiet of stagnation or neglect but of a place that has found its pace and stuck to it — a south-central Kentucky county of farms, county roads, small communities, and a county seat in Greensburg that has organized local life around its courthouse square for more than two centuries. Established in December 1792, in the very year Kentucky entered the Union as the 15th state, Green County was named for Major General Nathanael Greene, the Rhode Island Quaker turned Continental Army commander whose strategic genius in the Southern Campaign — trading space for time, forcing the British to chase him across the Carolinas until their army wore out — is credited with turning the tide against Cornwallis without ever winning a major pitched battle. The county that bears his name has outlasted every political upheaval since.
The Green River begins here. Not the full-grown river that flows past Mammoth Cave and carries barges toward the Ohio, but the upper headwaters — clear-water streams cutting through the limestone country of south-central Kentucky before gathering enough volume to earn the name on a map. The 2020 census counted 10,941 people in 288 square miles, a density of about 38 people per square mile that puts the county firmly in Kentucky’s most rural tier. The landscape is tobacco, cattle, and row crops, with the small communities of Summersville, Gresham, and Elk Horn punctuating the roads between farms. Greensburg, the county seat, has a population of around 2,430 and provides the courthouse, the schools, the banks, the pharmacy, and most of what passes for a commercial center in a county this size.
Understanding a Very Small Rental Market
Green County’s rental market is small in every dimension. There are no apartment complexes worth noting, no property management companies of any scale, and very little turnover-driven demand. The county has no hospital — residents travel to Columbia in Adair County, Campbellsville in Taylor County, or further for major medical care. There is no four-year college. There is no significant manufacturing employer of the kind that would draw workers from outside the county. The rental pool is primarily composed of households employed by the Green County Schools, the county and state governments, and the small-business retail and service sector in Greensburg, plus a meaningful share of agricultural workers whose income is tied to the tobacco harvest cycle and cattle operations.
What that means in practice is a market where most rental relationships are personal and long-standing, where the same families have rented from the same landlords for years, and where the distinction between a written lease and an understanding between neighbors is sometimes blurry. That informality is understandable given the county’s culture and size, but it creates legal risk. HB128 applies regardless of how well the landlord and tenant know each other. An oral month-to-month arrangement is theoretically enforceable, but when it breaks down and you need to file a Forcible Detainer at the Green County Justice Center, the absence of a written lease with clear terms makes the proceeding harder to predict and harder to win. A basic written lease — two pages, plain language, covering rent amount, due date, notice period, and the major lease terms — is worth the fifteen minutes it takes to prepare and sign. Do not skip it because the tenant is your neighbor’s cousin.
Agricultural Income and Screening Adjustments
Screening tenants in Green County requires some sensitivity to the agricultural income cycle that shapes much of the local economy. Tobacco is still grown here, and while the allotment system that once governed its production has been replaced by market contracting, the basic seasonal income pattern remains: tobacco income arrives in a lump payment after harvest and sale, typically in the fall, rather than being distributed evenly across twelve monthly paychecks. A tenant whose primary income is tobacco farming may show very little verifiable monthly income for most of the year and then a significant cash infusion in September or October. Cattle operations have a somewhat similar pattern, though cattle income tends to be more spread across the year than tobacco.
For agricultural applicants, prior-year tax returns — particularly Schedule F (Profit or Loss from Farming) — provide the most accurate picture of annual farm income. Do not rely on a single month’s bank statement, which will look very different in July than in October. Apply your income ratio to the annualized average, not a single-month peak. If an applicant is a farm operator with variable annual income, consider requiring a slightly larger security deposit (up to the 2x monthly rent cap permitted by HB128) to provide additional cushion, and be clear in the lease about your rent due date and late fee structure. Month-to-month agricultural workers employed by someone else — hired farmhands rather than operators — may have more consistent wage income, which is easier to verify with pay stubs.
HB128 in Green County: The Basics Without Shortcuts
Kentucky’s HB128 applies fully and uniformly in Green County, just as it does in Jefferson County, Fayette County, and every other county in the Commonwealth. The law does not have a rural exemption, a small-county carve-out, or a provision saying that informal arrangements in tight-knit communities are governed by different rules. Whatever the custom has been locally, HB128 is the law.
For nonpayment of rent, serve a written 14-day notice to pay or vacate specifying the exact termination date, and keep dated, verifiable proof of how it was delivered. If the tenant pays in full within 14 days, the lease continues and you cannot proceed. If not, file your Forcible Detainer at the Green County Justice Center on Court Street only after the notice has fully expired.
For lease violations, the 14-day notice to cure or quit starts the clock; the lease cannot terminate for that violation until at least 30 days from the original notice date if the tenant fails to cure. For month-to-month terminations, one full month’s written notice is required. For week-to-week arrangements, five days written notice.
Security deposits are capped at two times monthly rent and must be held in a dedicated account separate from personal funds. Return within 30 days of tenancy termination with an itemized written deduction statement. The penalty for improper withholding — $250 or twice the withheld amount, whichever is greater — has no good-faith exception. In a market where rents might run $350 to $600 per month, that $250 floor is meaningful relative to the total deposit.
The nonwaivable habitability duty covers 13 categories including heating, plumbing, weatherproofing, pest and mold control, and required safety equipment. Respond to written maintenance requests within 14 days, or 5 days for essential services. Self-help eviction — changing locks, cutting utilities, removing belongings — is prohibited and carries a penalty of three times periodic rent or actual damages. For pre-1978 housing, which describes nearly every rental unit in Green County, federal lead paint disclosure and EPA pamphlet delivery before lease signing are required.
Green County is a quiet place with a quiet rental market. But the law that governs it is the same law that governs the noisiest apartment complex in Louisville. Follow it, document your actions, and the Justice Center on Court Street in Greensburg will rarely need to see you.
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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