Ascension Parish Louisiana Landlord-Tenant Law: A Complete Guide for Rental Property Owners in Gonzales, Prairieville, and the Baton Rouge Corridor
Ascension Parish is Louisiana’s growth story. While much of the state has seen population stagnation or decline over the past two decades, Ascension has grown rapidly — driven by its position as the primary suburban expansion zone for the Baton Rouge metropolitan area and by the continuing strength of the petrochemical industrial corridor along the Mississippi River that runs through its western edge. The parish has one of Louisiana’s lowest poverty rates, some of the state’s most active residential construction markets in communities like Gonzales and Prairieville, and a rental market that commands rents well above the Louisiana average. For landlords, Ascension Parish is one of the most favorable operating environments in the state — a well-employed population, strong rental demand, and a legal framework that, while Louisiana-specific in its Civil Code foundation, is straightforward to apply with proper preparation.
The Petrochemical Corridor and Industrial Tenant Profiles
The stretch of the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans — sometimes called Cancer Alley by critics, the Chemical Corridor by the industry, and simply River Road by the people who live and work there — hosts one of the most concentrated collections of petrochemical manufacturing facilities in the world. In Ascension Parish specifically, major plant employers include BASF’s Geismar complex (one of the largest chemical facilities in the United States), Honeywell, Dow Chemical, Shell Chemical, Methanex, and numerous smaller specialty chemical and contracting firms. These facilities employ thousands of workers in operator, maintenance, engineering, and management roles that command wages well above both state and national medians for comparable education levels.
For landlords, the key screening distinction in the chemical corridor is between direct plant employees and turnaround or project contractors. Direct employees of BASF, Honeywell, Dow, or Shell have permanent W-2 employment with the company, comprehensive benefits, and employment security tied to the long-term viability of a major industrial facility — one of the most stable employment relationships available anywhere. Screen them with standard procedures: pay stubs, employer confirmation, 3x income threshold. Turnaround and project contractors — skilled tradespeople who work intensive short-term assignments at plants during scheduled maintenance shutdowns — may earn extraordinary wages during active projects but face gaps between assignments. For contractor applicants, request prior-year tax returns alongside recent pay stubs to assess annual earnings; a turnaround welder earning $8,000 in a two-week project is not earning $208,000 per year.
Flood Risk: The 2016 Event and Ongoing Considerations
In August 2016, a slow-moving low-pressure system dumped record rainfall across south Louisiana over several days, producing catastrophic flooding across Ascension Parish and neighboring parishes. Unlike a named hurricane, this event arrived with limited warning and flooded tens of thousands of homes — many in areas that had never flooded before and were not in FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas. The 2016 flood was one of the most economically damaging natural disasters in American history by insured and uninsured losses combined, and it affected rental properties throughout Ascension Parish without regard to their prior flood history.
For landlords in Ascension Parish, the 2016 event established a new baseline for flood risk awareness. Every lease in Ascension should include flood zone disclosure (check FEMA’s current flood map at msc.fema.gov for your specific property), a requirement that the tenant maintain renter’s insurance, provisions addressing tenant obligations during mandatory evacuations, and a storm damage reporting requirement. Landlords should carry separate flood insurance on the structure — standard homeowner’s and landlord policies do not cover flood damage — and verify annually that coverage limits reflect current replacement costs. The Louisiana Civil Code addresses total or partial destruction of the leased thing (CC Art. 2696): if the property is totally destroyed, the lease terminates; if partially damaged, the tenant may seek rent reduction or terminate.
Louisiana Law and the Eviction Process in Ascension Parish
Ascension Parish has both a city court (Gonzales City Court) and the 23rd Judicial District Court. File evictions in Gonzales City Court for properties within Gonzales city limits; file in the 23rd Judicial District Court for all other Ascension Parish properties. Begin with a written 5-day notice to vacate for nonpayment or lease violation, served properly per CCP Art. 4704. After expiration, file a Rule to Show Cause. The rule is served on the lessee at least 2 days before the hearing; the judge rules; and if judgment is for the lessor, the lessee has 24 hours to vacate before a writ of possession is obtained and enforced by the Ascension Parish Sheriff. Month-to-month leases require 10-day written notice to terminate. Security deposits are capped at 2 months’ rent and must be returned with itemized deductions within 30 days.
This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Louisiana landlord-tenant law is governed by the Civil Code and differs significantly from other states. Consult a licensed Louisiana attorney or contact Gonzales City Court at (225) 647-9533 or the 23rd Judicial District Court at (225) 473-9866 for guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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