A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Fillmore County, Minnesota
Fillmore County is one of Minnesota’s most geographically and culturally distinctive counties — a place where the Driftless Area’s glacially untouched bluffs and valleys create a landscape unlike anywhere else in the state, where a Victorian arts town has become a nationally recognized ecotourism destination, and where one of Minnesota’s most significant Old Order Amish communities preserves a way of life that draws visitors from across the country. For landlords, the county presents a genuinely small and thin residential rental market, but one with unusual character and a tenant base drawn from a range of distinctive community economies.
The Driftless Landscape: Why It Matters
Most of Minnesota was covered by glacial ice sheets during the last ice age — ice that flattened the terrain, deposited thick layers of fertile till, and left behind the thousands of lakes that define the state’s character. Fillmore County, along with adjacent Houston and Winona counties and portions of several others, lies within the Driftless Area — a region that the glaciers bypassed. The result is a landscape of striking topographic relief: the Root River and its tributaries have carved deep valleys through the sedimentary limestone bedrock, creating bluffs that rise hundreds of feet above the valley floors. Cold, spring-fed streams cascade from the bluffs, creating ideal habitat for native brook trout and stocked brown and rainbow trout. Sinkholes, caves, and karst features punctuate the upland plateau. It is a landscape more reminiscent of the Ozarks or the Appalachians than the Minnesota most visitors imagine, and it draws outdoor enthusiasts from across the region specifically because of its uniqueness within the state.
Lanesboro: Minnesota’s Arts Destination
Lanesboro is arguably the most successful small-town arts and ecotourism reinvention story in Minnesota. The city — which sits in a dramatic bend of the Root River, surrounded by bluffs, with its original 1880s commercial architecture largely intact — was facing the same slow decline that has claimed many small rural communities when its residents and civic leaders made a deliberate choice to invest in arts and outdoor recreation as the economic future. The Root River State Trail, the Commonweal Theatre Company (founded in 1989 and now one of the most respected regional theatre companies in the upper Midwest, operating a full professional season from spring through fall), and a collection of quality bed-and-breakfasts and restaurants have transformed Lanesboro into a destination that draws visitors from the Twin Cities, Rochester, and beyond throughout the warm-weather season. The city has also become a significant cycling destination, with the paved trail system providing car-free riding through some of the most scenic terrain in the state.
For landlords, Lanesboro presents an unusual situation: the city is tiny (fewer than 750 permanent residents) but has a hospitality and arts workforce that requires year-round housing in a city where residential inventory is extremely limited. Theatre employees, bed-and-breakfast staff, restaurant workers, and outfitter employees all need places to live, and the city’s popularity means that property that could be used for short-term vacation rentals competes with long-term residential use. Landlords who offer year-round residential leases in Lanesboro at reasonable rates will find motivated, community-connected tenants who specifically want to be part of the Lanesboro community.
The Harmony Amish Community
The Old Order Amish community centered around Harmony is one of the largest in Minnesota, comprising dozens of farming families who practice a traditional agricultural and craft-based lifestyle. The Amish do not use electricity, automobiles, or most modern technology, farming instead with horses and maintaining strong community ties through their plain church communities. Their presence in Fillmore County is both a genuine cultural reality and a significant tourism draw: buggy rides, farm tours, furniture workshops, bakeries, and quilt shops attract tens of thousands of visitors to the Harmony area annually. For landlords, the Amish community itself does not participate in the conventional rental market — Amish families own their farms or live in extended family arrangements — but the tourism economy the community anchors sustains service employment in Harmony that does generate some rental demand.
Preston, Spring Valley, and the Year-Round Market
The county’s year-round rental market is anchored by its largest communities. Spring Valley, the county’s most populous city at roughly 2,500 residents, provides a modest apartment and rental home market serving school district staff, county employees, and agricultural service workers. Preston, the county seat, has the courthouse and county government functions that provide stable public sector employment. Mayo Clinic Health System has a clinic presence in the region, providing some healthcare employment. Chatfield, on the county’s northern border with Olmsted County, benefits from some Rochester commuter demand given its relative proximity to the Rochester metro.
Legal Framework
Fillmore County operates entirely under Minnesota Ch. 504B. No rent control, no just-cause eviction, no landlord licensing. Iowa law does not apply to any Fillmore County property. Evictions file at Fillmore County District Court in Preston. Security deposits must be returned within 21 days with interest and an itemized statement. Entry requires 24 hours’ advance notice. Heat must be maintained at 68°F from October 1 through April 30. Self-help eviction is illegal.
Fillmore County landlord-tenant matters are governed by Minn. Stat. Ch. 504B. Nonpayment notice: 14-Day Pay or Vacate (§504B.285). Lease violation: reasonable time to cure. No-cause termination: one full rental period written notice (§504B.135). Security deposit return: 21 days; up to 2× damages for wrongful retention plus attorney’s fees (§504B.178). Security deposit interest required annually at MN Dept. of Commerce rate. Landlord entry: 24 hours’ advance notice required (§504B.195). Minimum heat: 68°F, Oct. 1–Apr. 30. No rent control. No just-cause eviction requirement. Eviction actions filed at Fillmore County District Court, Preston. Self-help eviction: illegal, up to $500/day civil penalty + misdemeanor (§504B.375). Iowa law does not apply. No tribal trust land complications. Minneapolis just-cause ordinance does not apply. Last updated: April 2026.
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