A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Nobles County, Minnesota
Worthington, Minnesota made national news in the spring of 2020 when its JBS USA pork processing plant became one of the early major COVID-19 hotspots in rural America. For most of the country, it was a brief glimpse into a world they hadn’t known existed: a small southwest Minnesota city where the majority of residents speak Spanish or Somali, where the largest employer is a multinational meat packing corporation, and where immigrant families from dozens of countries have built permanent communities on the Minnesota prairie. For landlords, that national moment was an introduction to a market they’d be wise to understand on its own terms.
JBS USA: The Economic Engine
JBS USA’s Worthington facility is one of the largest pork processing plants in the United States, slaughtering and processing hogs at a scale that makes it a major node in the national pork supply chain. The plant employs well over a thousand workers in production, maintenance, quality control, and administrative roles, making it by far the dominant private employer in Nobles County. Processing plant employment is characterized by physically demanding work, competitive wages relative to the region, and year-round stability — hog processing does not have an agricultural off-season. This combination of scale and stability makes JBS employees the core of Worthington’s working-class rental demand.
For landlords, this employment base creates a large, year-round pool of tenants seeking affordable workforce housing in reasonable proximity to the plant. Demand is genuine and sustained. The challenge is that the same workforce diversity that creates opportunity also creates a Fair Housing compliance imperative that cannot be treated casually. Landlords in Worthington who apply inconsistent screening criteria, communicate differently with applicants of different national origins, or steer prospective tenants toward or away from specific units based on protected characteristics face real legal exposure under the federal Fair Housing Act.
Worthington’s Demographic Transformation
The story of how Worthington became one of the most diverse small cities in Minnesota tracks closely with the history of the processing plant. Beginning in the 1980s, recruitment efforts targeting Mexican and Central American workers began drawing Spanish-speaking immigrants to Worthington. In the 1990s and 2000s, Somali refugees resettled in Worthington, initially drawn by employment at the plant and subsequently by community networks and the presence of established Somali institutions. Other East African communities, as well as smaller communities from Southeast Asia and elsewhere, followed over subsequent decades. Today Worthington’s population is majority non-white and non-Anglo, a demographic profile more typical of a mid-sized metro neighborhood than a southwest Minnesota prairie city of 13,500 people.
This diversity has tangible implications for how the city functions. Worthington has bilingual (English/Spanish) signage in many commercial areas, a growing number of Latino-owned businesses, Somali community organizations, multilingual schools, and a social infrastructure that reflects decades of community-building by its immigrant residents. It is not a city in demographic transition — it is a city that completed that transition years ago and has developed a stable, established diverse community.
Minnesota West Community and Technical College
Minnesota West Community and Technical College operates a campus in Worthington offering two-year technical and transfer programs that serve both recent high school graduates and working adults seeking credentials for advancement. The college plays an important role in workforce development for the immigrant communities in Worthington, offering English Language Learning programs, healthcare training, and technical credentials that help processing plant workers advance into higher-paying roles. College employees and some residential students add modestly to Worthington’s rental demand.
Agriculture and the Southwest Prairie
Beyond Worthington, Nobles County is classic southwest Minnesota agricultural territory — flat, fertile, and intensively farmed with corn and soybeans on productive glacial till soils. Hog confinement operations are common, feeding the regional processing economy. The county borders Iowa to the south and Rock County to the west, and its smaller communities of Adrian and Rushmore have very limited rental markets serving primarily agricultural employees and local service workers.
State Law: Straightforward and Consistent
Nobles County has no local landlord-tenant ordinances. Minn. Stat. Ch. 504B governs entirely. Key provisions: 14-Day Pay or Vacate for nonpayment (§504B.285); security deposit return within 21 days with annual interest and itemized deductions, 2x damages for wrongful retention (§504B.178); 24-hour advance notice for non-emergency entry (§504B.195); 68°F minimum heat October 1 through April 30; no rent control; no just-cause eviction; self-help eviction illegal up to $500 per day (§504B.375). All evictions go to Nobles County District Court in Worthington. The Fair Housing Act applies to all tenancies.
Nobles 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 Nobles County District Court, Worthington. Self-help eviction: illegal, up to $500/day civil penalty + misdemeanor (§504B.375). Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination on all protected bases. No tribal trust land complications. Minneapolis just-cause ordinance does not apply. Last updated: April 2026.
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