A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Cabarrus County, North Carolina
Cabarrus County sits in a sweet spot that not many NC counties can claim: close enough to Charlotte to benefit from metro-level job growth and demand, far enough away that acquisition prices still make sense for rental investors. Concord and Kannapolis together give the county two distinct economic engines — tourism and motorsports in the north, life sciences and research in the south — and the result is a rental market with broader demographic reach than most of its neighbors. If you are building a portfolio along the I-85 corridor between Charlotte and the Triad, Cabarrus is a county you need to understand.
Concord: Tourism, Motorsports, and the Retail Corridor
Concord’s economic identity has been shaped by two landmark developments that put the city on the map beyond Cabarrus County lines. The first is Concord Mills, the enclosed megamall at the I-85/Concord Mills Boulevard interchange that draws more than 20 million visitors per year and ranks as one of the top tourism destinations in North Carolina by attendance. The mall anchors a sprawling hospitality and retail corridor that includes hotels, restaurants, entertainment venues, and outlet shopping that collectively employ thousands of workers in Cabarrus County. Many of those workers rent locally, and the concentration of hospitality employment in Concord creates steady demand for workforce housing in the $900–$1,200 monthly range.
The second is Charlotte Motor Speedway, which sits just a few miles northeast of downtown Concord and hosts NASCAR Cup Series races that draw hundreds of thousands of spectators annually. Beyond the race weekends themselves, the Speedway and the broader motorsports ecosystem it supports — team shops, media operations, hospitality companies — provide year-round employment and generate short-term and long-term rental demand from industry workers. Landlords near the Speedway corridor have a built-in tenant pipeline that many other NC markets simply don’t have.
Concord’s growth along US-29 and the I-85 frontage roads has been relentless for two decades. New apartment complexes, townhome developments, and single-family subdivisions have pushed north and east as Mecklenburg County prices have compressed housing options for Charlotte workers. The result is a rental market where vacancy sits around 5.6% and median rents for a two-bedroom hover near $1,250 — competitive for a Charlotte suburb but still meaningfully below what comparable units run in Huntersville or Concord’s neighbor to the south, Harrisburg.
Kannapolis and the NC Research Campus
The story of Kannapolis over the past 20 years is one of the more dramatic economic reinventions in the NC Piedmont. The city was built around the Cannon Mills textile operation, and when Pillowtex — Cannon’s successor — closed its Kannapolis plant in 2003 and laid off more than 4,500 workers in a single day, the economic devastation was profound. The closure was one of the largest single-day layoffs in North Carolina history and left an enormous physical and economic void in the center of the city.
What replaced it is remarkable. David Murdock, the real estate developer who had acquired Pillowtex, donated the mill site and significant funding to create the North Carolina Research Campus — a 350-acre life sciences complex that has attracted research operations from UNC Chapel Hill, NC State, Duke, UNC Charlotte, Appalachian State, and a growing roster of private biotech and nutrition companies. The campus focuses on nutrition, health, and genomics research and has brought hundreds of researchers, graduate students, and biotech professionals into Kannapolis who need housing in the surrounding area. These tenants are a world apart demographically from the textile workers they replaced: higher income, longer tenure, and far more stable as renters.
Atrium Health (now part of Advocate Health) operates Atrium Health Cabarrus in Concord, one of the larger hospital campuses in the Charlotte metro, adding thousands more healthcare workers to the Cabarrus rental demand base. The combination of research campus professionals in Kannapolis and healthcare workers in Concord gives Cabarrus County a professional tenant tier that makes the market more resilient than its working-class neighbors to the north and west.
North Carolina Law in Cabarrus County
Cabarrus County landlords operate under G.S. Chapter 42 with no meaningful local modifications. The standard framework applies: 10-day written demand for rent before filing for nonpayment (G.S. § 42-3), security deposits capped at two months’ rent for leases longer than month-to-month with trust accounting and a 30-day return window after move-out (G.S. §§ 42-50 through 42-56), habitability obligations requiring landlords to maintain major systems and address dangerous conditions (G.S. § 42-42), and Summary Ejectment through Small Claims Court (G.S. §§ 42-26 through 42-36).
In Cabarrus’s growing market, security deposit compliance is particularly important. With rents at $1,250 median, a two-month deposit cap means up to $2,500 sitting in trust. The statute requires written notification to the tenant within 30 days of receipt identifying the financial institution where the deposit is held. After move-out, the landlord has 30 days to return the deposit in full or provide an itemized accounting of deductions with any remaining balance. If the final accounting can’t be completed by the 30-day mark, an interim statement is required, with the final statement due within 60 days total. The consequences of missing these deadlines are severe: willful noncompliance forfeits the landlord’s entire right to retain any portion of the deposit, regardless of legitimate damage claims.
The retaliatory eviction protection under G.S. § 42-37.1 deserves attention in Cabarrus because of the older housing stock in parts of Kannapolis near the former mill neighborhoods. If a tenant files a good-faith complaint with a housing code or government agency and the landlord files for eviction within 12 months, the court may presume the eviction is retaliatory. The landlord can overcome the presumption by documenting a legitimate, independent basis for the eviction. Maintaining responsive maintenance records and responding to repair requests in writing is the cleanest way to stay out of this situation.
Filing Eviction at the Cabarrus County Courthouse
Summary Ejectment cases in Cabarrus County are filed at the Cabarrus County Courthouse in downtown Concord. The filing fee is approximately $96, and service by the Cabarrus County Sheriff runs about $30 per tenant. The docket is busier than Rowan or Catawba to the west, a reflection of Cabarrus’s faster population growth, but hearings are typically scheduled within 7 to 14 days of filing.
Cabarrus magistrates are attentive to notice compliance. Bring the original signed lease, the 10-day demand with clear documentation of how and when it was served, and a rent ledger showing the complete payment history. If service was by posting on the door, photograph the posted notice with a date-stamped image. If service was by sheriff, bring the certificate of service. An undocumented notice delivery is the most common reason a Summary Ejectment case gets continued in this courthouse.
After a favorable ruling, the tenant has 10 days to appeal to District Court, during which they must pay rent arrears to the clerk and sign an undertaking to continue paying rent. If no appeal is filed, the landlord requests a Writ of Possession. The sheriff executes the writ within five days, providing the tenant at least two days’ advance notice before removal. Start to finish, the process runs two to three weeks in most Cabarrus County cases.
Investment Outlook for Cabarrus Landlords
Cabarrus occupies a compelling position in the Charlotte investment market. It is close enough to the urban core to benefit from Charlotte’s continued population and job growth, but priced well enough below Mecklenburg that yield math still works for buy-and-hold investors. Single-family homes in Concord and Kannapolis that would cost $350,000 or more in south Charlotte can still be found in the $200,000–$270,000 range in comparable condition, producing gross yields in the 5.5–7% range that are increasingly rare in the immediate Charlotte suburbs.
The tourism economy around Concord Mills and the Speedway also creates a viable short-term rental market for landlords willing to navigate Concord’s STR zoning rules. Properties within a few miles of the mall and Speedway corridor can command nightly rates that produce monthly revenue well above long-term rental rates, particularly during race weekends. Operators should review Concord’s current STR ordinance carefully before listing — the city has tightened rules in recent years as the STR market has matured.
For long-term residential rentals, the Kannapolis corridor around the Research Campus is worth particular attention for landlords targeting the professional demographic. Proximity to the campus, walkability to downtown Kannapolis’s revitalizing restaurant and retail scene, and access to the Cabarrus Health Sciences programs at Rowan-Cabarrus Community College make this end of the county an increasingly desirable address for the research and healthcare tenant pool.
The Bottom Line
Cabarrus County gives landlords access to a growing, diversified rental market with two distinct demand drivers — the Concord tourism and motorsports corridor in the north and the Kannapolis research and healthcare base in the south. The legal environment is clean: no local rent control, no rental registration, no eviction diversion overhead. The court processes Summary Ejectment cases efficiently. Screen your tenants carefully given the broad applicant pool this market attracts, maintain your properties to code, document every notice, and Cabarrus County will deliver consistent, reliable rental income for years to come.
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