A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Forsyth County, North Carolina
Winston-Salem spent a long time living in the shadow of its Triad neighbor Greensboro, but the city has built a compelling case over the past 15 years that it deserves to be evaluated on its own terms. The tobacco industry that defined its 20th century identity is largely gone, but what replaced it — a world-class medical center, a top-ranked university, a genuine arts and culinary scene, and a growing innovation economy — has created a rental market with more depth and demographic diversity than the city’s size would suggest. For landlords, Forsyth County offers urban-scale demand with Piedmont-scale acquisition prices, plus a legal framework that rewards professionalism.
Wake Forest University and the Medical Center
Wake Forest University and its affiliated Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist medical complex are the twin engines of Forsyth County’s modern economy. The university enrolls around 8,500 students in a residential campus setting on the northern edge of Winston-Salem and is consistently ranked among the top 30 national universities. Graduate and professional programs — particularly the law school and the business school — attract students who are more likely to rent off-campus than live in dormitories, and the faculty, staff, and postdoctoral research population adds thousands of stable, higher-income renters to the market near campus.
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist is one of the largest academic medical centers in the Southeast and the single largest employer in Forsyth County, with over 20,000 employees in clinical, research, and administrative roles. The concentration of healthcare workers — physicians, nurses, residents, fellows, technicians, and support staff — creates a large and reliable rental demand base that is largely recession-resistant. Medical workers tend to rent for multi-year stretches while completing training or establishing themselves before buying, making them among the most desirable long-term tenants a Forsyth County landlord can place.
Downtown Winston-Salem and the Arts Economy
Winston-Salem has developed a legitimate identity as North Carolina’s arts city. The University of North Carolina School of the Arts, located in downtown Winston-Salem, trains professional performers in music, dance, drama, film, and design and has anchored an arts ecosystem that includes the Stevens Center, the Reynolda House Museum, the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, and a growing concentration of galleries, studios, and creative businesses in the Innovation Quarter. The Innovation Quarter itself — a 1.5 million square foot mixed-use research and technology district built on the former R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company campus — is one of the more ambitious urban redevelopment projects in the NC Piedmont and has attracted biotech, digital health, and tech companies that bring young professional workers into the downtown rental market.
Landlords with properties in the downtown core, the West End historic neighborhood, or the Ardmore and Buena Vista areas near the university are operating in a market where rents trend above the county median and tenant quality skews toward the professional and creative demographic. These neighborhoods have seen meaningful appreciation over the past decade and the trajectory has not reversed.
The Working-Class Base and the Outer Suburbs
Beyond the university and medical center premium, Forsyth County has a large working-class rental market anchored by manufacturing, distribution, and service employment. The US-421 corridor heading toward Kernersville and the Greensboro market hosts significant logistics and warehouse operations. Hanesbrands, one of the country’s largest apparel manufacturers, is headquartered in Winston-Salem and maintains operations in the county. Hospitality, healthcare support, and retail employment provides a broad working-class base in the eastern and southern parts of the city.
Kernersville, at the eastern edge of the county near the Guilford line, is a suburb of about 25,000 that combines manufacturing employment with Triad commuter demand and has a rental market slightly more affordable than central Winston-Salem. Clemmons and Lewisville, to the southwest of the city, attract higher-income suburban renters who want more space and newer construction than central Winston-Salem offers.
State Law and What Winston-Salem Adds Locally
Forsyth County operates under G.S. Chapter 42 without local rent control or eviction diversion requirements, but Winston-Salem does layer on local context that matters. The city&rsqth;s code enforcement program is active, particularly in older neighborhoods like East Winston, the Cleveland Avenue corridor, and areas near downtown where aging rental stock is concentrated. The Minimum Housing Code sets standards for structural integrity, HVAC, plumbing, electrical systems, and habitability, and the city’s Inspections Division follows up on complaints. Landlords who defer maintenance in these neighborhoods should expect eventual code enforcement contact.
The retaliatory eviction protection under G.S. § 42-37.1 creates real exposure in a city with active code enforcement. If a tenant files a housing complaint and the landlord files for eviction within 12 months, the court may presume retaliation. Maintain written maintenance records, respond to repair requests in writing with documented timelines, and keep any eviction decision cleanly separated from any complaint history.
Legal Aid of NC maintains an active Forsyth County office. Tenants in Winston-Salem are more likely than in smaller NC markets to have legal assistance when responding to eviction. A well-documented case — correct notice, clean rent ledger, clear lease — wins regardless of tenant representation. A sloppy case loses faster when the tenant has a lawyer.
Filing Eviction in Forsyth County
Summary Ejectment cases file at the Forsyth County Courthouse in downtown Winston-Salem. Filing fee approximately $96, sheriff service approximately $30 per tenant. The docket is busy — Winston-Salem is a large city — and hearings typically schedule within 7 to 14 days. Bring the signed lease, the 10-day notice with documented delivery, and a complete rent ledger. After a favorable ruling the standard 10-day appeal window applies, followed by the Writ of Possession process. Allow two to four weeks for the full process in Forsyth County.
The Bottom Line
Forsyth County gives landlords access to one of the most economically diverse rental markets in the NC Piedmont. The Wake Forest medical center and university anchor a high-quality, stable tenant base. The Innovation Quarter and arts economy attract a professional and creative demographic. The working-class manufacturing and logistics base provides broad demand across the affordable tier. Acquisition prices still trail Wake and Mecklenburg meaningfully, creating yield opportunities that those markets have largely eliminated. Operate professionally, maintain your properties to code, document everything, and Forsyth County will reward you with a rental income stream that grows with the city.
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