A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Moore County, North Carolina
Moore County occupies a unique niche in North Carolina’s rental landscape. It is neither a major metro nor a struggling rural county β it is a resort destination that has built a genuine, year-round community around the golf and retirement industries, and that community creates a rental market with characteristics unlike most of its neighbors in the Sandhills and central Piedmont regions. The Pinehurst/Southern Pines corridor is the county’s economic and cultural center of gravity: home to some of the most recognizable golf courses in the world, a thriving retirement community, and an upscale hospitality sector that employs thousands of workers who need housing they can actually afford. Understanding these two layers β the resort economy and the workforce economy that supports it β is the key to smart landlording in Moore County.
For investors evaluating Moore County, the county’s economic stability is a genuine advantage. Retirement-driven demand is durable: retirees don’t get laid off, they don’t relocate for promotions, and they tend to be long-term tenants who treat properties carefully. The golf economy adds a seasonal hospitality layer that drives population and economic activity throughout the year. And the county’s proximity to Fort Liberty in adjacent Cumberland County means that military-affiliated tenants occasionally appear in the Moore County rental pool as well, particularly in the Aberdeen and Vass communities near the Cumberland border. The result is a market with multiple demand drivers and enough economic variety to weather most regional downturns with less volatility than single-industry counties.
The Pinehurst/Southern Pines Market: Resort Real Estate and What It Means for Landlords
The Village of Pinehurst and the Town of Southern Pines anchor the county’s high end. Pinehurst, incorporated in 1895 and developed as a planned resort community around its eponymous resort and golf courses, is one of the most distinctive communities in the American South β a place where golf culture, historic architecture, and an affluent retirement demographic have coexisted for more than a century. Property values here are well above the statewide median, and rental rates reflect that: a single-family home in the Pinehurst/Southern Pines corridor can command $1,500 to $2,500 per month or more depending on size, condition, and proximity to the golf amenities.
The tenant profile at the high end of the Moore County market is distinct. Retirees and semi-retirees seeking a furnished or well-appointed unfurnished rental while their permanent home is sold or built represent a meaningful segment β people with significant assets and a preference for quality over price. Corporate relocation tenants connected to the region’s defense-adjacent employers and Pinehurst Resort’s hospitality operations round out the upper tier. These are tenants who will pay premium rents for premium properties but who also have high expectations for maintenance responsiveness and property quality. Landlords in the resort corridor who manage their properties professionally β responsive repairs, quality appliances, well-kept exteriors and landscaping β retain these tenants reliably. Those who treat high-end properties like standard workforce rentals find that premium tenants vote with their feet quickly.
One regulatory note specific to Pinehurst: the village is largely governed by HOA covenants associated with the Pinehurst resort community, and many properties carry deed restrictions that can affect rental activity. Some HOA documents limit the frequency of rentals, require HOA approval of leases, or restrict short-term rentals entirely. Investors purchasing property in Pinehurst’s deed-restricted golf communities should review the HOA documents carefully before assuming that standard landlord-tenant law is the only governance framework that applies. The HOA restrictions operate in addition to, not instead of, NC state law.
Workforce Housing: Aberdeen, Vass, and the Working County
Below the resort tier, Moore County has a substantial workforce rental market centered on Aberdeen, Vass, Cameron, and the unincorporated communities surrounding Carthage. Aberdeen sits along US-1 at the southern edge of the county, just north of the Cumberland County line, and functions as the county’s most accessible commercial hub for working-class households. Rents in Aberdeen and the surrounding area are significantly lower than in Pinehurst β single-family homes and apartments in the $900 to $1,300 range β and the tenant pool includes healthcare workers, retail and service employees, trades workers, and county government staff.
This segment of the Moore County market behaves more like a typical mid-size NC county rental market: moderate demand, standard tenant profiles, and more price sensitivity than the resort market above it. Landlords in the workforce tier compete more directly on price and condition than on amenity set, and vacancy management is a more active concern than at the high end. Aberdeen’s proximity to Fort Liberty (roughly 20 miles from the main gate) means the community occasionally draws military-adjacent tenants, adding a small measure of the SCRA considerations that dominate the Cumberland and Hoke markets. Vass, further north along US-1, is a smaller community with modest rental activity and a rural character that appeals to tenants looking for space and quiet at lower price points.
Seasonal and Short-Term Rental Considerations
Moore County’s resort identity creates a natural market for short-term and seasonal rentals, particularly during major golf events at Pinehurst Resort. The U.S. Open, U.S. Women’s Open, and other significant tournaments at Pinehurst bring thousands of visitors to the area, and the demand for short-term accommodations during these events is intense β property owners have historically commanded very strong rates for well-positioned rentals during tournament weeks. This creates a potential hybrid strategy for some landlords: maintaining a property on a long-term lease for most of the year while structuring the lease to allow short-term rental during major events, or operating on a purely short-term basis for maximum flexibility around the golf calendar.
However, the short-term rental space in Pinehurst requires careful navigation. As noted in the ordinances section, HOA restrictions in many Pinehurst communities affect rental frequency and lease duration. Zoning regulations in both Pinehurst and Southern Pines may also govern short-term rental operations. Landlords considering short-term rental strategies in Moore County should verify applicable municipal and HOA rules before committing to a management approach, and should be aware that the legal framework for transient occupancies differs from the long-term residential tenancy law that governs landlord-tenant relationships under G.S. Chapter 42.
North Carolina Eviction Law Applied in Moore County
Long-term residential evictions in Moore County proceed under standard NC Summary Ejectment procedures with no meaningful local variation. For nonpayment of rent, the landlord serves a written 10-day demand under G.S. Β§ 42-3. If the tenant does not pay within 10 days, the landlord files a Complaint in Summary Ejectment at the Moore County Courthouse in Carthage. The filing fee is approximately $96. Hearing dates are generally available within one to two weeks of filing. The full process from demand through writ of possession typically runs two to three weeks in uncontested cases β landlords should plan for this timeline when assessing cash flow impact during an eviction.
Lease violations other than nonpayment can be filed immediately without a cure period. Month-to-month tenancies require a 7-day written notice to quit under G.S. Β§ 42-14 before filing. After a magistrate judgment in the landlord’s favor, the tenant has 10 days to appeal. Once the appeal window closes without appeal, or once an appeal is resolved, the clerk issues a writ of possession and the Moore County Sheriff’s Office handles physical removal. Self-help eviction β changing locks, removing property, or cutting utilities to force a departure β is illegal in North Carolina and creates civil liability for the landlord regardless of the circumstances.
Security deposits are capped at two months’ rent for annual leases and one and a half months for month-to-month tenancies under G.S. Β§ 42-51. Given the higher rent levels in the resort segment of the Moore County market, this cap means that deposit amounts can be meaningful in dollar terms β $2,000 to $4,000 or more for higher-end properties. Landlords must hold deposits in a trust account, and must return the deposit or provide an itemized accounting of deductions within 30 days of lease termination under G.S. Β§ 42-52. Thorough move-in documentation β including a signed checklist and date-stamped photographs β is the landlord’s primary protection when deductions are disputed, and this documentation discipline is especially important in a market where tenants at the high end may have the sophistication and resources to challenge deposit claims formally.
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