A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Carroll County, New Hampshire
Carroll County is the gateway to New Hampshire’s White Mountains — a county of dramatic peaks, four-season tourism, and a rental market that is unlike anything in southern New Hampshire. The same legal framework applies here as everywhere in the state, but the practical reality of renting in Carroll County is shaped by forces that don’t exist in Hillsborough or Rockingham: the seasonal swing between summer hikers and winter skiers, the workforce housing challenge created by resort employment, and the constant presence of vacation rentals that exist outside the RSA 540 residential framework entirely.
The Mount Washington Valley: Conway and North Conway
Conway and its village of North Conway form the commercial heart of Carroll County. The Route 16 corridor through North Conway is lined with outlet stores, restaurants, and outdoor gear shops that serve the millions of visitors who pass through the Mount Washington Valley every year. This tourism infrastructure is the county’s economic engine and the source of most of its year-round workforce rental demand.
Hospitality and retail workers who staff the valley’s hotels, restaurants, shops, and attractions need year-round housing at price points that are affordable on service industry wages. Carroll County has historically struggled to provide enough workforce housing — the same tourism economy that drives demand also drives property values upward and incentivizes vacation rental conversion over year-round residential leasing. The result is a rental market that is tighter than the county’s small population would suggest, with genuine competition for quality affordable units.
Landlords who rent year-round to workforce tenants in the Conway area operate under RSA 540’s full residential framework. Most multi-unit buildings serving year-round tenants are restricted property requiring just cause to terminate. The 7-day nonpayment notice starts the clock quickly — a meaningful advantage in a market where tenants may have irregular income from seasonal employment. The payment cure right (RSA 540:9) is available to tenants at any time before the hearing, up to three times per 12-month period.
The Ski Resort Economy
Carroll County’s ski resorts — Cranmore Mountain in North Conway, Attitash in Bartlett, King Pine in Madison, and Black Mountain in Jackson — generate significant seasonal employment and a housing challenge that landlords need to navigate carefully. Ski resort workers typically need housing from November through April. The question of whether resort worker housing is a residential tenancy under RSA 540 or a seasonal rental under RSA 540-C depends on how the arrangement is structured.
A year-round lease signed with a resort worker who happens to ski is a residential tenancy under RSA 540 regardless of the employment relationship. A lease for a ski chalet rented specifically for recreational or vacation purposes falls under RSA 540-C. A seasonal arrangement where a resort employee rents housing for the ski season only — not for vacation or recreational purposes, but as their primary residence during employment — is almost certainly a residential tenancy under RSA 540, not a vacation rental. Landlords who want to rent to resort workers for a defined season without creating long-term residential tenancy rights need carefully drafted lease agreements that are reviewed by a NH attorney before execution.
Wolfeboro: New Hampshire’s Oldest Resort Town
Wolfeboro, on the eastern shore of Lake Winnipesaukee in Carroll County, calls itself the oldest summer resort in America — a claim backed by 250 years of history as a destination for Boston-area families seeking lakeside relief from summer heat. Wolfeboro’s rental market is primarily seasonal and vacation-oriented, with a small year-round residential market serving the town’s permanent population and the workers who support the seasonal economy. Lakefront and near-lake vacation rentals in Wolfeboro operate under RSA 540-C. Year-round residential rentals in the village operate under RSA 540.
RSA 540 in Carroll County
For year-round residential rentals throughout Carroll County, the standard RSA 540 framework applies identically to every other NH county. The 7-day demand for rent for nonpayment, 30-day notice for most other grounds, the restricted vs. nonrestricted property distinction, and the security deposit rules (cap at greater of one month’s rent or $100; trust account required; 30-day return; double damages for wrongful withholding) all apply uniformly. Carroll County landlords have no local ordinances to navigate beyond state law — no rent control, no registration requirements, no just-cause ordinances beyond what RSA 540 itself requires.
Carroll County landlord-tenant matters for year-round residential rentals are governed by RSA Chapters 540 and 540-A. Vacation and recreational rentals are governed by RSA 540-C. Nonpayment notice: 7 days. Other grounds: 30 days. Security deposit cap: greater of 1 month’s rent or $100. Return within 30 days; double damages for wrongful withholding. No rent control. Resort worker housing arrangements require careful legal structuring. Evictions filed in NH Circuit Court — District Division. Consult a licensed NH attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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