White Pine County Nevada Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in Ely, the Most Remote County Seat in Nevada
Ely, Nevada does not make most lists of desirable places to own rental property. It sits at over 6,400 feet elevation in a high-desert valley surrounded by mountain ranges, equidistant from Las Vegas and Reno at roughly 250 to 320 miles from either, and connected to the outside world primarily by US-50 — the road that Life magazine once declared the loneliest in America. But for the landlord who understands it, White Pine County offers something that flashier Nevada markets do not: a small, self-contained rental market with a stable institutional backbone, limited competition from other landlords, and a legal framework that remains straightforwardly landlord-friendly under Nevada state law.
All residential tenancies in White Pine County are governed by NRS Chapter 118A and NRS Chapter 40. The White Pine County Justice Court handles all eviction filings. There is no local rent control and no good-cause eviction requirement. The eviction process is identical to every other Nevada county: proper notice, proper counting of judicial days, filing in the correct court, constable execution of the writ. The framework is the same whether you’re in Las Vegas or Ely.
The Robinson Mine and White Pine County’s Economic Reality
The Robinson Mine, operated by KGHM Robinson Nevada Mining Company (a subsidiary of KGHM Polska Miedź, one of the world’s largest copper producers), is the foundation of White Pine County’s private-sector economy. The open-pit copper mine sits in the Egan Range west of Ely and has been operating in various forms since the late 1800s, when copper strikes first put Ely on the map. The current operation employs hundreds of workers directly and supports additional indirect employment throughout the community.
Copper is a different commodity from gold, and that distinction matters for landlords tracking economic risk. Gold prices are heavily influenced by investor sentiment, currency fluctuations, and safe-haven demand — factors that are partially divorced from industrial activity. Copper prices, by contrast, track global manufacturing, construction, and infrastructure spending very closely. When global manufacturing contracts, copper demand falls and mining employment at operations like Robinson can be reduced or temporarily curtailed. Landlords in Ely should monitor copper price trends and mine production announcements as leading indicators of local employment conditions, just as Elko landlords watch gold prices.
What partially offsets the copper cycle risk is Ely’s institutional employment base. Ely State Prison, a maximum-security Nevada Department of Corrections facility, is one of the county’s largest employers. Corrections officers, administrative staff, and support personnel have stable state government employment that is entirely independent of commodity prices. A corrections officer at Ely State Prison will have a paycheck next month regardless of what copper is trading at on the London Metal Exchange. This government employment anchor provides meaningful stability to the Ely rental market in a way that purely mining-dependent communities like Round Mountain or the smaller Elko County satellite communities do not have.
Managing Property at 6,400 Feet: Practical Considerations
Ely’s elevation of 6,437 feet makes it the highest county seat in Nevada and gives it a climate that is genuinely severe by Nevada standards. Average lows in January hover around 10 to 15 degrees Fahrenheit, and temperatures below zero are not uncommon during cold snaps. Heavy snow accumulations are normal, and the combination of cold temperatures and altitude means that heating system failures in winter are genuine emergencies that require immediate response.
Under NRS Chapter 118A, heating is classified as an essential service. When an essential service fails, the landlord’s obligation is to respond as quickly as possible. While Nevada law specifies a 14-day response window for non-essential habitability repairs, heating in winter conditions is treated differently — the spirit and intent of the essential service designation is prompt response. In Ely’s January climate, a tenant without heat faces a health and safety emergency. Document all repair responses with timestamped records and service receipts.
Ely’s isolation creates a practical maintenance challenge that urban landlords rarely face. There is no Home Depot within 250 miles. HVAC contractors, plumbers, and electricians serving the Ely market may have limited availability and may charge travel fees for service calls. Appliance repair may require ordering parts with multi-day lead times. Building these realities into your maintenance planning — keeping spare filters, maintaining relationships with local contractors, and scheduling annual preventive maintenance before each season — is more critical in Ely than in any other Nevada market. A broken furnace that would be fixed in four hours in Reno might take 48 hours in Ely simply due to supply chain constraints.
The rental stock in Ely is predominantly older single-family homes and small multi-unit properties, much of it built during the mining booms of the mid-20th century. Older housing stock requires more proactive maintenance and more thorough move-in documentation. The move-in checklist required by NRS § 118A.200 for all written leases is especially important in a market where pre-existing wear is common and tenants may dispute deposit deductions at move-out. Photograph every room, every appliance, and every surface at move-in and have the tenant sign the checklist.
For evictions that do proceed to court, the White Pine County Justice Court at 801 Clark Street handles the filing. The process is the same as anywhere in Nevada: 7-day judicial notice to pay or quit for nonpayment (NRS § 40.2512), 5-day judicial notice to cure or quit for curable violations (NRS § 40.2514), and 30 or 60 days’ notice for no-cause terminations depending on tenancy length (NRS § 40.251). All periods count judicial business days only. The writ of restitution is executed by the constable. Self-help is prohibited under NRS § 118A.390.
Ely is not a market for absentee landlords who want passive income without involvement. The isolation, the climate, and the small applicant pool all require active, attentive management. But for the landlord who is present, understands the local economy, and maintains their properties well, White Pine County offers low competition, stable institutional employment demand, and Nevada’s consistently landlord-favorable legal environment.
This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Residential evictions in White Pine County are filed in the White Pine County Justice Court, 801 Clark St, Ely, NV 89301, (775) 289-8841. Nevada’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (NRS Chapter 118A) and NRS Chapter 40 govern all residential tenancies. Nonpayment: 7-day judicial notice (NRS § 40.2512). Lease violations: 5-day judicial notice (NRS § 40.2514). No-cause termination: 30 days (<1 year tenancy) or 60 days (>1 year tenancy) (NRS § 40.251). All notice periods count judicial days only. Security deposit cap: 3 months’ rent; return deadline: 30 days. No rent control. Writ of restitution executed by constable. Self-help eviction prohibited (NRS § 118A.390). Consult a licensed Nevada attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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