Cherokee County Landlord Guide: Gaffney, I-85 Workforce, and SC Eviction Law
Cherokee County’s rental market is a working-class Upstate story β a manufacturing and logistics workforce housed in a county that sits at the center of one of the Southeast’s most active industrial corridors. Gaffney serves as the county hub, and while it lacks the scale of Spartanburg or the premium character of Greenville, it functions as an affordable, practical housing market for the blue-collar workforce that keeps the I-85 economy moving. For landlords, Cherokee County offers accessible acquisition prices, steady demand from an employed workforce, and a legal framework β South Carolina’s β that is landlord-practical and procedurally straightforward.
Eviction Law: Gaffney and Cherokee County Magistrate Court
Nonpayment evictions in Cherokee County follow the standard SC framework: written 5-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under SC Code Β§ 27-40-710, followed by Summary Ejectment filing at Cherokee County Magistrate Court in Gaffney after five days without resolution. The filing fee runs $80β$120; a hearing is scheduled within 10 days; a successful judgment produces a Writ of Ejectment enforced by the Cherokee County Sheriff if needed. Lease violation evictions under SC Code Β§ 27-40-720 require 14 days to cure for remediable violations. All notices must be in writing and properly served β verbal notice is not legally sufficient for any SC eviction proceeding.
Manufacturing Workforce Tenants and Income Stability
Cherokee County’s manufacturing economy β food processing, plastics, distribution centers, and legacy textile operations β provides direct-hire employment at wages that generally support market-rate rents. Direct-hire manufacturing employees at established Cherokee County employers are among the more stable tenant profiles a landlord in this market will encounter: regular wages, predictable schedules, and a workforce population that tends toward long-term community ties. The key screening distinction is between direct-hire employees and temporary workers placed through staffing agencies. Temp-to-hire positions are common in the manufacturing sector, and workers in those positions face income volatility during agency periods that direct employees do not. A paystub from a staffing agency rather than a direct employer is worth noting during the application review.
Limestone University and the Gaffney Student Market
Limestone University, with an enrollment of several thousand students, adds a defined student rental segment to Gaffney’s market. Student tenants in the near-campus area represent demand that is relatively predictable seasonally β academic-year occupancy is strong, summer occupancy varies β but income-uncertain. Most undergraduates rely on financial aid, parental support, or part-time employment for housing costs, none of which provide the income verification certainty of a W-2 employer. Standard practice for student-targeted rentals is to require a parental co-signer or guarantor on the lease, use academic-year lease terms with explicit summer provisions, and verify enrollment status at lease commencement. Faculty and staff housing near Limestone is a more financially stable segment and worth marketing to if units are positioned near campus.
The I-85 Commuter Advantage and Cross-Border Tenants
Cherokee County’s location between Spartanburg and the Charlotte metro’s Gaston County, NC, makes it an affordable bedroom community for workers employed in both directions. Gaffney rents are substantially lower than Spartanburg’s and a fraction of Charlotte-area housing costs, and the I-85 commute to either market is manageable for workers who prioritize cost of living. This cross-market commuter segment adds employment diversity to the tenant base β a Cherokee County landlord’s tenant pool may include workers from BMW-supply chain employers in Spartanburg, Lowes and manufacturing workers from Gaston County, NC, and healthcare employees from Gaffney’s own Upstate Carolina Medical Center / Gaffney campus. Income from North Carolina employers is verified and underwritten the same way as SC income β a pay stub is a pay stub, and SC law governs the tenancy regardless of employer location.
Security Deposits and Property Condition Documentation
Market norms in Cherokee County run one month’s rent for most residential units β modest in absolute terms but subject to the same statutory requirements as anywhere in SC. SC Code Β§ 27-40-530 requires return within 30 days of lease termination and possession surrender with itemized accounting of any deductions. In a market with older housing stock β including Gaffney’s mill-era housing and mid-century residential neighborhoods β the documentation of pre-existing condition at move-in is critical. A tenant who moves into a property with existing scuffs, worn carpet, and aging fixtures should sign a move-in checklist documenting those conditions; without it, the landlord has no documentary basis for distinguishing pre-existing wear from tenant-caused damage at move-out.
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