Darlington County Landlord Guide: Hartsville, Sonoco, the Raceway, and SC Eviction Law
Darlington County’s rental market punches above its weight for a Pee Dee county of 67,000 residents. The combination of Sonoco Products Company’s substantial Hartsville employment footprint, Coker University’s student demand, McLeod Health’s healthcare workforce, and the Darlington Raceway’s event-driven tourism economy gives the county a more diverse tenant base than most comparable SC markets. For landlords, that diversity creates both opportunity β multiple demand segments with different income profiles β and operational nuance, particularly around the distinction between residential and vacation rental law in a NASCAR market.
Eviction Process: Darlington County Magistrate Court
The SC statutory eviction framework applies uniformly across Darlington County. Nonpayment evictions begin with a written 5-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under SC Code Β§ 27-40-710. After five days without resolution, Summary Ejectment is filed at Darlington County Magistrate Court. The county has magistrate offices in both Darlington and Hartsville β confirm the correct filing location based on the property’s address before submitting. A hearing is scheduled within 10 days of filing. Lease violation evictions require 14-day cure periods under SC Code Β§ 27-40-720. Writs of Ejectment are enforced by the Darlington County Sheriff’s Office.
The Sonoco Workforce Advantage in Hartsville
Sonoco Products Company β headquartered in Hartsville and operating as a Fortune 500 global packaging manufacturer β is the defining employment anchor of Hartsville’s rental market. The company employs thousands in its Hartsville operations, including manufacturing workers, engineers, researchers at the Sonoco Institute of Packaging Design and Graphics at Clemson, and corporate staff across finance, marketing, legal, and executive functions. This employment diversity creates demand across multiple price points: corporate and R&D staff may seek the higher-end of Hartsville’s rental range, while manufacturing workers occupy the mid-market. Tenants employed directly by Sonoco are generally excellent credit risks β the company has been in continuous operation for over a century and is not going anywhere.
Sonoco’s relocation program for incoming employees creates a specific opportunity for Hartsville landlords: corporate relocation tenants who are new to the area, need housing immediately, and may be eligible for employer lease guarantees or corporate housing arrangements. For landlords with quality properties positioned near the Sonoco campus and Hartsville’s amenities, actively marketing to HR departments and relocation firms is a viable tenant acquisition strategy that can produce highly qualified applicants with employer backstops.
Darlington Raceway: STR Opportunity and Legal Framework
The Darlington Raceway hosts multiple NASCAR race weekends each year, with the Southern 500 (traditionally held on Labor Day weekend) being the marquee event that draws tens of thousands of visitors to a county with limited hotel inventory. This creates a genuine short-term rental opportunity for Darlington County homeowners and landlords, but it comes with a critical legal distinction: short-term vacation rentals during race events are governed by the South Carolina Vacation Rental Act (Β§ 27-50-210 et seq.), not the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act. The two frameworks have different notice requirements, different occupant rights, and different removal procedures. A landlord who uses a standard residential lease for a race-weekend guest and then needs to remove a problem occupant will find that the residential eviction process is a poor fit for a situation that is fundamentally a vacation rental dispute. Use Vacation Rental Act-compliant agreements for all race-event short-term bookings, and keep the residential and vacation rental operations clearly separated.
Security Deposits and the Two-City Market
Darlington County’s two primary cities have meaningfully different rent levels and deposit norms. Hartsville, with its professional and corporate employment base, generally supports one-to-two-month deposits and rents at the higher end of the county range. Darlington, with a more working-class tenant base, typically runs one-month deposits at more modest rent levels. South Carolina imposes no deposit cap, so landlords may calibrate appropriately to their specific property and submarket. In both cities, SC Code Β§ 27-40-530 requires return of the unused deposit within 30 days of lease termination with itemized accounting β no exceptions, no adjustment for deposit size. The documentation discipline that protects deposit deductions (move-in photos, signed checklist, dated repair invoices) is equally important at $500 and $2,000.
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