Landlording in Claiborne County: Cumberland Gap, LMU, and the Non-URLTA Advantage
Claiborne County is one of those Tennessee counties that rewards patient landlords who take the time to understand its market dynamics. Nestled between Powell Mountain to the south and the Cumberland Mountains to the north, the county’s geography creates natural rental demand pockets centered around two anchors — Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate and the historic town of Cumberland Gap. Neither is a high-volume market by urban standards, but both generate consistent, year-round demand from tenants who are typically more stable than the transient populations that trouble landlords in resort or seasonal markets.
Understanding that Claiborne County operates outside Tennessee’s URLTA framework is the single most important piece of legal knowledge for any landlord here. The Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act applies only to Tennessee counties with populations of 75,000 or more. At 32,213 residents, Claiborne County is nowhere near that threshold. The practical consequences are significant — tenants here do not have the statutory right to repair-and-deduct, the formal written notice requirements under URLTA do not govern, and the specific anti-retaliation presumption under T.C.A. § 66-28-514 does not automatically apply. What does apply is Tennessee common law and the basic statutory eviction framework under T.C.A. § 66-7-101 et seq.
The Lincoln Memorial University Rental Market
Lincoln Memorial University, located in Harrogate just off U.S. Highway 25E, is the dominant economic force shaping rental demand in Claiborne County’s eastern communities. The university enrolls more than 4,000 students across its undergraduate, graduate, law, and medical programs — a substantial population for a county of this size. LMU’s DeBusk College of Osteopathic Medicine and the Duncan School of Law bring graduate-level students who tend to be older, more financially stable, and more responsible as tenants than traditional undergraduates. Medical students in particular often arrive with co-signer parents, maintained credit histories, and a professional reputation they are motivated to protect.
For landlords, the Harrogate and New Tazewell rental corridors closest to LMU offer the most reliable demand cycle. Lease-up typically happens in spring as incoming classes confirm enrollment, and turnover concentrates in May and July. Landlords who time their lease renewals to align with the academic calendar — offering 12-month leases starting in August — tend to see lower vacancy than those operating on calendar-year cycles. Always require a creditworthy co-signer for student tenants without independent employment income, regardless of grade level. Medical school debt loads can be substantial, and a co-signer agreement provides an important backstop if a student leaves the program.
Cumberland Gap and Short-Term Rental Considerations
The town of Cumberland Gap — a small incorporated community of just over 500 residents sitting at the famous mountain pass — draws tourism traffic from Cumberland Gap National Historical Park year-round. Landlords with properties in or near Cumberland Gap have considered short-term rental platforms as a revenue alternative. Claiborne County does not currently have a formal STR ordinance, and the town of Cumberland Gap operates under basic Tennessee state law without specific short-term rental registration requirements at the time of publication. That regulatory vacuum can change, and any landlord operating short-term rentals should monitor county commission meetings and contact the Cumberland Gap town offices before investing in an STR conversion.
For long-term landlords in the Cumberland Gap corridor, the tenant pool tends to draw from park service employees, local business operators, and commuters to Middlesboro, Kentucky just across the state line. The tri-state corner of Tennessee, Virginia, and Kentucky creates a unique cross-border commuter dynamic — some tenants work in Virginia or Kentucky and prefer the Tennessee side for lower costs and different regulatory environments. This is generally a stable renter profile, though income verification should account for potential Kentucky or Virginia employer pay cycles rather than assuming Tennessee norms.
Eviction Procedure in Claiborne County
Evictions in Claiborne County proceed through General Sessions Court at the courthouse in Tazewell. Because URLTA does not apply, the governing eviction statute is T.C.A. § 66-7-109, which requires a written notice to vacate before a detainer warrant can be filed. For nonpayment of rent, the standard notice period is 14 days. For other lease violations, a 30-day notice is typically used, though the statute does not specify a cure period outside URLTA counties the way T.C.A. § 66-28-505 does in URLTA jurisdictions.
Once notice expires without compliance, the landlord files a detainer warrant at the General Sessions Court clerk’s office in Tazewell. Filing fees in rural Tennessee counties typically run $90 to $130 depending on the number of defendants and service method. The court will set a hearing date and the sheriff’s department will serve the warrant on the tenant. At the hearing, if the judge rules in the landlord’s favor, a judgment for possession is entered. If the tenant does not appeal or vacate within the appeal window, the landlord may request a writ of possession enforced by the Claiborne County Sheriff.
One practical reality of rural court systems: hearing dates in smaller General Sessions courts can sometimes be set further out than landlords expect, particularly if the court has a heavy civil docket. Build realistic timelines into your financial planning — a Claiborne County eviction from first missed payment to physical possession can take six to ten weeks under normal circumstances, longer if the tenant files an appeal to Circuit Court.
Security Deposits and Written Leases
Tennessee imposes no dollar cap on security deposits in non-URLTA counties, and the formal 30-day return requirement under T.C.A. § 66-28-301 is a URLTA provision that does not technically apply in Claiborne County. That said, best practice — and the standard a Tennessee court is likely to apply in a security deposit dispute — is to return the deposit or provide a written, itemized statement of deductions within 30 days of move-out. Landlords who hold deposits beyond that window without documentation risk losing the right to make any deductions at all, even under common law principles.
Written leases are not legally required in Tennessee for tenancies of less than one year, but every Claiborne County landlord should use one regardless of lease length. A clear written lease establishes the rent amount, due date, late fee structure, pet policy, maintenance responsibilities, and notice requirements for termination. Without a written lease, disputes about any of those terms get resolved by a judge applying common law defaults — which may not reflect the landlord’s intentions. For student tenants near LMU, a well-drafted lease with a co-signer addendum is your primary protection against a mid-semester departure.
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