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Lewis County
Lewis County · Tennessee

Lewis County Landlord-Tenant Law

Tennessee landlord guide — county ordinances, courthouse info & local rules

📍 County Seat: Hohenwald
👥 Pop. 12,544
⚖️ General Sessions Court
❌ URLTA Does Not Apply
🌿 South Middle TN / Duck River / Natchez Trace / Small Rural County

Lewis County Rental Market Overview

Lewis County is one of Tennessee’s smaller and more rural counties, occupying a wooded stretch of the Highland Rim south of the Duck River in south-central Middle Tennessee. Hohenwald, the county seat and only incorporated municipality of any real size, is a small city with a distinct history — it was settled in the late nineteenth century by Swiss and German immigrants, a heritage that still shapes its character in subtle ways and gives it its distinctly European name. With a 2020 population of 12,544, Lewis County falls far below the 75,000-resident URLTA threshold, and Tennessee common law governs all residential landlord-tenant matters throughout the county.

The county’s economy is modest and mixed: county government and schools, a small manufacturing sector in and around Hohenwald, the Natchez Trace Parkway corridor that brings recreational visitors through the county, and a scattering of small agricultural operations. Lewis County is not a commuter county in any significant sense — it is too far from any major employment center for daily commuting to be practical for most residents — and the rental market reflects an economy that is largely self-contained and genuinely small. Landlords operating here need realistic expectations about the applicant pool and a patient approach to finding tenants whose income is stable and verifiable within a very limited labor market.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Hohenwald
Population 12,544 (2020)
Key Communities Hohenwald, Gordonsburg, Napier
Court System General Sessions Court, Hohenwald
URLTA Status ❌ Does Not Apply (pop. under 75,000)
Rent Control None (state preemption)
Just-Cause Eviction Not required statewide

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 14-Day Pay or Vacate (T.C.A. § 66-7-109)
Lease Violation Notice 30-Day Notice to Vacate
Filing Fee ~$75–$105
Court Type General Sessions Court
Answer Deadline Set by court at time of filing
Writ Enforcement Lewis County Sheriff
Self-Help Eviction ❌ Prohibited statewide

Lewis County Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
Rent Control None. T.C.A. § 66-35-102 prohibits local rent control statewide.
URLTA Coverage ❌ Does not apply. Population (12,544) is well below the 75,000 threshold. Tennessee common law governs all residential landlord-tenant matters.
Security Deposit No statutory cap under common law. Best practice: return within 30 days of lease end with itemized written deductions.
Habitability Tennessee’s common law implied warranty of habitability applies countywide. Given the county’s wooded terrain and older housing stock in Hohenwald, landlords should pay particular attention to moisture, structural integrity, and heating system maintenance.
Repair-and-Deduct Not available. Statutory repair-and-deduct rights under T.C.A. § 66-28-502 apply only in URLTA counties.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited statewide. Lockouts, utility shutoffs, or removal of tenant belongings without a court order expose landlords to civil liability.
Retaliatory Eviction URLTA anti-retaliation provisions do not apply. Common law retaliation principles remain in effect.
Late Fees No statutory cap. Must be clearly specified in the written lease to be enforceable.
Small-Market Screening Note Lewis County’s limited labor market means the most stable applicants are almost exclusively county and school system employees, Hohenwald manufacturing workers with verified direct-hire status, and healthcare workers at Lewis County Healthcare. Apply standard income and credit thresholds consistently — the temptation to lower standards in a thin market is the primary risk for landlords operating here.

🏛️ Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Tennessee

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Tennessee
Filing Fee 130
Total Est. Range $175-$400
Service: — Writ: —

Tennessee State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

14
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
14
Days Notice (Violation)
30-45
Avg Total Days
$130
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 14-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate
Notice Period 14 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes
Days to Hearing 6-14 days
Days to Writ 10 days
Total Estimated Timeline 30-45 days
Total Estimated Cost $175-$400
⚠️ Watch Out

Tennessee has a dual-track eviction system. The URLTA (§66-28-505) applies to counties with population over 75,000 (covering ~75% of the population including Nashville, Memphis, Knoxville, Chattanooga). Non-URLTA counties use §66-7-109. Notice periods are 14 days for both tracks for nonpayment. Tenants have a mandatory 5-day grace period (§66-28-201(d)). The 14-day notice cannot be sent until after the 5-day grace period expires. If the same nonpayment recurs within 6 months, landlord can issue a 7-day unconditional quit notice (§66-28-505(a)(2)(B)). Filing fees vary by county ($100-$200).

Underground Landlord

📝 Tennessee Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the General Sessions Court. Pay the filing fee (~$130).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Tennessee eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Tennessee attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Tennessee landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Tennessee — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Tennessee's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
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🏙️ Local Market & Screening Tips

Key submarkets: Hohenwald (sole rental concentration, county seat, government and light manufacturing employment), Gordonsburg and Napier (rural residential, minimal rental inventory).

Most stable tenants: Lewis County Healthcare employees, county and school system staff, and direct-hire manufacturing workers at Hohenwald facilities. The Natchez Trace Parkway brings recreational visitors but does not create significant year-round rental demand. Maintain screening standards even when the applicant pool is thin — placing an unqualified tenant in a market with limited replacement applicants compounds the original risk considerably.

Hohenwald and the Highland Rim: Renting Property in Lewis County, Tennessee

Lewis County occupies a quiet corner of south-central Middle Tennessee, a county of wooded hills, narrow creek valleys, and small farms that has never grown large enough to attract the industrial or commercial investment that has transformed some of its neighbors. The Highland Rim terrain — deeply dissected, heavily forested, and interrupted by the headwaters of creeks that drain into the Buffalo and Duck rivers — has always made Lewis County a harder agricultural proposition than the flat bottom counties to the west or the more accessible valleys to the north and south. What this geography produced over generations is a county that is genuinely its own thing: small, stable in its modest way, and governed by a set of economic realities that require a landlord to think carefully about what sustainable rental investment looks like here.

Hohenwald is Lewis County’s seat and its only real population center — a city of about 3,700 that serves as the retail, governmental, and light industrial hub for a county of 12,500. The city’s name reflects its origins: it was founded in the 1890s by Swiss and German colonists who named it after a valley in the Swiss Alps, and while little visible trace of that heritage remains in the built environment, the name itself is a daily reminder that this corner of Middle Tennessee has a more varied settlement history than most. Hohenwald’s courthouse square anchors the city, and the surrounding blocks contain the services, employment, and commercial activity that the county depends on.

The Rental Market in Scale

Lewis County’s rental market is small by any measure — a county seat of 3,700 people generates a finite number of rental households, and the rural areas outside Hohenwald have minimal formal rental inventory. The market is predominantly made up of individual landlords with individual properties: single-family homes, duplexes, and small rental houses that serve working families and individuals whose employment is rooted in Hohenwald’s institutional and manufacturing employment base. There are no significant apartment complexes, no purpose-built student housing, and no large rental development that would constitute a distinct submarket.

This scale has practical implications that run in both directions. On the positive side, Lewis County property is inexpensive to acquire, and a well-maintained rental property in Hohenwald that is priced at the local market rate can generate reasonable cash-on-cash returns at acquisition prices that would be impossible in larger Tennessee markets. On the challenging side, the applicant pool for any given vacancy is small, the universe of qualified applicants within that pool is smaller still, and the time required to find and properly screen a suitable tenant can extend in ways that a higher-volume market would not require. Landlords who enter Lewis County expecting the application pace of a larger market will be disappointed; landlords who price acquisition and operating costs appropriately for the market’s scale and patience requirements can do well.

Lewis County Healthcare and Government Employment

Lewis County Healthcare — the county’s critical access hospital in Hohenwald — is the single largest institutional employer and the most reliable source of stable, verifiable rental demand in the county. A critical access designation means the facility is federally recognized as essential rural infrastructure, and that status provides a degree of operational continuity that a purely market-driven rural hospital would not have. Clinical staff, nursing personnel, administrative employees, and support workers at Lewis County Healthcare have the income stability and professional rootedness that make them excellent rental applicants.

County government employment — the sheriff’s department, road commission, courthouse staff, and county administrative positions — contributes another tier of stable, year-round income to the rental market. The Lewis County school system, which serves the entire county in a consolidated district, employs teachers, counselors, administrators, and support staff whose state-funded salaries follow the predictable annual cycle common to Tennessee public education. These institutional employers collectively define the most reliable segment of Hohenwald’s rental demand, and a landlord who consistently attracts and retains employees from these sectors has built a genuinely stable portfolio even in a small market.

Manufacturing Employment in Hohenwald

Hohenwald has a small but real manufacturing presence — light industrial facilities that have located in the city over the years, drawn by available industrial land and a workforce willing to work in production environments. The specific employers change over time as facilities open, expand, or close, but manufacturing has been a consistent component of Hohenwald’s employment base for decades. For rental applicants from the manufacturing sector, the standard verification considerations apply with particular force in a small market: direct-hire versus agency employment, length of tenure at the current facility, and consistency of hours over the most recent pay periods.

In a small manufacturing labor market like Hohenwald’s, staffing agencies are active because the facilities need flexibility and the workers need access to employment. An applicant who has been placed at the same facility through an agency for eighteen months is meaningfully different from one who started four months ago, and both are different from a direct employee with three years of tenure. Asking specifically about employment status — direct hire or agency, and for how long — gives the landlord the information needed to evaluate the actual stability of the income, not just its current level.

The Natchez Trace and the Recreation Economy

The Natchez Trace Parkway — the federal recreational road that runs the length of the old Natchez Trace trail from Natchez, Mississippi to Nashville — passes through Lewis County, and the parkway corridor draws cyclists, motorcyclists, and touring visitors throughout the spring, summer, and fall. The parkway brings visitor spending to the county, particularly at a handful of services near the parkway’s alignment, but it does not generate significant year-round employment or create meaningful rental demand beyond the small number of hospitality and service workers it supports. Unlike a recreational area with a lodging and resort economy, the Natchez Trace is a driving and cycling road whose visitors are largely passing through rather than staying.

The broader outdoor recreation access that the county’s terrain provides — hunting on timberland, fishing on the Buffalo River tributaries, the general appeal of a wooded, uncrowded landscape — has attracted some remote workers and retirees to Lewis County in recent years, following a pattern seen across rural Middle Tennessee. These newcomers typically purchase property rather than rent, but an occasional retiree or remote worker seeking short-term rental accommodation while evaluating a permanent purchase represents a real if infrequent demand segment. Remote worker rental applicants in Lewis County should be evaluated with the same income verification standards applied elsewhere in this guide: employer-confirmed remote work authorization, stable monthly income documented across multiple pay periods, and internet connectivity adequate for the work to be performed from the property.

Screening in a Thin Market

The most important operational principle for Lewis County landlords is to maintain consistent screening standards even when the applicant pool is thin and the property has been vacant longer than desired. The temptation to lower income thresholds, overlook credit problems, or skip reference checks when the only available applicant is marginal is understandable but reliably counterproductive. A bad tenant placement in a market with limited replacement applicants means a longer exposure period to non-payment or property damage before a qualified replacement can be found, and a damaged relationship with the small-market community where a landlord’s reputation directly determines their ability to attract the next qualified applicant.

The practical alternative to lowering standards is to price the property correctly and maintain it well enough that it attracts institutional and government workers — the most reliable segment of the local applicant pool — rather than competing only with the lowest-quality inventory in the market. A well-maintained Hohenwald rental priced competitively within the local range for similar properties will attract better applicants than the same property priced at a premium that the market does not support.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Tennessee attorney or contact the Lewis County General Sessions Court for guidance on specific matters. Last updated: March 2026.

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