Bedford County Virginia Landlord-Tenant Law: A Guide for Property Owners in Virginia’s Fastest-Growing County West of Richmond
Bedford County describes itself as the fastest-growing county west of Richmond, and the numbers back that up. With a population of approximately 81,000 — a 25% gain since 2000 — and 754 square miles that make it Virginia’s fifth-largest county by land area, Bedford sits at the center of one of the more dynamic rental markets in central Virginia. Bounded by Lynchburg to the east and Roanoke to the west, connected by US Route 460 running through the county’s commercial spine, Bedford offers landlords a market with real depth: growing residential demand in the Forest and New London corridor, a premium recreational and retirement market around Smith Mountain Lake, and a median household income of approximately $77,644 that sits comfortably above most of its regional neighbors. This is not a declining rural market — it is a county actively absorbing population spillover from two mid-sized cities while building its own independent commercial and recreational economy.
For landlords, this growth trajectory creates opportunity alongside responsibility. The same population growth that drives demand also means more competition among rental properties in the Forest corridor, more sophisticated tenants who understand their rights under the Virginia Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, and a General District Court with a published dress code policy and a formal written-only continuance process — signals of a professionalized court environment that expects landlords to show up prepared. Bedford County rewards organized landlords who maintain proper documentation, serve notices correctly, and understand the Thursday civil docket. It exposes unprepared ones to delays, counterclaims, and lost cases.
Forest and the New London Corridor: Bedford’s Primary Rental Market
Forest is an unincorporated community in eastern Bedford County that has grown into the de facto suburban extension of Lynchburg. Though Forest uses Lynchburg mailing addresses for many properties, it is firmly in Bedford County jurisdictionally — meaning evictions and all landlord-tenant matters go to Bedford General District Court, not Lynchburg’s court. This is a distinction that trips up new landlords frequently. Forest is where Bedford’s schools are growing, where new residential subdivisions are being platted, and where the county’s most active workforce rental market operates. Tenants here typically work in Lynchburg at Centra Health (the dominant healthcare employer in the region), Liberty University and its affiliated operations, Areva/Framatome, BWX Technologies, and the city’s retail and service sector. The commute from Forest to central Lynchburg runs 10–20 minutes, making it genuinely competitive with in-city addresses for Lynchburg workers who value more space and lower density.
For landlords in the Forest and New London areas, income verification is relatively straightforward: most applicants have stable Lynchburg-area employer income. Request two to three months of pay stubs, confirm employment by calling HR directly, and apply the standard 3x gross rent income threshold. The New London Business and Technology Center and the adjacent Light Industrial parks along US-460 also generate local manufacturing and logistics employment that feeds the rental market in communities like Thaxton, Goode, and Stewartsville along the Bedford/Campbell county line area.
Smith Mountain Lake: A Different Kind of Rental Market
Smith Mountain Lake occupies the northern portion of Bedford County (along with parts of Franklin and Pittsylvania counties). The reservoir, created by Appalachian Power’s 1963 dam on the Roanoke River, has a 500-mile shoreline and is one of Virginia’s premier recreational lakes. Bedford County holds the entire north shore, and that geography has shaped a distinct rental submarket that operates differently from the Forest corridor in almost every way. Where Forest is workforce housing for Lynchburg commuters, the lake area is retirement living, second-home ownership, and increasingly, remote-worker relocation. The income demographics of lake-area newcomers are striking: recent IRS migration data showed that Bedford County’s incoming residents earned an average of $102,485, outpacing departing residents by more than $37,000. That wealth concentration is focused disproportionately on the lake.
For landlords with properties near Smith Mountain Lake, the rental market is thinner but the tenant profile skews wealthier. Long-term professional rentals — remote workers in technology, finance, and consulting; retirees between home sales; newly relocated employees of Roanoke or Lynchburg employers — are the primary tenant pool. Income verification for remote workers requires extra diligence: request an employment verification letter confirming remote status, three months of pay stubs, and direct HR contact. Remote positions can be reclassified or eliminated without local economic warning. Strong credentials on paper do not substitute for documented, verified income. Apply the same income qualification standards you’d use for any applicant — 3x monthly rent in gross income — regardless of how affluent the applicant appears.
Agricultural and Tourism Economy Tenants
Agriculture remains a significant economic driver in Bedford County, particularly in the central and western parts of the county away from the Forest corridor and the lake. The county’s tourism economy — anchored by the National D-Day Memorial in the Town of Bedford, the Peaks of Otter on the Blue Ridge Parkway, Thomas Jefferson’s Poplar Forest retreat home, and a growing craft beverage scene with numerous wineries and breweries — generates hospitality employment that contributes to the rental market in communities near Bedford town and along the Route 460 corridor. Agricultural and hospitality workers tend to have more variable monthly income than salaried or hourly manufacturing workers. For these applicants, the three-month pay stub review and prior year’s W-2 are especially important to capture true annual earning capacity rather than a seasonally inflated snapshot.
Bedford General District Court: The Thursday Civil Docket
Evictions for Bedford County properties are filed at Bedford General District Court, 24th Judicial District of Virginia, at 123 East Main Street, Suite 202, Bedford, VA 24523. Clerk Ashley Richards Schley can be reached at (540) 586-7637 or aschley@vacourts.gov. Office hours run Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The three GDC judges are Chief Judge Sam Daniel Eggleston III and Presiding Judges Randy C. Krantz and Stephanie S. Maddox.
Civil hearings in Bedford GDC are held every Thursday, with three time slots: 9:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., and 1:30 p.m. Small Claims matters are heard the 1st Thursday of each month at 9:30 a.m. Arraignments and advisements are scheduled at 8:30 a.m. on Thursdays. The weekly Thursday civil schedule is more favorable for landlords than many rural Virginia counties with bi-monthly dockets — a missed filing window costs one week rather than two. That said, Bedford’s published continuance policy adds an important procedural requirement: continuances must be filed in writing, and both the Clerk and the Judge consider the motion before granting approval. Verbal requests are not accepted. Bedford GDC also publishes a formal dress code for court appearances, which is uncommon among Virginia’s smaller county courts and signals an expectation of professional conduct from all parties. Review the dress code on the court’s website before attending.
The eviction process follows Virginia’s standard VRLTA framework. For nonpayment, serve a 5-Day Notice to Pay or Quit as soon as rent is overdue under the lease. For lease violations, serve a 30-Day Notice to Comply or Vacate giving the tenant 21 days to cure and 9 days to vacate if they cannot. Month-to-month tenancies require 30 days’ written notice to terminate. After the notice period expires, file the Unlawful Detainer at Bedford GDC, await service by the Bedford County Sheriff, attend the Thursday civil hearing, and follow through to the Writ of Eviction if the landlord prevails and the tenant does not appeal within 10 days. The Sheriff provides at least 72 hours’ notice to the tenant before the physical removal. Total timeline from initial notice to Sheriff removal typically runs four to eight weeks.
Virginia’s 2024 HB 1482 provides for emergency hearing requests in unauthorized occupancy / squatter situations where no lease exists, as long as the landlord provided written notice to vacate at least 72 hours before filing. This compresses the normal process significantly for those situations.
Self-help eviction is absolutely prohibited in Virginia. Changing locks, cutting utilities, or removing tenant belongings without a court order and Sheriff’s Writ of Eviction violates Va. Code § 55.1-1245 and exposes landlords to civil liability and possible court-ordered tenant restoration of possession. Bedford County’s growth trajectory brings in tenants from Northern Virginia, Richmond, and other markets who are very likely to know their rights and respond aggressively to illegal eviction attempts. Follow the court process every time.
VRLTA Habitability and Maintenance Standards
All Bedford County residential tenancies fall under the Virginia VRLTA (Va. Code Ann. §§ 55.1-1200–55.1-1262), which requires landlords to maintain fit and habitable rental units, comply with building and housing codes, provide working utilities, and respond to repair requests in a reasonable timeframe — 24–48 hours for urgent issues, 30 days for non-urgent maintenance. Tenants who give written notice of a repair problem and remain current in rent may file a Tenant’s Assertion in GDC. After proper notice and a 14-day waiting period, tenants may contract a repair themselves and deduct the cost from rent, up to one month’s rent. Document all maintenance requests, responses, and completed work in writing. Photograph units at move-in and move-out with timestamps and obtain signed move-in/move-out checklists from tenants. Bedford County’s mix of older rural housing stock and newer suburban construction means maintenance needs vary widely by property type — budget accordingly and stay responsive.
This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant law is subject to legislative change. Consult a licensed Virginia attorney or contact Legal Aid Works at (866) 534-5243 for situation-specific guidance. Bedford General District Court: 123 East Main Street, Suite 202, Bedford, VA 24523 — (540) 586-7637. Last updated: March 2026.
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