Craig County Virginia Landlord-Tenant Law: A Guide for Property Owners in Virginia’s Smallest County
Craig County holds the distinction of being Virginia’s least populous county — a designation it has maintained for decades. With approximately 5,200 residents spread across 331 square miles of predominantly national forest and mountain terrain, it is a uniquely remote and rural jurisdiction where the entire county’s legal and civic infrastructure is concentrated in a single small courthouse in New Castle. For the handful of landlords operating rental properties in Craig County, understanding the court’s specific schedule and procedures is essential: the county’s civil docket meets only once a month, and an eviction case mishandled or missed can cascade into a multi-month delay in a jurisdiction where there are no alternative hearing dates to fall back on.
The rental market itself is tiny. Craig County’s residential rental housing stock likely consists of fewer than 200 units countywide, mostly older single-family homes and a small number of manufactured homes. Typical rents run $700 to $1,100 per month — among the lowest in the Commonwealth. Most landlords in Craig County are individual private owners, not professional management companies. The county’s isolation from major employment centers (Roanoke is 40 miles away) and its near-total encirclement by the Jefferson National Forest mean that rental demand is constrained to a small, locally-rooted population with limited housing options elsewhere in the county.
The Combined Court: What Landlords Need to Know
Craig County is served by a combined General District and Juvenile & Domestic Relations District Court, located at 182 Main Street, Suite 5, New Castle, VA 24127 (P.O. Box 232). Clerk Patricia H. Taylor can be reached at (540) 864-5989, fax (540) 864-7385. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. This combined-court arrangement is common in Virginia’s smallest counties, where the volume of cases does not justify maintaining separate facilities and clerk staffs for each court type.
The General District Court judges assigned to the 25th Judicial District and who may hear Craig County cases are Chief Judge Christopher M. Billias, Robin J. Mayer, Rupen R. Shah, and David Browning Spigle. These judges rotate across the 25th District, which covers Alleghany, Bath, Botetourt, Craig, and Highland counties. Craig County’s cases may be heard by any judge assigned to the district on a given court date.
The Monthly Civil Docket: Plan Around It
The single most important procedural fact for Craig County landlords is this: civil court meets only once per month, on the 4th Tuesday at 9:00 a.m. There is no supplemental civil date, no weekly docket, no second opportunity during the month. The civil schedule runs as follows: General Civil Returns and Protective Orders at 9:00 a.m.; Contested Civil Cases at 9:30 a.m.; Cases Specially Set at 10:00 a.m. Your Unlawful Detainer return will fall on the 4th Tuesday following service by the Sheriff.
This monthly schedule has real practical implications. If the 4th Tuesday of a given month falls shortly after you file, you may have a hearing within a few weeks of the notice expiration. But if timing is unfavorable, your first available court date could be five weeks away. Add to that any continuance — which in Craig County bumps the matter a full 30 days — and an uncontested eviction that would take four weeks in a high-volume court can stretch to ten or more in Craig County. File as soon as your notice period runs. Confirm your docket date with the Clerk’s Office. Call (540) 864-5989 before your court date to confirm the hearing is still on the schedule.
Continuances at Craig GDC are available from both the Judge and the Clerk, which is more permissive than many Virginia courts. However, given the monthly docket, even a Clerk-granted continuance effectively delays the proceeding by four weeks. Request continuances only when genuinely necessary.
VRLTA Notices and Rural Property Considerations
Craig County residential tenancies fall under the VRLTA, Va. Code Ann. §§ 55.1-1200 et seq. The standard notice requirements apply: a 5-Day Notice to Pay or Quit for nonpayment, a 30-Day Notice to Remedy or Vacate (21 days to cure) for lease violations, and 30 days’ notice to terminate month-to-month tenancies. Notices should be served in person or by the methods specified in Va. Code § 55.1-1202 — in a rural county where tenants may be difficult to locate, certified mail to the leased address creates a reliable documentary record.
Rural properties in Craig County often have features that are absent from suburban rentals: woodstoves, propane heat, private wells, septic systems, woodsheds, large lots, and sometimes outbuildings or animal facilities. The VRLTA’s habitability obligation requires landlords to maintain these systems in functional, safe condition. For propane systems, ensure that fuel supply responsibility is clearly assigned in the lease — if the landlord owns the propane tank, clarify whether fuel cost is included or billed separately. For woodstoves, include a clause requiring annual chimney cleaning and prohibiting improper use of the firebox. For wells, provide a water quality test result to the tenant at move-in and specify in the lease who calls for repairs if the pump fails.
Security Deposits, Move-In Inspections, and the 45-Day Rule
Virginia’s security deposit cap is two months’ rent (Va. Code § 55.1-1226). For a Craig County property at $900 per month, the maximum deposit is $1,800. The deposit must be returned along with a written itemization of any deductions within 45 days of tenancy termination. Failure to do so forfeits the landlord’s right to retain any portion of the deposit and may expose the landlord to liability for the full deposit amount plus attorney’s fees.
Conduct a thorough written and photographic move-in inspection covering every room, the heating system (woodstove or HVAC), all appliances, windows, doors, decking, porches, outbuildings, and the well and septic access points. Have the tenant sign the inspection report. At move-out, repeat the inspection with the same level of thoroughness. In a small-town community where landlord and tenant may know each other personally, these documented records protect the relationship as well as the legal rights of both parties — removing ambiguity and reducing the risk of a dispute that damages longstanding community ties.
The 2024 VRLTA updates apply in Craig County as they do statewide: 72-hour minimum advance written notice for landlord entry, fee disclosure on the first page of the lease under Va. Code § 55.1-1204.1, late fees capped at 10% of monthly rent, and the emergency hearing pathway under HB 1482 for unauthorized occupancy situations. Self-help eviction remains strictly prohibited under Va. Code § 55.1-1245.
For Craig County’s small landlord community, the practical advice is straightforward: use written leases that are specific to your property’s features, document everything at move-in, file eviction notices promptly when issues arise (given the monthly docket, delays compound quickly), and appear at every court date prepared. Legal aid resources for southwest Virginia are available through Blue Ridge Legal Services at (540) 343-0010. The Craig County Combined Court Clerk at (540) 864-5989 is a small-office operation where staff can often answer procedural questions directly.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Virginia attorney or contact Blue Ridge Legal Services at (540) 343-0010. Craig County Combined District Court: 182 Main Street, Suite 5, New Castle, VA 24127 — (540) 864-5989. Last updated: March 2026.
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