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Bennington County Vermont
Bennington County · Vermont

Bennington County Landlord-Tenant Law

Vermont landlord guide — Superior Court info, local rules & the Southshire–Northshire rental market

📍 Shire Towns: Bennington & Manchester
👥 Pop. ~37,000
⚖️ Bennington Superior Court • Civil Division
🎿 Green Mountains — Ski Country & Outlet Shopping

Bennington County Rental Market Overview

Bennington County occupies the southwestern corner of Vermont, bordered by New York State to the west and Massachusetts to the south — making it geographically closer to Albany, Hartford, and Concord, New Hampshire than to Montpelier. The county is unique in Vermont for having two shire towns (county seats): Bennington to the south, the county’s largest municipality with approximately 15,000 residents and a long manufacturing history, and Manchester to the north, a year-round resort community anchored by high-end outlet shopping, The Equinox resort, and easy access to Stratton Mountain and Bromley Mountain ski areas. Other notable communities include Arlington in the Battenkill Valley, North Bennington home to Bennington College, Shaftsbury, Pownal, and the resort town of Wilmington near Mount Snow on the eastern edge of the county.

The county’s two distinct economic zones create two very different rental markets. Bennington’s market is working-class and affordable — average one-bedroom rents run approximately $970–$1,050/month, among the lowest in Vermont — driven by manufacturing, healthcare at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center, and Bennington College. Manchester’s market is tourism-driven and seasonal, with rents commanded by proximity to Stratton and Bromley ski areas and the upscale outlet shopping corridor; rental inventory is tight year-round and seasonal demand spikes sharply in ski season. All evictions in Bennington County are filed with the single Bennington Superior Court Civil Division in Bennington, regardless of whether the property is in the Southshire or the Northshire.

📊 Quick Stats

Shire Towns Bennington (Southshire) & Manchester (Northshire)
Population ~37,000 (2024 est.)
Key Communities Bennington, Manchester Center, Manchester Village, Arlington, North Bennington, Shaftsbury, Pownal, Wilmington, Peru
Court System Bennington Superior Court — Civil Division (all evictions filed here)
Avg. Rent (1BR Bennington) ~$970–$1,050/mo
Manchester Area Rents Significantly higher; tight ski-country inventory
Major Employers SW Vermont Medical Center, Bennington College, Stratton Mountain Resort, Bromley Mountain, Manchester outlet retail
Rent Control None
Just-Cause Eviction Not required statewide

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 14-Day Actual Notice
Lease Violation 30-Day Actual Notice
Criminal / Violence 14-Day Actual Notice
No-Cause (≤2 yrs, monthly) 60-Day Actual Notice
No-Cause (>2 yrs, monthly) 90-Day Actual Notice
Security Deposit Return 14 days after vacancy
Eviction Filing Fee ~$270 (confirm with court)
Statute 9 V.S.A. §§ 4451–4475; 12 V.S.A. ch. 169

Bennington County — Local Rules & Vermont Law Highlights

Topic Rule / Notes
Rental Licensing No county-level rental licensing required in Bennington County. Vermont has no statewide landlord licensing statute. The towns of Bennington, Manchester, and other municipalities in the county do not require residential rental registration for standard long-term leases. Short-term rental operators in Manchester, Stratton-area towns, and Wilmington should verify applicable local zoning or STR permit requirements with the individual town clerk before listing on any STR platform, as ski-area towns may have specific regulations.
Rent Control None. No municipality in Bennington County has enacted rent stabilization or rent control. Vermont has no statewide rent control statute. All rent increases require at least 60 days’ actual notice before taking effect at the start of a new rental period (9 V.S.A. § 4455(b)). Landlords in the Manchester ski-corridor may raise rents freely at lease renewal subject only to this notice requirement.
Security Deposit No statutory cap on deposit amount. Must be returned with a written itemized statement within 14 days after the landlord learns of vacancy or receives the tenant’s notice of move-out date (9 V.S.A. § 4461(c)). Seasonal units: 60 days. Normal wear and tear is not deductible. Willful failure to return: double the wrongfully withheld amount plus reasonable attorney’s fees. After 14 days without return, the landlord forfeits all right to withhold any portion of the deposit.
Where to File Evictions All residential evictions in Bennington County — whether the property is in Bennington, Manchester, Arlington, Wilmington, or any other town — are filed at the Bennington Superior Court Civil Division at 207 South Street, Bennington, VT 05201. Vermont uses a unified Superior Court system; there are no separate precinct or JP courts for evictions.
Bennington Superior Court — Civil Division Address: 207 South Street, Bennington, VT 05201
Phone: (802) 447-2700
Email: BenningtonUnit@vtcourts.gov
Hours: Monday–Friday 8:00 AM–4:30 PM (closed first Friday of each month 12:30–4:30 PM for in-service training; closed on observed state holidays)
Presiding Judge: Hon. John Valente • Superior Judge: Hon. David Barra
Note for Manchester-area landlords: Despite Manchester being a co-shire town, all civil filings including evictions are processed at the Bennington location. Plan accordingly for travel time when filing or attending hearings.
Confirm current information at vermontjudiciary.org.
Vermont Notice Requirements Every termination notice must state a specific termination date — notices without a date are legally defective and will not support an eviction judgment. The landlord must file an ejectment action within 60 days of the stated termination date or the notice expires. “Actual notice” means hand-delivery or first-class/certified mail, with a rebuttable presumption of receipt three days after mailing.
Habitability & Repairs Vermont’s implied warranty of habitability cannot be waived by any lease clause. Landlords must maintain safe, clean, habitable premises throughout the tenancy, including functioning heat and adequate hot and cold water. Tenants may withhold rent for unrepaired material health-and-safety defects after proper notice. Repair-and-deduct is available for minor defects after 30 days of landlord inaction — capped at one-half of one month’s rent (9 V.S.A. § 4459). In Bennington County’s older housing stock, heating system maintenance is especially critical given Vermont’s cold winters.
Landlord Entry At least 48 hours’ advance notice required; entry only permitted between 9:00 AM and 9:00 PM for inspections, repairs, showings, and agreed services (9 V.S.A. § 4460). No-notice entry permitted only when there is a reasonable belief of imminent danger to persons or property. Tenant consent to entry may not be unreasonably withheld.
Application Fees Prohibited. Vermont law (9 V.S.A. § 4456a) bans all application fees for residential rentals. For background and credit checks, landlords must accept a government-issued ID or ITIN as an alternative to a Social Security number and may not reject applications for lack of an SSN. Amended by 2025, No. 69, eff. July 1, 2025.
Illegal Evictions Self-help eviction is strictly prohibited. Landlords may not change locks, shut off utilities, remove doors, or physically deny access to force a tenant to leave (9 V.S.A. § 4463). All evictions require a court-issued writ of possession. Violations entitle the tenant to injunctive relief, damages, costs, and attorney’s fees (§ 4464).
Anti-Retaliation Landlords may not retaliate against tenants for reporting code violations or habitability complaints. A termination notice served within 90 days of a government health/safety notice creates a rebuttable presumption of illegal retaliation (9 V.S.A. § 4465). Tenant remedy includes damages, attorney’s fees, and a defense in any retaliatory eviction action.
Ski-Season Rental Considerations Manchester-area and Stratton-corridor landlords face strong seasonal demand. Vermont law treats seasonal rental units not intended as primary residences differently for security deposit purposes — the return deadline extends from 14 days to 60 days (9 V.S.A. § 4461(c)). Be clear in the lease whether the unit is intended as a primary or seasonal residence, as this affects which return timeline applies. Short-term rentals are a distinct category and operate outside Chapter 137 (transient hotel/motel occupancy under 32 V.S.A. ch. 225 is excluded).
Bennington College Rental Market Bennington College, located in North Bennington, enrolls approximately 700–800 students and creates a modest but consistent demand for off-campus rentals in the North Bennington–Bennington corridor. College employees and faculty seeking longer-term rentals are typically strong tenants. Use written leases with clear academic-year terms; student tenants receive the full protections of Vermont law.
Southwestern Vermont Medical Center SVMC is Bennington’s largest employer and anchor institution, providing a stable professional healthcare workforce that represents some of the most reliable long-term tenants in the Southshire market. Healthcare workers on rotating shifts may have non-standard schedules — consider whether lease terms accommodate this and screen for verified hospital employment.

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: Vermont Judiciary — Bennington Civil Division

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💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Vermont
Filing Fee $295
Total Est. Range $400-800+
Service: — Writ: —

Vermont State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

14
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
30 (material lease violation - no cure required); 14 (criminal activity/health-safety threats)
Days Notice (Violation)
60-120
Avg Total Days
$$295
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 14-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit
Notice Period 14 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay all rent due through end of rental period within 14 days to stop termination; also can defeat ejectment by paying all rent + interest + costs (once per 12 months)
Days to Hearing 21+ (tenant has 21 days to file answer after service; hearing scheduled after answer) days
Days to Writ 14 days after Writ of Possession served (7 days if missed rent escrow payment) days
Total Estimated Timeline 60-120 days
Total Estimated Cost $400-800+
⚠️ Watch Out

VERY tenant-friendly. 14-day notice for nonpayment (longest initial notice in batch 10). Tenant pays within 14 days = tenancy continues. CRITICAL: Tenant can defeat ejectment at ANY TIME during proceedings by paying all rent in arrears + interest + court costs - BUT only once per 12 months (12 V.S.A. § 4773). Acceptance of partial rent does NOT waive landlord's right to pursue eviction (§ 4467(a)). Landlord must file complaint within 60 days of termination date in notice (§ 4467(k)). Filing fee is HIGH: $295 flat regardless of county. RENT ESCROW: landlord can file motion requiring tenant to pay rent into court during proceedings; if tenant misses escrow payment = immediate judgment for possession + only 7-day writ. Multiple notices on different grounds can be relied upon simultaneously. Burlington: just cause eviction ordinance; security deposit capped at 1 month.

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📝 Vermont 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 Superior Court - Civil Division - Ejectment Action (9 V.S.A. Ch. 137; 12 V.S.A. Ch. 169). Pay the filing fee (~$$295).
  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 Vermont 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 Vermont attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Vermont landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Vermont — 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 Vermont's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Key communities: Bennington (Southshire — manufacturing, SVMC, Bennington College), North Bennington (Bennington College corridor), Manchester Center & Manchester Village (Northshire — resort retail, Equinox, ski access), Arlington (Battenkill Valley), Shaftsbury, Pownal, Wilmington, Peru (Bromley Mountain).

Bennington / SVMC corridor: Healthcare workers at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center provide the most stable long-term tenant pool in the Southshire. Screen for SVMC employment verification. Manufacturing sector tenants are also common — verify employment with pay stubs and check for stability of employer. Bennington’s affordability relative to the Vermont average attracts working families; two-bedroom units have strong sustained demand.

Manchester / ski corridor: Manchester-area rentals attract hospitality workers, resort employees, and second-home overflow from the Stratton and Bromley ski markets. Year-round residential inventory is tight; well-maintained one- and two-bedroom units rarely sit vacant. Seasonal ski-worker tenants may have compressed income windows — screen carefully for year-round income or require larger deposits (no cap in Vermont). Confirm in writing whether the lease is for a primary or seasonal residence, as this affects the deposit return deadline.

Arlington / Battenkill Valley: Quiet rural corridor between Bennington and Manchester; strong community ties and low tenant turnover. Attracts remote workers seeking affordable Vermont rural living within driving distance of both ski resorts and the Albany metro. Ideal profile for long-term family rentals.

Wilmington / Mount Snow area: High seasonal STR demand near Mount Snow; verify town STR ordinances before listing short-term. Year-round residential market is small. Flood and road-condition factors may be relevant for properties in the Deerfield River watershed.

Bennington County Landlords

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Bennington County Vermont Landlord-Tenant Law: Two Markets, One Courthouse

Bennington County covers the southwestern corner of Vermont — a county of geographic contrasts, historical depth, and two distinct economies operating under a single set of Vermont landlord-tenant rules. To the south, the town of Bennington anchors the Southshire: Vermont’s most populous southern town, home to Southwestern Vermont Medical Center, Bennington College in neighboring North Bennington, and a manufacturing tradition that stretches back to the Revolutionary War era. To the north, the Manchester corridor anchors the Northshire: a year-round resort destination built around high-end outlet shopping, The Equinox resort, and proximity to Stratton Mountain Resort and Bromley Mountain. Connecting them is Route 7A — the scenic heart of one of Vermont’s most historically and geographically varied counties.

One Court for Two Shire Towns

Bennington County has the unusual distinction of having two officially recognized shire towns — Bennington in the south and Manchester in the north. For historical and administrative purposes, both towns serve as county seats. For landlords, however, the practical reality is straightforward: all civil court filings including evictions go to a single location. The Bennington Superior Court Civil Division at 207 South Street in Bennington handles every ejectment action in the county, whether the property is in Bennington itself, in Manchester Center, in Arlington’s Battenkill Valley, in Wilmington near Mount Snow, or anywhere else in the county’s 675 square miles. Manchester-area landlords should note that despite the Northshire’s status as a co-shire town, there is no civil division courthouse there — plan for the 35-mile drive to Bennington when filing or attending hearings.

The phone is (802) 447-2700. Hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM, with the court closing at 12:30 PM on the first Friday of each month for staff training. Vermont’s procedural requirements for eviction notices apply uniformly across the county: every notice must state a specific termination date, and an ejectment action must be filed within 60 days of that date or the notice expires and cannot support a judgment of eviction.

The Southshire Market: Affordability Anchored by Institutions

Bennington’s rental market is among the most affordable in Vermont, with average one-bedroom rents running approximately $970 to $1,050 per month — well below the state average and a fraction of what comparable units command in Burlington or even Middlebury. This affordability reflects both the local wage base and the county’s ongoing population decline, a trend that has been more pronounced in Bennington than in most Vermont counties. For landlords, the practical implication is a market where supply and demand are reasonably balanced, where units rarely sit long if priced correctly and maintained properly, and where tenant turnover is driven more by life circumstances than by the intense rental competition seen in Vermont’s growth markets.

Southwestern Vermont Medical Center is the Southshire’s most important single employment anchor for landlords. SVMC is a full-service community hospital with nursing, allied health, and administrative staff who represent some of the most stable long-term tenants in the local market. Healthcare workers typically have verifiable incomes, consistent employment, and professional reputations that make them low-risk tenants. Screen for SVMC employment with a pay stub or offer letter and give serious weight to hospital employment as a positive screening factor. Bennington College, located on a hilltop campus in North Bennington about two miles from downtown, adds a smaller but consistent stream of faculty, staff, and graduate students to the rental pool.

The Northshire Market: Stratton, Bromley, and the Ski Economy

Manchester and the Northshire operate on an entirely different economic logic than Bennington. This is ski country — Stratton Mountain Resort, the highest peak in southern Vermont with 99 trails and over 2,000 feet of vertical, sits about 18 miles northeast of Manchester Center. Bromley Mountain, 7 miles east on Route 11, is a smaller family-friendly resort. Together they generate an enormous seasonal workforce and a tourist economy that sustains Manchester’s outlet retail corridor, its restaurants, its hospitality sector, and its rental market year-round.

Rental inventory in the Manchester area is genuinely tight. The outlet corridor, The Equinox resort, and Hildene — the historic Lincoln family estate — make Manchester a destination that draws significant second-home investment, which competes with residential rental supply. Workers at Stratton and Bromley, in Manchester’s retail and hospitality sector, and at the various supporting businesses need housing. Year-round residential rentals near Manchester Center and Manchester Village are rarely vacant for long if priced reasonably and kept in good condition. Seasonal demand spikes in ski season (December through March) and again in foliage season (late September through October).

For Manchester-area landlords renting to resort and hospitality workers, Vermont’s no-cause notice periods are particularly important to understand. If a ski season worker has been in your unit for more than two years — which happens more often than landlords expect with established local hospitality employees — you will need 90 days’ notice to terminate a month-to-month tenancy without cause. That window could easily span an entire ski season. Know how long your tenants have been in place before making any tenancy decisions.

Seasonal vs. Primary Residence: A Critical Legal Distinction

Vermont law draws a meaningful distinction between standard residential rentals and seasonal rentals “not intended as a primary residence” (9 V.S.A. § 4461(c)). For standard residential tenancies, the security deposit return deadline is 14 days after the landlord learns of vacancy. For seasonal units, the deadline extends to 60 days. In a county where the Northshire’s rental stock includes a significant number of units that function as seasonal ski chalets or summer vacation homes, getting this classification right matters for both the landlord and the tenant.

State the intended use clearly in the lease. If the unit is rented as a primary residence — meaning the tenant lives there full-time, receives mail there, and does not maintain another primary residence — the 14-day deposit return rule applies. If it is genuinely a seasonal rental for a vacation or ski property where the tenant has another primary home elsewhere, the 60-day rule applies. Do not rely on an informal understanding; get the classification in writing in the lease. Misclassifying a primary residence tenant as seasonal to gain the longer return window is not a strategy that will hold up in court.

Old Housing Stock and Heating Obligations

Bennington County has some of the oldest housing stock in Vermont — a characteristic of the entire southwestern corner of the state. Historic homes in Bennington’s downtown, in Old Bennington, in Manchester Village, and in the farming communities along Route 7A are architecturally beautiful and historically significant, but they present real maintenance challenges. Vermont’s implied warranty of habitability includes an explicit requirement that the landlord ensure the dwelling has heating facilities capable of safely providing a reasonable amount of heat, and that landlords who include heat in the rental agreement supply it at all times (9 V.S.A. § 4457(c)).

In a county where winters are long and the older housing stock includes century-old boilers, oil systems, and structures with limited insulation, heating system failures are not hypothetical — they happen. A tenant who provides actual notice of a heating failure that materially affects health and safety has the right to withhold rent if the landlord fails to repair within a reasonable time. Landlords with older properties should service heating systems before each winter, document the service with receipts and records, and know their emergency repair contacts. The cost of a heating system inspection in October is trivial compared to the legal and human cost of a system failure in January.

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Vermont landlord-tenant law is subject to change. All evictions in Bennington County are filed at the Bennington Superior Court Civil Division, 207 South Street, Bennington, VT — (802) 447-2700. Every termination notice must state a specific termination date and an ejectment action must be filed within 60 days of that date. Application fees for residential rentals are prohibited. Seasonal rental units not intended as a primary residence have a 60-day security deposit return window; all other residential units have a 14-day window. Verify local STR ordinances with town clerks for Manchester, Wilmington, and ski-area towns before listing short-term rentals. Consult a licensed Vermont attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Vermont landlord-tenant law is subject to change. All evictions in Bennington County are filed at the Bennington Superior Court Civil Division, 207 South Street, Bennington, VT — (802) 447-2700. Despite Manchester being a co-shire town, all civil filings are processed in Bennington. Every termination notice must state a specific termination date and an ejectment action must be filed within 60 days. Application fees for residential rentals are prohibited under Vermont law. Seasonal units not intended as a primary residence have a 60-day security deposit return window. STR operators in Manchester, Wilmington, and ski-area towns should verify local ordinances before listing. Consult a licensed Vermont attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

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