Orleans County Vermont Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in Newport, Jay Peak Country, and Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom
Orleans County sits in the northern tier of Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom — the region that U.S. Senator George Aiken famously described in 1949 as a place apart, rough and beautiful in equal measure. The county runs from Jay Peak’s 3,858-foot summit on the western Green Mountain boundary north to the Quebec border, and from the rivers flowing north into Lake Memphremagog east through agricultural hill towns toward the Connecticut River watershed. It is the largest of the three Northeast Kingdom counties by area, the most populous, and the only one containing an incorporated city — Newport, the county seat since 1886, where the Clyde, Barton, and Black rivers meet at Lake Memphremagog’s southern shore. Vermont’s full landlord-tenant law framework applies here, and Orleans County’s unique border geography and resort economy create practical considerations that landlords in more southerly counties simply don’t encounter.
⚠️ Courthouse Address: File at 217 Main Street, Not 247
The Orleans Superior Court Civil Division’s permanent home is 247 Main Street in Newport. However, as of March 2026, the 247 Main Street courthouse is temporarily closed to the public. All court assistance, forms, and hearings — including eviction filings — are being handled at the Orleans Criminal Courthouse at 217 Main Street, the building immediately next door. If you show up at 247 Main Street to file an eviction, you will find a closed building. Go to 217 Main Street until the Vermont Judiciary announces a return to 247. Always verify the current location at vermontjudiciary.org before making the trip to Newport. The court phone is (802) 334-3305 and the email is OrleansUnit@vtcourts.gov. The court closes on the third Wednesday of each month from 8:00 AM to noon for in-service training.
Newport City: Where the Rivers Meet the Lake
Newport City received its city charter in 1917 and remains the only incorporated city in the entire Northeast Kingdom. With roughly 4,455 residents in just 7.78 square miles, it is by far the most densely populated place in Orleans County and serves as the governmental, commercial, and healthcare hub for 23 surrounding towns. Newport’s position at the confluence of three rivers and at the southern end of Lake Memphremagog — an international lake shared with Quebec, stretching 30 miles to the north — has defined its role since the railroad arrived in 1863.
North Country Hospital is Newport’s anchor employer and the county’s most important source of stable professional tenant income. Healthcare workers at North Country represent a reliable long-term rental cohort with consistent paychecks and strong community ties. Newport’s rental market is the most active in the county, with average one-bedroom rents around $950–$1,150/month — among Vermont’s most affordable for a city with full healthcare, commercial, and government services. Newport also hosts a Community College of Vermont branch that enrolls several hundred students and generates modest rental demand adjacent to the hospital corridor.
Jay Peak: Vermont’s Snowiest Resort and Its Workforce
Jay Peak Resort, located in the town of Jay in Orleans County’s northwestern corner, averages 359 inches of annual snowfall — more natural snow than any other ski area in the eastern United States. The resort employs hundreds of seasonal and full-time workers in ski operations, hospitality, the indoor water park, ice arena, and golf course, making it the county’s largest single-site employer during the ski season. Jay Peak uses J-1 visa holders and international seasonal workers alongside local staff, drawing from as far away as South America and from Quebec, just 30 miles away.
For landlords in Jay, Troy, North Troy, Westfield, and even Barton, the Jay Peak workforce is the primary rental demand driver. Year-round full-time staff are the most reliable tenants; seasonal workers benefit from fixed-term leases aligned to the ski season (typically November through April) or the summer season (June through September). Vermont’s application fee prohibition applies to all applicants including J-1 workers and Quebec residents. Be clear in lease terms about the seasonal nature of any short-season arrangement.
The Border Economy: Derby Line, Stanstead, and Cross-Border Life
Orleans County’s 23-town landscape includes Derby Line, where the Haskell Free Library and Opera House sits deliberately straddling the U.S.–Canada border. The building’s architects placed it in 1904 so that Vermont residents could enter through the U.S. side and watch performances on a stage in Canada. This famous landmark is a symbol of the county’s genuine cross-border character: Newport and Derby are economically intertwined with the Quebec town of Stanstead on the other side of the line.
For landlords, cross-border tenants present one specific practical issue: income documentation. A Quebec resident working in Vermont will have Vermont wages; a Vermont resident working in Quebec may receive a paystub in Canadian dollars. Vermont law prohibits requiring an SSN on a rental application and requires acceptance of ITINs, but income-to-rent ratio screening must still be applied. Convert Canadian dollar income to USD equivalents when calculating the 30% rent burden guideline. Do not reject applications solely because income is earned across the border — verify the U.S. dollar equivalent carefully.
The Kingdom’s Lakes and Seasonal Rentals
Orleans County contains some of Vermont’s most spectacular lakes: Lake Memphremagog, Lake Willoughby (one of Vermont’s deepest and most dramatic, framed between Mount Pisgah and Mount Hor in a glacially carved gap), Crystal Lake, Lake Seymour, Lake Salem, and dozens of smaller ponds. Summer lake camps and lakeside cottages have been a feature of Orleans County’s seasonal economy for well over a century, with generations of families returning to the same properties year after year. For landlords, these seasonal camps and cottages are covered by Vermont’s 60-day security deposit return timeline and the summer-occupancy exception to heat obligations. Clearly designate every seasonal unit as such in writing, and do not allow seasonal occupancy to drift into year-round primary residency without revisiting the lease and legal obligations.
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 Orleans County are currently filed at 217 Main Street, Newport, VT 05855 (the Orleans Criminal Courthouse) — the courthouse at 247 Main Street is temporarily closed. Phone: (802) 334-3305. Court closes third Wednesday of each month 8:00 AM–noon. Every termination notice must state a specific termination date; ejectment must be filed within 60 days. Application fees prohibited statewide. Seasonal unit deposits must be returned within 60 days. Consult a licensed Vermont attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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