A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Crawford County, Wisconsin
Crawford County sits at a geographic and historical crossroads that has given it an identity unlike any other Wisconsin county. It occupies the far southwestern corner of the Driftless Area — that remarkable unglaciated landscape of steep limestone bluffs, spring-fed streams, and hidden valleys that covers a broad swath of southwestern Wisconsin — and its western boundary is the Mississippi River itself. Prairie du Chien, the county seat, stands where the Wisconsin River meets the Mississippi in one of the most historically significant river junctions in North America. For three centuries, this confluence was a trading hub of continental importance — a place where Native American trading networks, French fur trade routes, British colonial ambitions, and American westward expansion all intersected. Prairie du Chien is one of the oldest continuously occupied European settlements in the upper Midwest, with a French presence dating to the late 17th century, and that history is written into the landscape, the architecture, and the place names in ways that give the city a distinctive character rare in Wisconsin communities its size.
Prairie du Chien: The County’s Anchor
Prairie du Chien, with approximately 5,700 residents, is Crawford County’s largest city, its governmental center, and its dominant rental market. The city’s economy rests on three pillars: healthcare, government, and tourism. Prairie du Chien Medical Center, affiliated with Mayo Clinic Health System, is the county’s largest employer and the anchor of its professional rental demand. Physicians, nurses, medical technicians, and healthcare administrators who are placed or recruited to the Prairie du Chien facility represent the strongest rental demand segment in the county — professional income, stable employment, and a residential choice driven by work placement rather than urban preference. For landlords with quality units in Prairie du Chien, these healthcare workers are the most reliable year-round tenant profile available in the market.
County government, the local school district, and the service sector that supports a small river city collectively add to the year-round employment base. Fort Crawford Museum, Villa Louis (a National Historic Landmark on a Mississippi River island), and the city’s river character contribute to a modest tourism economy that draws visitors during the summer and fall seasons but does not generate the kind of concentrated seasonal rental demand that characterizes more intense tourism markets elsewhere in Wisconsin.
The Driftless Area Setting
Crawford County’s interior — away from the Mississippi River bottomlands — is a landscape of dramatic beauty defined by the Driftless Area’s unglaciated terrain. The county’s coulees, ridges, and river valleys have attracted organic farmers, artists, homesteaders, and back-to-the-land community members who have built a distinctive alternative agricultural culture in the region over the past five decades. Gays Mills, in the county’s eastern interior, is known for its apple orchards and its long history as a hub of the Driftless Area’s alternative agricultural community. Soldiers Grove, rebuilt on higher ground after repeated Mississippi River flooding, is notable for its commitment to solar energy and sustainable design in its downtown reconstruction.
This agricultural and alternative community character creates a thin but distinctive rental demand segment in the county’s interior communities — renters who are drawn to the Driftless Area lifestyle, who may be involved in organic farming, artisanal food production, or outdoor recreation, and who value the region’s natural character and community culture. This segment is not large in absolute numbers, but it is stable and committed to place in ways that can produce long-term tenancies for landlords who understand and serve it.
Wisconsin Legal Framework in Crawford County
All residential tenancies in Crawford County follow the standard Wisconsin Ch. 704 and ATCP 134 framework without local variation. The 5-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate initiates nonpayment evictions. Lease violations require a 5-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate. No-cause termination of month-to-month tenancies requires 28 days’ written notice. Eviction actions are filed at the Crawford County Circuit Court in Prairie du Chien, a small-docket court that handles cases efficiently without significant backlog.
ATCP 134 security deposit requirements apply fully: 21-day return deadline, itemized written deduction statement, move-in check-in sheet, prohibition on deducting normal wear and tear, double damages and attorney’s fees for wrongful withholding. In Prairie du Chien’s older housing stock — the city has significant buildings dating from the 19th and early 20th centuries — thorough pre-existing condition documentation at move-in is particularly important. Old buildings have old wear patterns; without a check-in sheet that establishes what existed before the tenancy, distinguishing pre-existing conditions from tenant-caused damage at move-out becomes a credibility contest that landlords frequently lose.
The 12-hour advance notice requirement for landlord entry, Wisconsin’s rent control prohibition under §66.1015, and the absence of any just-cause eviction requirement outside Milwaukee all apply in Crawford County. For landlords willing to work a thin rural market with realistic return expectations, Crawford County offers very low acquisition costs, a stable healthcare-anchored tenant pool in Prairie du Chien, a clear and accessible legal framework at a small-docket courthouse, and a landscape setting of extraordinary natural and historical character.
Crawford County landlord-tenant matters are governed by Wis. Stat. Ch. 704 and ATCP 134. Nonpayment notice: 5-day pay or vacate. Lease violation: 5-day cure or vacate. No-cause termination: 28-day written notice. Security deposit return: 21 days; double damages for wrongful retention. Landlord entry: 12 hours’ advance notice required. No rent control (Wis. Stat. §66.1015). No just-cause eviction requirement. Eviction actions filed at Crawford County Circuit Court, Prairie du Chien. Milwaukee just-cause ordinance (MCO §200-51.5) does not apply. Consult a licensed Wisconsin attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.
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