A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Door County, Wisconsin
Door County is Wisconsin’s answer to New England’s coastal vacation culture — a place that has somehow managed to develop a deeply rooted identity as an arts destination, a culinary destination, a natural landscape destination, and a genuine community of year-round residents all at once, without losing the character that drew visitors in the first place. The Door Peninsula is narrow, geographically bounded in ways that have permanently constrained development, historically oriented toward the water and the orchard and the working harbor, and possessed of a quality of light and landscape that painters and photographers have been documenting for over a century. It draws visitors from Milwaukee, Chicago, Green Bay, and beyond by the hundreds of thousands every summer, and it generates one of the most active short-term and seasonal rental economies of any Wisconsin county.
Two Markets in One County
Door County’s rental market is effectively two distinct markets that operate simultaneously in the same county. The first is Sturgeon Bay — the county’s only real city, its governmental center, its industrial anchor, and the home of most of the county’s year-round residential rental activity. The second is the peninsula’s string of tourist villages — Fish Creek, Ephraim, Sister Bay, Egg Harbor, Baileys Harbor, and the other communities that line both the Green Bay and Lake Michigan shores northward from Sturgeon Bay to the tip at Gills Rock. These village communities are dominated by tourism-oriented economic activity for six to eight months of the year and become quiet, close-knit year-round communities for the remaining months.
Landlords need to understand which market they are operating in, because the operational requirements and tenant profiles are fundamentally different. A year-round residential rental in Sturgeon Bay near the Bay Shipbuilding campus operates like a standard Wisconsin residential tenancy with stable working-class and professional tenants, predictable turnover, and conventional lease structures. A vacation rental cottage in Fish Creek during the summer tourist season is a different animal entirely — high nightly or weekly rates, rapid turnover, platform-mediated booking, and the specific legal framework of transient lodging rather than residential tenancy.
Sturgeon Bay: The Industrial and Year-Round Core
Sturgeon Bay is a working city in a way that the peninsula’s tourist villages are not. Bay Shipbuilding — now operated by Fincantieri Marine Group, one of the world’s largest shipbuilding conglomerates — has been building ships in Sturgeon Bay since 1918. The yard has constructed vessels ranging from Great Lakes cargo ships to U.S. Navy vessels, and its workforce of skilled tradespeople — welders, pipefitters, electricians, marine engineers — represents the backbone of Sturgeon Bay’s year-round employment economy. Door County Medical Center adds a healthcare employment sector. County government, retail, and the service sector that supports a city of 9,000 round out the employment base.
For landlords in Sturgeon Bay, the shipyard workforce is the most important tenant segment to understand and target. These are skilled trades workers earning above-average blue-collar incomes, typically stable in employment, and likely to stay in the area for extended periods if their housing situation is positive. Properties near the waterfront industrial district and the city’s working-class neighborhoods represent the most direct access to this demand.
The Peninsula Villages and Seasonal Economics
The communities north of Sturgeon Bay along the peninsula are tourism economies almost entirely. Fish Creek is perhaps the most arts-oriented, with Peninsula Players (Wisconsin’s oldest professional theater company), the American Folklore Theatre, and Peninsula Music Festival anchoring a summer cultural calendar that has made it a destination for arts-minded visitors. Ephraim, the only alcohol-free village in Wisconsin, has a distinctive character shaped by its Moravian settlement history. Sister Bay is the peninsula’s largest village north of Sturgeon Bay and has more year-round residential character than the smaller villages. Baileys Harbor, on the Lake Michigan side, is quieter and more naturalist in character, known for its ridges preserve and rare orchids.
All of these communities have active short-term rental economies. Property owners with vacation cottages, converted barns, and waterfront properties have found the STR market on the peninsula to be one of the most financially productive in Wisconsin, with peak summer nightly rates for desirable properties that can generate substantial seasonal income from relatively few weeks of occupancy. Wisconsin’s §66.1014 provides meaningful protection against local STR bans, though Door County’s municipalities retain health, safety, and septic capacity regulation authority.
Wisconsin Legal Framework in Door County
All residential tenancies in Door County follow the standard Wisconsin Ch. 704 and ATCP 134 framework. The 5-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate for nonpayment, 5-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate for lease violations, and 28-Day Written Notice for no-cause month-to-month termination apply throughout the county. Eviction actions are filed at the Door County Circuit Court in Sturgeon Bay.
ATCP 134 security deposit compliance requires particular attention in Door County because of the multiple seasonal tenancies many landlords manage. Each tenancy has its own 21-day deposit return deadline. A landlord with a summer cottage that turns over four different tenants from May through September has four separate deadlines, each running 21 days from the end of that specific tenancy. Missing any one of them creates double-damages exposure. A calendar tracking every tenancy end date and its corresponding deposit return deadline is basic risk management for Door County landlords with seasonal portfolios.
Wisconsin’s rent control prohibition under §66.1015, the absence of any just-cause eviction requirement outside Milwaukee, and the 12-hour advance notice requirement for landlord entry all apply throughout Door County. For landlords who understand the peninsula’s dual character — the industrial and year-round Sturgeon Bay market and the seasonal tourism economy of the peninsula villages — and who manage each portfolio with appropriate documentation discipline and legal structure, Door County offers one of the most economically distinctive and rewarding landlord environments in Wisconsin.
Door 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 per tenancy; 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 Door County Circuit Court, Sturgeon Bay. 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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