Eviction and the Rental Housing Crisis in Rural America

Publication Year
2024

Type

Journal Article
Abstract

Evictions are commonplace in the United States, and their negative conse-
quences are broad and severe. However, research on evictions to date has focused primarily
on urban areas, and thus has not addressed the impact evictions have on rural renters. This
paper offers the first comprehensive analysis of evictions in rural communities, where the
number of renters has been increasing in recent decades. We use Eviction Lab’s national
eviction database to study the approximately 220,000 evictions filed in rural counties each
year. While the majority of rural evictions affect families with a white head of household
(57 percent in 2010), eviction filing rates are four times higher among rural Black renters
than among rural white renters. Eviction filing rates are highest in heavily Black counties
in the rural southeast. While eviction filings are somewhat lower in rural majority- Hispanic
counties, these communities experience low-quality informal housing and overcrowding.
Eviction rates are also higher in rural counties with higher rent burdens and where more
households include children.

Journal
Rural Sociology
Short Title
Evictions in Rural America