North Carolina sets its rental rules at the state level under Chapter 42 of the General Statutes, and tenant protections are limited. Eviction (called “summary ejectment”) moves quickly through small-claims court. There is no rent control, and G.S. 42-14.1 goes further than most states — it preempts cities from adopting rent control or from barring landlords who refuse federal housing assistance, so no North Carolina city can require a landlord to take a voucher. The North Carolina Housing Finance Agency (NCHFA) is the state housing agency and runs several rental-assistance programs. This page covers the statewide rules, the eviction timeline, and links to every North Carolina city we cover.

Quick numbers to write down:

Public Housing & Vouchers in North Carolina

Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers and public housing are run by local authorities — the Charlotte Housing Authority (INLIVIAN), the Raleigh Housing Authority, the Greensboro Housing Authority, and many more. The NC Housing Finance Agency (NCHFA) adds statewide programs:

Apply to several authorities at once. Use HUD’s PHA directory or our how to find your PHA and how to apply for Section 8 guides. City waitlist status is on the city pages below.

Rent Control & Source-of-Income Preemption

North Carolina has no rent control, and G.S. 42-14.1 preempts local governments from adopting it. The same statute also bars cities and counties from prohibiting landlords from refusing federal housing assistance — meaning a North Carolina city cannot pass a source-of-income ordinance requiring landlords to accept Housing Choice Vouchers. Statewide, there is no source-of-income protection either. So a landlord can legally decline a voucher anywhere in the state; the practical step is to find landlords who already participate. Ask your PHA for its list and read our source-of-income protections guide.

Emergency Rental Assistance in North Carolina

The statewide pandemic program (HOPE) has ended. Current help is local and program-based:

See our emergency rental assistance guide for the national picture.

North Carolina Tenant Law: Key Protections at a Glance

Quick Reference: North Carolina (NC)

Security deposits

Under the Tenant Security Deposit Act (G.S. 42-50 to 42-56), deposits are capped at 1.5 months’ rent for month-to-month, 2 months for longer terms, and 2 weeks for week-to-week. The landlord must account for the deposit within 30 days (or up to 60 days if an interim accounting is provided), and the money must be held in a trust account or bonded. A landlord in willful bad faith forfeits the right to keep any of the deposit and owes any actual damages you can prove, plus possible attorney’s fees (G.S. 42-55). See how to recover your security deposit.

Eviction process & how long it takes

Self-help eviction is illegal — only the sheriff can remove a tenant after a court order (G.S. 42-25.6). The summary ejectment sequence is:

An uncontested North Carolina eviction commonly runs about three to five weeks from the demand to a sheriff lockout; an appeal extends it. Appear at your hearing and bring your lease, receipts, and photos. Get help from Legal Aid of NC and read how to avoid eviction.

Other Housing Programs in North Carolina

Major North Carolina Cities We Cover

Where to Get Help in North Carolina

Free legal aid: Legal Aid of North Carolina (1-866-219-5262) handles eviction defense, habitability, and discrimination.

State housing agency: NC Housing Finance Agency for vouchers, Key rental assistance, and LIHTC.

Find your local PHA: HUD’s PHA directory or our how to find your PHA guide.

211 helpline: dial 2-1-1 or visit 211.org for rental help, shelters, and utility assistance.

HUD fair housing: file at hud.gov/reporthousingdiscrimination or call 1-800-669-9777.

Next Steps

Not sure where to start? Our Where to Start tool routes you to the right mix of North Carolina programs in about two minutes.

If you have a 10-day demand or a court date, do not wait: contact Legal Aid of NC and read eviction prevention before your magistrate hearing.