Sioux County, Nebraska Eviction Risk: Very Low
1 incorporated cities and unincorporated areas. The county Eviction Risk Score is held aloft by the city of Harrison (2.1) and a small number of dense urban cores. Rent-control coverage varies by city.
Ranked #92 of 93 NE counties
0k residents · 1 cities · 1 tracts
Sioux County eviction risk score history
Key metrics
-
Tenant beats landlord15.6%/ 100 outcomesIn court-decided eviction outcomes for Sioux County, NE, tenants prevail in roughly 15.6% of contested cases. A higher number means landlords face stronger tenant defenses and longer calendars.
-
Timeline32dfiling → judgmentFrom the moment an unlawful-detainer notice is filed in Sioux County, NE until a money judgment is entered, a contested eviction takes about 32 days on average. Longer timelines mean more lost rent for landlords.
-
Cost range$1.0–3.3klegal + lost rentA typical eviction in Sioux County, NE costs landlords $1,029 to $3,264 all-in, covering court filing fees, process-server costs, attorney time, and lost rent.
-
Average rent$1,06314% stretched on rentAverage gross rent in Sioux County, NE is $1,063 per month per the U.S. Census American Community Survey. 14% of renter households here spend more than 30% of pre-tax income on rent.
-
Renters16.0%of households16.0% of occupied housing units in Sioux County, NE are renter-occupied. A higher renter share usually correlates with more eviction filings and a more active rental market.
-
Poverty5.1%3.4% unemp.5.1% of Sioux County, NE residents live below the federal poverty line, and unemployment runs at 3.4%. Both feed the economic-stress sub-score in our Eviction Risk Score model.
Scrub 50 years
Sioux County's 2.1/10 (Very Low) reflects a stable rural rental market with a 13.8% rent burden and a 16% renter share - among the lowest combinations in Nebraska. Ranked 92nd of 93 Nebraska counties, with only 1 counties scoring lower (less risky) statewide.
How Sioux County ranks in Nebraska
Landlord guides for Nebraska
| City↕ | Population↕ | Risk↕ | % income on rent↕ | Average rent↕ | Lean↕ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 001 | Harrison | 218 | 2.1 | 13.8% | $1,063 | Rep |
County heatmap
One county, multiple regulatory regimes.
Sioux County sits in the far northwestern corner of Nebraska's Panhandle, a sparsely populated ranching community anchored by its only incorporated place, Harrison (2.1/10). The county records an eviction risk score of 2.1/10 (Very Low), placing it 92nd out of 93 Nebraska eviction laws counties - meaning 91 counties across the state carry higher landlord risk than Sioux County does. That near-bottom ranking reflects conditions that overwhelmingly favor landlords: a small renter pool, negligible rent burden, no local rent ordinances, and a state statute that sets clear, relatively quick timelines for recovering possession when tenants default.
The numbers behind that ranking are striking for a rental market. Only about 16% of Sioux County households rent, compared to statewide averages that typically run 30-35%. Average rent sits at $1,063 per month, and renters here devote just 13.8% of income to housing costs - a rent burden figure that is exceptionally low by any national benchmark. The county's poverty rate of 5.1% further reflects a tight, stable local economy built around agriculture and cattle ranching rather than the wage volatility that drives eviction risk in urban Nebraska eviction laws counties. With scores spanning from 2.1 to 2.1 across the county's single tracked city, there is essentially no intra-county variation - the entire market reads as uniformly low risk.
Nebraska eviction laws governs residential tenancies statewide under the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Neb. Rev. Stat. § 76-1401 et seq.), and that framework applies in Sioux County without any local overlay. The state preempts any municipal rent control measure, so Harrison cannot enact rent caps independently of state law - a landlord-protective feature that distinguishes Nebraska eviction laws from states where cities layer on additional tenant protections. Landlords in Sioux County can serve a 7-day pay-or-quit notice for non-payment, a 14-day cure notice for lease violations, and a 30-day no-cause notice for month-to-month terminations - all governed by the same statute. Court filing fees run $85 to $200, an uncontested eviction typically concludes in 21 to 45 days, and even contested hearings rarely exceed 100 days in this rural jurisdiction where docket pressure is minimal compared to Douglas or Lancaster counties.
Sioux County's Very Low risk designation reflects genuine structural conditions - not just low population - including one of the lowest rent burdens in Nebraska eviction laws, a landlord-friendly state statute with no local rent control permitted, and a renter share well below the state norm. Landlords operating here face a predictable legal environment with short notice periods, modest court fees, and no source-of-income or just-cause requirements.
Historical eviction filings in Sioux County
From 2000 to 2016, eviction filings in Sioux County increased. The peak was 2 filings in 2005.1
- 02000
- 2Peak (2005)
- 22016
Data covers 2000–2018, the full span of the Princeton Eviction Lab's national county court-records dataset.
How Sioux County compares
Sioux County (2.1/10, Very Low) scores materially below the Nebraska state average of 2.9/10 and clusters with a handful of similarly rural Panhandle and Sandhills counties. Neighboring McPherson and Hooker counties sit at comparable risk levels, while Wheeler and Thomas counties are slightly higher on the scale - though all five remain in the lower-risk range. None of these peer counties have rent control, just-cause requirements, or source-of-income protections; the differences in their scores trace primarily to modest variations in poverty rates, renter share, and historical eviction patterns rather than legal framework.