A free tool from NextGen Properties — $500M+ AUM

Burns, WY Eviction Risk Score Laramie County · Wyoming · Population 397

4.6 Moderate
★★★ High confidence
14.6%Tenant-law probabilityi
$676–2,281Typical eviction costi
23 daysTypical timelinei
3.61%Eviction filing ratei
$1,141HUD 2BR FMR 2025i
$1,614Median gross renti
27.1%Rent burdeni
11.5%Rentersi

Sub-score breakdown

Local political climate
4.2
GOP margin +28.2% in 2020
Regional political climate
4.2
GOP margin +28.2% in 2020
State political climate
1.3
Economic stress
3.5
12.1% poverty · 0.0% unemployed
Supply constraint
5.9
$1,614 median rent · 11.5% renters
Rent-control risk
9.6
27.1% rent burden
Eviction process difficulty
1.5
Tenant organizing strength
3.1
11.5% renters
Housing court bias
7.7
Eviction filing rate (ground truth)
5.7
3.61 filings per 100 renter households (county, latest year)
Voucher gap (market vs HUD FMR)
0.0
Market rent +41.5% vs HUD 2BR FMR ($1,141)

Sub-scores are national percentile rankings (1 = most landlord-friendly, 10 = most tenant-protective) derived from ACS 2023 5-year data, 2020 county presidential margin, and state law weighting. Source: ACS 2023 5-year + Gazetteer 2024.

Location & regional heat

Heat density reflects surrounding cities. Click any nearby city to compare.

Own rentals in or near Burns?
Get a free consultation covering local rent-control exposure, notice requirements, and eviction defense risk.
Free Consultation →

About eviction risk in Burns, WY

Burns, WY has an eviction risk score of 4.6 out of 10, placing it in the moderate-risk tier for landlords operating in Laramie County and the state of Wyoming. The score combines local political climate, court disposition patterns, cost-of-eviction estimates, tenant organizing strength, and the likelihood of new tenant-protective legislation in the next legislative cycle.

Census ACS 2023 5-year estimates show median gross rent as a percentage of household income is 27.1% — a core driver of eviction filings, because households above 30% of income on rent are statistically more likely to miss a payment after any income shock. Median gross rent in Burns is $1,614/month. About 11.5% of occupied units here are renter-occupied.

Economic stress: poverty rate 12.1%, unemployment 0.0%. Higher values correlate with higher eviction filing rates and longer court timelines.

Political climate: In 2020, Laramie County voted Republican by 28.2 points — classified as strongly landlord-leaning for purposes of rent-control or just-cause expansion risk.

What this score means for landlords

At 4.6/10, Burns is a lower-risk environment. Standard screening, documented notices, and prompt action on non-payment typically resolve quickly. Still follow your state's specific notice and service requirements.

Nearby Cities — Eviction Risk Comparison

Landlord Guides & Research Tools

Deepen your market research with these ACS-data guides. The metrics powering this score feed directly into each ranking.

Landlord Guides for Wyoming

Eviction Costs — Wyoming →
Filing fees, attorney fees, lost rent, sheriff lockout
Eviction Process — Wyoming →
Step-by-step timeline, notices, statute cites
Rent Control — Wyoming →
Statewide caps, local ordinances, just-cause
Tenant Screening — Wyoming →
5-point protocol, legal rules, protected classes
Tenant Protections — Wyoming →
Just cause, retaliation, habitability, entry