Northern Kentucky courthouse exterior
Northern Kentucky & Greater Cincinnati

The Local Eviction
Process Guide

County-specific rules, real court addresses, exact filing fees, and required forms — for landlords and tenants in NKY and the Cincinnati metro.

6 Counties Covered
2 States (KY + OH)
30–60 Day Avg. Timeline
Kentucky and Ohio have entirely different eviction processes. Kentucky calls it an "Forcible Detainer" action. Ohio calls it a "Forcible Entry and Detainer" (FED) action. The courts, fees, and notice requirements differ significantly by county. Use the correct county guide below.

Find Your County Court

Each county has its own court, filing process, and fee schedule. Select your county for specific addresses, hours, and local rules.

Kentucky

Grant County, KY

Coming Soon
Court Grant County District Court
Address 101 N Main St, Williamstown, KY 41097
Filing Fee $113 (residential)
Ohio

Clermont County, OH

Coming Soon
Court Clermont County Municipal Court
Address 4430 OH-222, Batavia, OH 45103
Filing Fee ~$123 (residential)

Kentucky vs. Ohio: How Eviction Works

The eviction process is entirely different on each side of the river. Understanding which state you're in determines everything about your timeline, notice, and court.

🔵

Kentucky Process

Called: "Forcible Detainer"
  1. 1
    Serve Written Notice

    Non-payment: 7-day written notice. Lease violation: 15-day notice to cure or vacate. Month-to-month tenancy termination: 30-day notice.

  2. 2
    File Forcible Detainer Complaint

    File at your county District Court. Bring the signed notice, lease agreement, and proof of service. Pay filing fee (~$113 residential). Court assigns a hearing date — typically 7–14 days out.

  3. 3
    Serve Summons on Tenant

    The court issues a summons. The Sheriff's Office serves it on the tenant. Landlord pays a separate service fee (approx. $30–$50 per county).

  4. 4
    Attend District Court Hearing

    Bring all documentation. If tenant doesn't appear, you typically get a default judgment. If tenant appears, judge hears both sides same day in most NKY counties.

  5. 5
    Obtain Writ of Possession

    If judgment is in landlord's favor, request a Writ of Possession. Tenant has a brief appeal window (typically 7 days). After that, the Sheriff enforces the writ and removes tenant.

KY Timeline: Notice period + ~3 weeks to hearing + 7-day appeal = 30–45 days minimum
🔴

Ohio Process

Called: "Forcible Entry and Detainer" (FED)
  1. 1
    Serve Written Notice

    Non-payment: 3-day written notice. Lease violation: varies — check your lease. Month-to-month: 30-day notice. Notice must be personally served or posted AND mailed.

  2. 2
    File FED Complaint

    File at the Municipal Court serving your property. In Hamilton County: Hamilton County Municipal Court at 1000 Main St, Cincinnati. Filing fee: $135–$175. First hearing set for 7–30 days out.

  3. 3
    Bailiff Serves Tenant

    Court bailiff serves the summons. This is included in Ohio's process — no separate service fee to the Sheriff in most municipal courts.

  4. 4
    First Hearing (Possession Only)

    Ohio splits eviction into two parts: possession and money damages. First hearing is possession only. If landlord wins, tenant typically has 10 days to vacate before a writ issues.

  5. 5
    Writ of Execution

    If tenant doesn't vacate, court issues a Writ of Execution. Bailiff carries out the removal — not the Sheriff in municipal court jurisdictions.

OH Timeline: 3-day notice + ~3 weeks to hearing + 10-day vacate window = 35–50 days minimum

Required Notices Before Filing

Serving the wrong notice — or serving it incorrectly — is the #1 reason eviction cases get dismissed. These are the specific notice requirements for NKY and Cincinnati counties.

Reason for Eviction Kentucky (NKY Counties) Ohio (Hamilton Co.) How to Serve
Non-payment of rent 7-day written notice to pay or vacate 3-day written notice to pay or vacate Personal service or posting on door
Lease violation (curable) 15-day notice to cure or vacate Varies — check lease; often 30-day Personal service or posting on door
Lease violation (uncurable) Immediate notice to vacate Immediate notice to vacate Personal service or posting on door
End of lease (month-to-month) 30-day written notice 30-day written notice Personal service or certified mail
End of fixed-term lease No notice required — lease expires No notice required — lease expires N/A
Drug/criminal activity Immediate — no notice period Immediate — no notice period Personal service recommended
⚠ Critical: Ohio Notice Must Be Served Two Ways

In Ohio, a 3-day notice for non-payment must be served by personal delivery OR posting on the door AND also mailed via first-class mail. Posting alone without the mailing step can invalidate your notice and result in case dismissal at Hamilton County Municipal Court.

Estimate Your Filing Costs

Eviction filing costs vary by county and whether you're claiming back rent. Use this calculator for a quick estimate.

Select your county above to see estimated costs

Full Fee Schedule by County

County State Filing Fee Sheriff/Bailiff Service Writ of Possession Typical Total
Boone County KY $113 ~$40 (Sheriff) ~$25 ~$178
Kenton County KY $113 ~$40 (Sheriff) ~$25 ~$178
Campbell County KY $113 ~$35 (Sheriff) ~$25 ~$173
Grant County KY $113 ~$35 (Sheriff) ~$25 ~$173
Hamilton County OH $135–$175 Included (Bailiff) ~$45 ~$180–$220
Clermont County OH ~$123 Included (Bailiff) ~$40 ~$163

* Fees verified as of 2024–2025. Court fees change periodically — confirm current fees with your county court before filing. Additional fees may apply if back rent is claimed as a money judgment.

Eviction Forms & Resources

Official forms from Kentucky Courts and Ohio Courts. Always verify you have the current version before filing.

Kentucky Forms

  • Forcible Detainer Complaint (AOC-185) File this at your District Court to initiate eviction
    Kentucky Courts ↗
  • Notice to Vacate / Pay Rent 7-day notice template for non-payment (must be in writing)
    Kentucky Courts ↗
  • Writ of Possession Request Request after judgment — court issues for Sheriff to enforce
    Kentucky Courts ↗
  • Tenant's Answer to Forcible Detainer For tenants who wish to respond formally to an eviction filing
    Kentucky Courts ↗

Ohio Forms

  • FED Complaint — Hamilton County Municipal Court File at 1000 Main St, Cincinnati. Available at clerk's window.
    Hamilton Co. Court ↗
  • 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate (Ohio) Must be served personally OR posted + mailed in Hamilton County
    Ohio Legal Help ↗
  • Writ of Execution — Ohio Issued by court after judgment; enforced by municipal court bailiff
    Hamilton Co. Court ↗
  • Tenant Answer / Counterclaim Form Ohio tenants can counterclaim for habitability violations
    Ohio Legal Help ↗

📋 Landlord's Pre-Filing Checklist

Print / Save as PDF

Before You File

At the Courthouse

After Filing

If You've Been Served an Eviction Notice

Receiving an eviction notice doesn't mean you've lost your home yet. Here's what you should know about your rights in Kentucky and Ohio.

Kentucky Tenant Rights

  • You have 7 days to pay or vacate after a non-payment notice — paying in full within this window stops the eviction (unless landlord has filed twice in 6 months).
  • Landlord must maintain habitability. If repairs were requested and ignored, document everything — this may be a defense.
  • Retaliation is illegal. A landlord cannot file eviction because you complained about habitability to a code enforcement agency.
  • Self-help eviction is illegal in Kentucky. Landlord cannot change locks, remove belongings, or shut off utilities — only the Sheriff can remove a tenant after a court order.
  • You can appeal. After a judgment, you typically have 7 days to appeal to Circuit Court.
Legal Aid of the Bluegrass (NKY) ↗

Ohio Tenant Rights

  • You have 3 days to pay after non-payment notice — payment in full within 3 days stops the eviction process.
  • Habitability is a legal right in Ohio. If landlord has failed to make required repairs after written notice, you may have a counterclaim (escrow remedy available in Ohio).
  • Retaliation is illegal. Ohio law prohibits eviction within 90 days of a habitability complaint.
  • Self-help eviction is illegal in Ohio. Locks cannot be changed, utilities cannot be shut off, belongings cannot be removed without a court order.
  • You can request a continuance. At your first hearing, you can often request a brief delay to seek legal help.
Legal Aid Society of Greater Cincinnati ↗

Common Eviction Questions

No. Kentucky law requires a court judgment before a landlord can remove a tenant. Even if the tenant has clearly abandoned the property, changing locks without a court order exposes the landlord to damages. The Forcible Detainer process through District Court is the only legal path to removal.

In both Kentucky and Ohio, if the tenant is properly served and fails to appear, the court will typically issue a default judgment in the landlord's favor. The landlord should still appear with all documentation. In Kenton and Boone County KY, default judgments are commonly granted the same day.

Accepting any rent payment after filing a Forcible Detainer in Kentucky can be interpreted as waiving your right to proceed with that case — effectively "forgiving" the breach. If you need to file again, you may need to restart the notice process. Do not accept partial payment unless you're willing to dismiss the case.

In both Kentucky and Ohio, an eviction filing becomes a matter of public court record and may appear on tenant screening reports for 7 years. This is true even if the tenant later paid or the case was dismissed — the filing itself is on record. Some tenant screening companies report it differently, but landlords doing manual court record searches will see it.

Not immediately. In Kentucky, after a judgment the tenant has a brief window to appeal (typically 7 days). After the appeal window closes and no appeal is filed, the landlord can request a Writ of Possession and the Sheriff schedules the removal — often 5–10 additional days. In Ohio (Hamilton County), the tenant typically has 10 days after judgment before the court issues a Writ of Execution for the bailiff to enforce.

Yes. Florence is located within Boone County, so evictions for Florence properties are filed at Boone County District Court in Burlington. Jurisdiction for eviction is determined by the county where the rental property is located — not the city. This applies to all NKY cities: Covington and Florence residents file based on their county (Kenton or Boone), not their city.

These are the same concept with different names by state. Kentucky uses "Forcible Detainer" — a civil action to recover possession of real property. Ohio uses "Forcible Entry and Detainer" (FED) — same purpose, different statutory basis. Both result in a court-ordered removal if the landlord prevails. The procedures, timelines, and courts differ significantly between the two states.

For residential evictions, individual landlords in Kentucky can represent themselves (pro se) in District Court. However, if you own property through an LLC, corporation, or other entity, Kentucky law typically requires an attorney to represent the entity in court. In Ohio, individuals can also self-represent in municipal court. For complex cases involving habitability counterclaims or significant back rent claims, an attorney is strongly recommended.

Legal Aid & Local Court Resources

Legal Aid of the Bluegrass

Free legal assistance for low-income tenants in Northern Kentucky (Boone, Kenton, Campbell counties).

📍 Covington, KY 📞 (859) 581-1188
legalaidkentucky.org ↗

Legal Aid Society of Greater Cincinnati

Free civil legal services for eligible Hamilton County Ohio residents facing eviction.

📍 Cincinnati, OH 📞 (513) 362-7100
lascinti.org ↗

Kentucky Courts Self-Help Center

Official Kentucky Court of Justice resource for landlord-tenant forms and general process guidance.

🌐 Online resource
courts.ky.gov ↗

Ohio Legal Help

Ohio's official legal aid resource — plain-language guides to eviction rights and process for both landlords and tenants.

🌐 Online resource
ohiolegalhelp.org ↗

Boone County Sheriff's Office

Handles Writ of Possession enforcement for Boone County, KY eviction orders.

📍 Burlington, KY 📞 (859) 334-3474

Kenton County Sheriff's Office

Handles Writ of Possession enforcement for Kenton County, KY eviction orders.

📍 Covington, KY 📞 (859) 431-6225