Kent County Authority
State seal State flag

Kent County Authority

Kent County has 187,604 residents and a median household income of $74,477.

Explore Kent County by Town

Click any town to visit its landing page.

Part of Delaware State Authority

Kent County Delaware: Government, Services, and Civic Structure

Kent County occupies the geographic center of Delaware, functioning as both the state capital county and the seat of county government for roughly 180,000 residents (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census). Dover, Delaware's state capital, sits within Kent County, creating an administrative density unusual for a county of its physical size — approximately 594 square miles of land area. This page covers the county's governmental structure, the principal public services it administers, how county authority interacts with state and municipal jurisdictions, and the boundaries of what Kent County government directly controls.


Kent County, Delaware

Kent County is a county in Delaware with a population of 181,851. It includes 27 incorporated places: Bowers, Camden, Cheswold, Clayton, Dover, Dover Base Housing, and 21 more.

Population & Demographics

The U.S. Census Bureau reports a population of 181,851 for Kent County. The median age is 38.5 years. Median household income is $69,278. The poverty rate is 12.3%. The county contains 27 incorporated towns — Bowers, Camden, Cheswold, Clayton, Dover, Dover Base Housing, Farmington, Felton, Frederica, Harrington, Hartly, Highland Acres, and 15 more. Census-Designated Places in the county: Dover Base Housing, Highland Acres, Kent Acres, Rising Sun-Lebanon, Riverview, Rodney Village, and Woodside East.

Economy & Jobs

U.S. Census County Business Patterns counts 4,717 business establishments employing 58,874 people, with an annual payroll of $3,090,595K. The largest employment sectors are healthcare (12,440 jobs), retail (10,231 jobs), food accommodation (7,664 jobs), manufacturing (5,174 jobs), and professional (3,652 jobs). Bureau of Labor Statistics reports an unemployment rate of 5.8%.

Housing & Cost of Living

Median home value: $272,300 (Census ACS 5-Year). Median gross rent: $1,224 per month. HUD Fair Market Rent FY2025: studio $1,173, 1-bedroom $1,181, 2-bedroom $1,492, 3-bedroom $2,080, 4-bedroom $2,278.

Health & Safety

Public safety infrastructure: 57 hospitals, 81 EMS stations, 81 fire stations, and 81 police stations. FEMA has issued 15 federal disaster declarations affecting Kent County.

Government & Civic

Kent County's court system is anchored by Kent County Courthouse and Kent County Supreme Courthouse.

History & Notable Places

Kent County has 155 properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Named sites include: Allee House, Archeological Site K-875 (7K-D-37/C), Archeological Site K-873 (7K-D-35/A, B and D), Archeological Site K-876 (7K-D-38/C), Archeological Site K-880 (7K-D-42/F), Archeological Site K-891 (7K-D-45/A and B), Archeological Site K-913 (7K-D-47/C, D and E), Archeological Site K-914 (7K-D-48/F and G), Archeological Site K-915 (7K-D-86/C), and Archeological Site K-916 (7K-D-49/C), among others.

Infrastructure & Community Resources

Public facilities and services include 623 schools, 29 libraries, 186 churches, 32 bank branches, and 147 SNAP retailers.

Agriculture

USDA NASS reports 113 farms and average farm size 849.8 acres in Kent County.

Definition and scope

Kent County operates as one of Delaware's 3 counties, alongside New Castle County and Sussex County. Under Delaware law, county governments function as political subdivisions of the state, deriving authority from Title 9 of the Delaware Code (Delaware Code, Title 9) rather than from an independently sovereign charter. This structural position distinguishes Delaware counties from home-rule jurisdictions found in other states — Kent County cannot legislate independently of state enabling authority.

The county seat is Dover, which also serves as Delaware's state capital. This dual role produces a geographic concentration of governmental functions: state agency offices, the Delaware Governor's Office, the Delaware General Assembly, and Kent County administrative offices all operate within or immediately adjacent to Dover's central district.

Kent County's land area covers 594 square miles, making it the second-largest county in Delaware by area. The county contains municipalities including Dover, Smyrna, Milford, Harrington, Camden, Wyoming, and Felton, each maintaining independent municipal governments for local ordinance, zoning, and basic service delivery.

Scope boundaries and limitations: This page covers the governmental and civic structure of Kent County, Delaware. It does not address municipal-level governance within Kent County's constituent cities and towns, which operate under separate charters. Sussex County and New Castle County government structures fall outside this page's coverage. Federal facilities located in Kent County — including Dover Air Force Base, the largest air mobility hub in the Department of Defense — operate under federal jurisdiction and are not subject to county governance authority. State agency functions, while physically present in Dover, are administered through the Delaware Executive Branch and are not county functions. For the broader Delaware government reference framework, see the Delaware Government Authority index.


How it works

Kent County operates under a commission form of government, governed by the Kent County Levy Court — a 7-member elected body that functions as the county's primary legislative and executive authority (Kent County Levy Court). Commissioners represent districts and serve 4-year staggered terms, providing continuity across election cycles.

The Levy Court's principal responsibilities are organized as follows:

The Kent County Administrative Complex in Dover houses most county departmental offices, including the Department of Planning Services, the Department of Public Works, and the Office of Finance.


Common scenarios

Residents and professionals interacting with Kent County government encounter the following principal service areas:

Property and land use: Property owners in unincorporated Kent County submit subdivision applications, variance requests, and building permits through the Department of Planning Services. Agricultural land use — significant in Kent County, where farming covers a substantial portion of the county's land base — is subject to both county zoning and state agricultural preservation programs administered through the Delaware Department of Agriculture.

Elections administration: Kent County hosts the Kent County Department of Elections, which administers voter registration and manages polling locations for state and federal elections under the authority of the Delaware Department of Elections. State legislative districts, including House and Senate districts covering Kent County, fall under the Delaware redistricting framework established by the General Assembly.

Public health: Health and social services for Kent County residents are administered primarily through the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services, not through the county government directly. This contrasts with larger states where counties operate independent health departments with substantial autonomous budgets.

Court jurisdiction: The Delaware court system, including the Delaware Superior Court, Family Court, and Justice of the Peace Courts, operates Kent County courthouses in Dover. These are state courts — they are not county courts — and are administered by the Delaware Judiciary, not the Levy Court.


Decision boundaries

Understanding which level of government handles a specific service in Kent County requires distinguishing 4 overlapping jurisdictions:

Kent County Levy Court vs. Delaware State Government: The Levy Court controls property assessment, unincorporated zoning, and county road maintenance. State agencies control education, public health, transportation funding, environmental regulation, and corrections — even when those functions are physically delivered in Kent County. The Delaware Department of Education sets curriculum and funding formulas for Kent County school districts; county government has no direct role in K-12 administration.

Kent County vs. Municipal Governments: Dover, Smyrna, and Milford each operate under their own municipal charters. A property inside Dover city limits is subject to Dover municipal zoning, not Kent County zoning. Police services in Dover are provided by the Dover Police Department, not by a county sheriff's force — Kent County does not maintain a traditional sheriff's law enforcement function comparable to county sheriffs in other states.

Kent County vs. Federal Jurisdiction: Dover Air Force Base, which employs thousands of military and civilian personnel and significantly affects the regional economy, operates entirely outside county governmental authority. Base-related infrastructure, environmental compliance, and workforce policy are federal matters.

Unincorporated vs. Incorporated Areas: County services — zoning enforcement, solid waste pickup contracts, road maintenance — apply primarily to the unincorporated portions of Kent County. Residents within incorporated municipalities typically receive those services through their municipal government, not the county.

The Smyrna municipality, located partly in Kent County and partly in New Castle County, illustrates a split-jurisdiction scenario in which residents on different sides of the county line fall under different county administrative frameworks while remaining within the same municipal government.


References

Read Next

New Castle County Delaware: Government, Services, and Civic Structure Its government operates under a charter-based structure distinct from the two lower counties, administering land use, public... Sussex County Delaware: Government, Services, and Civic Structure Its government operates under a county council structure distinct from the commission model used in other states,... Office of the Governor of Delaware: Roles, Powers, and Succession ANA › United States Authority › Delaware State Authority › Delaware Government Authority › Office of the Governor of Delaware:...

Communities in This County

Federal Disaster Declarations (11)

Tropical Storm Isaias
August 2020 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4566-DE
COVID-19 Pandemic Federal Disaster
January 2020 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4526-DE
COVID-19 Emergency
January 2020 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · EM-3449-DE
Hurricane Sandy
October 2012 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4090-DE
Hurricane Sandy
October 2012 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3357-DE
Hurricane Irene
August 2011 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4037-DE
Hurricane Irene
August 2011 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3336-DE
Severe Winter Storms And Snowstorms
February 2010 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1896-DE
Hurricane Katrina (hosted evacuees, no local impact)
August 2005 · Emergency declaration · hosted federal evacuees (no local impact) · EM-3263-DE
Hurricane Isabel
September 2003 · Major disaster declaration · Individual Assistance to residents · DR-1494-DE
Snow
February 2003 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3183-DE

Codes & laws coverage

County ordinances indexing

10 / 10

categories with corpus rows (100% of applicable) · known: Constitution & Foundation, Federal Statutes, Federal Regulations, Federal Notices & Orders, State Statutes (+5 more) · full breakdown →

Laws & Codes

Live from our ingestion pipeline; new content appears within minutes of fetch.

  • 21 CFR 862.1170 § 862.1170 Chloride test system. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1165 § 862.1165 Catecholamines (total) test system. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1163 § 862.1163 Cardiac allograft gene expression profiling test system. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1160 § 862.1160 Bicarbonate/carbon dioxide test system. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1155 § 862.1155 Human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) test system. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1150 § 862.1150 Calibrator. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1145 § 862.1145 Calcium test system. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1140 § 862.1140 Calcitonin test system. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1135 § 862.1135 C-peptides of proinsulin test system. · source
  • 21 CFR 862.1130 § 862.1130 Blood volume test system. · source

Browse the full mirror ›