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§ 8.01-470.Writs on judgments for specific property.

Chapter 18. Executions and Other Means of Recovery · Article 1. Issue and Form; Motion to Quash · Last amended 2019 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceWhen a judgment awards specific personal or real property, this section authorizes a writ of possession or writ of eviction that tracks the judgment’s description of the property and estate recovered, sets strict notice and timing deadlines for eviction, and lets officers force entry when premises are locked.

Full Text of § 8.01-470

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On a judgment for the recovery of specific property, a writ of possession for personal property or a writ of eviction for real property may issue for the specific property pursuant to an order of possession entered by a court of competent jurisdiction, which shall conform to the judgment as to the description of the property and the estate, title, and interest recovered, and there may also be issued a writ of fieri facias for the damages or profits and costs. In cases of unlawful entry and detainer and of ejectment, the officer to whom a writ of eviction has been delivered to be executed shall, at least 72 hours before execution, serve notice of intent to execute, including the date and time of execution, as well as the rights afforded to tenants in §§ 55.1-1255 and 55.1-1416, together with a copy of the writ attached, on the defendant in person or, if the party to be served is not found at the specific property for which a writ of eviction has been issued, then service shall be effected by posting a copy of such process at the front door or at such other door as appears to be the main entrance of such property. The execution of the writ of eviction by the sheriff should occur within 15 calendar days from the date the writ of eviction is received by the sheriff, or as soon as practicable thereafter, but in no event later than 30 days from the date the writ of eviction is issued. An order of possession shall remain valid for 180 days from the date granted by the court. If a plaintiff cancels a writ of eviction, such plaintiff may request other writs of eviction during such 180-day period. In cases of unlawful entry and detainer and of ejectment, whenever the officer to whom a writ of eviction has been delivered to be executed finds the premises locked, he may, after declaring at the door the cause of his coming and demanding to have the door opened, employ reasonable and necessary force to break and enter the door and put the plaintiff in possession. The execution
of the writ of eviction shall be effective against the tenants named in the writ of eviction and their authorized occupants, guests or invitees, and any trespassers in the premises. And an officer having a writ of possession for specific personal property, if he finds locked or fastened the building or place wherein he has reasonable cause to believe the property specified in the writ is located, may in the daytime, after notice to the defendant, his agent or bailee, break and enter such building or place for the purpose of executing such writ.

Plain-English Summary

Not every judgment is about money. Some direct that a specific piece of property — a house, a car, a parcel of land — be handed over to the person who won the case. Section 8.01-470 supplies the mechanics: a writ of possession moves personal property, a writ of eviction moves real property, and either must match the judgment’s own description of the property and the interest recovered. A companion writ of fieri facias can still collect any damages, profits, or costs awarded alongside the property itself.

Eviction cases carry the heaviest procedural weight. The sheriff must give the occupant at least seventy-two hours’ notice of the exact date and time of execution, spelling out the tenant protections found elsewhere in the Code, and must attach a copy of the writ. If nobody answers the door, posting the notice on the main entrance suffices. Once that clock runs, the sheriff should execute within fifteen calendar days of receiving the writ, and in no event later than thirty days after the writ issues — a deadline built to keep evictions from lingering once a court has ruled. The underlying order of possession stays valid for one hundred eighty days, so a landlord who cancels one writ can still request another within that window.

The section also grants officers real authority: if a locked door blocks execution, the officer may announce the purpose of the visit, demand entry, and then use reasonable force to break in and install the plaintiff in possession. That authority reaches everyone named in the writ along with their occupants, guests, and any trespassers found on the premises. A parallel rule lets an officer force entry to a locked building to seize specific personal property, provided the debtor or an agent first receives notice and the entry happens during daylight hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much advance notice must a sheriff give before executing a writ of eviction?

At least seventy-two hours before execution, the officer must serve notice of intent to execute, including the date and time, along with a copy of the writ.

What is the deadline for a sheriff to execute a writ of eviction once received?

Execution should occur within fifteen calendar days from when the sheriff receives the writ, or as soon as practicable after that, but never later than thirty days from the date the writ was issued.

How long does an order of possession remain valid?

An order of possession remains valid for one hundred eighty days from the date the court grants it, and a plaintiff who cancels a writ of eviction may request another within that same period.

Can an officer break into a locked property to execute a writ?

Yes. If the premises are locked, the officer may declare the purpose of the visit, demand entry, and then use reasonable and necessary force to break in and put the plaintiff in possession.

Who is bound by execution of a writ of eviction?

Execution is effective against the tenants named in the writ along with their authorized occupants, guests, or invitees, and against any trespassers found on the premises.

Amendment History

Code 1950, § 8-402; 1977, c. 617; 1991, c. 503; 2000, c. 640; 2001, c. 222; 2003, c. 259; 2007, c. 128; 2019, cc. 180, 700.

Source & verification. Section text and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Code of Virginia, published by the Code of Virginia, Virginia Division of Legislative Automated Systems. Last verified July 16, 2026. · Official source
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