King and Queen County Virginia Government

King and Queen County is one of Virginia's smallest and most rural counties, governed under the state's constitutional framework for county government. This page covers the structure of county government in King and Queen, how its elected and appointed bodies operate, the services it delivers to residents, and the boundaries of its authority relative to state and independent city governments.

Definition and scope

King and Queen County is a unit of general-purpose local government established under the Virginia Constitution and Title 15.2 of the Code of Virginia (Va. Code §15.2-100 et seq.). The county seat is King and Queen Court House, an unincorporated community. With a land area of approximately 316 square miles and a population that the U.S. Census Bureau estimated at roughly 7,000 residents, it ranks among Virginia's least densely populated jurisdictions.

The county operates under Virginia's optional forms of county government statute. King and Queen County uses the traditional Board of Supervisors–County Administrator model, in which an elected board holds legislative and policy authority while an appointed administrator handles day-to-day operations. This arrangement is one of the 3 principal structural forms authorized by the Code of Virginia for county governance, the other 2 being the county executive plan and the urban county executive plan.

Scope and coverage: This page covers governmental functions and jurisdiction exercised by King and Queen County, Virginia. It does not address the government of incorporated towns that may lie partly or wholly within the county, neighboring jurisdictions such as King George County, Virginia or King William County, Virginia, or state-level agencies of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Federal programs operating within the county (such as USDA Rural Development assistance, which is active in many rural Virginia counties) fall outside county authority and are not covered here.

For a broader orientation to Virginia's county governance landscape, the Virginia Counties Overview resource provides comparative context across all 95 Virginia counties.

How it works

King and Queen County government functions through a set of elected constitutional officers, an appointed county administrator, and a Board of Supervisors composed of district representatives.

Board of Supervisors. The board is the governing body. It adopts the annual budget, sets the real property tax rate, enacts local ordinances, and appoints the county administrator. Supervisors are elected by district to 4-year staggered terms under Va. Code §24.2-222, which governs election cycles for local governing bodies.

Constitutional Officers. Virginia's constitution mandates 5 elected constitutional officers at the county level:

  1. Commonwealth's Attorney — prosecutes criminal matters in the county's General District and Circuit Courts.
  2. Sheriff — provides law enforcement, operates the county jail, and serves civil process.
  3. Commissioner of the Revenue — assesses all local taxes including real estate and personal property.
  4. Treasurer — collects taxes, manages county funds, and disburses payments.
  5. Clerk of the Circuit Court — maintains land records, court filings, and issues marriage licenses.

Each constitutional officer is independently elected to a 4-year term and exercises authority derived directly from Article VII, Section 4 of the Constitution of Virginia, meaning the Board of Supervisors cannot eliminate or consolidate these offices without a constitutional amendment.

County Administrator. Appointed by and accountable to the Board of Supervisors, the county administrator oversees department heads, prepares the proposed annual budget, manages personnel under the county's classification plan, and implements board policy. This role is authorized under Va. Code §15.2-540.

Judicial Structure. The county is served by a Circuit Court and a General District Court. Judges are elected by the Virginia General Assembly, not by county voters, distinguishing the judicial branch from local elective offices.

Common scenarios

Residents and property owners interact with King and Queen County government in predictable functional contexts:

Residents seeking guidance on navigating Virginia government services at the county level can consult the how to get help for Virginia government resource, and for context on how county government fits into broader regional patterns, the Virginia government in local context page provides relevant framing.

Decision boundaries

Understanding what King and Queen County government can and cannot do requires distinguishing its authority from that of the Virginia General Assembly, state agencies, and the federal government.

County authority vs. state preemption. Virginia is a Dillon's Rule state, meaning counties possess only those powers expressly granted by the General Assembly or necessarily implied from granted powers (City of Virginia Beach v. Hay, 258 Va. 217 (1999). King and Queen County cannot, for example, enact its own firearms ordinances more restrictive than state law, as Va. Code §15.2-915 preempts local firearms regulation. Similarly, the county cannot impose income taxes or sales taxes — those are reserved to the Commonwealth.

County authority vs. independent cities. Virginia's unique constitutional structure separates independent cities entirely from county government. Cities such as Norfolk City Government and Chesapeake City Government are jurisdictionally independent of any surrounding county. King and Queen County has no towns that have incorporated as independent cities, so this boundary is currently theoretical rather than active for this jurisdiction.

County authority vs. school board. The School Board has independent statutory authority over educational programming under Va. Code §22.1-71. The Board of Supervisors controls the funding appropriation but cannot direct curriculum, staffing decisions, or instructional policy — a structural separation that applies in all Virginia counties.

What is not covered here. State agency operations within the county (Virginia Department of Transportation road maintenance, Virginia Department of Health environmental inspections, Virginia State Police patrol) are outside the scope of county government authority, even though those agencies deliver services within county boundaries. The county's /index serves as the primary entry point for understanding how county-level information is organized within this resource.

References