Housing & Apartments

Texas tenant rights: What your landlord doesn't want you to know

Texas is extremely landlord-friendly but you still have rights. Knowing them saves you money and stress.

Security deposit:

  • Landlord must return within 30 days of move-out (Texas Property Code Section 92.103)
  • They MUST provide an itemized list of deductions
  • If they don't return it in 30 days, they may forfeit the right to withhold any of it
  • Pro tip: Do a video walkthrough at move-in AND move-out. Timestamp everything.

Repairs:

  • You have the right to repairs that affect health and safety (TPC Section 92.052)
  • Send repair requests in WRITING (email counts). Keep copies.
  • If landlord doesn't repair within reasonable time, you can: terminate the lease, repair and deduct (with proper notice), or file with JP court
  • The "repair and deduct" process requires a specific written notice — don't just do it

Lock changes:

  • You have the right to request lock changes (TPC Section 92.156)
  • Landlord must comply within reasonable time
  • You can install your own keyless deadbolt if landlord doesn't act

Retaliation:

  • If you report code violations, landlord CANNOT retaliate within 6 months (TPC Section 92.331)
  • Retaliation includes rent increases, reduced services, or eviction attempts

Lease-breaking:

  • Texas has NO automatic right to break a lease without penalty
  • Exceptions: military deployment (SCRA), domestic violence (TPC 92.016), landlord failure to repair
  • Early termination fee is typically 2 months rent

Sources:

  • Texas Property Code — Chapters 92 (Residential Tenancies)
  • Texas Attorney General — Tenant Rights guide
  • Dallas Tenants Union — local advocacy resources
  • TexasLawHelp.org — free legal forms
Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 2:37 AM

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