Property Management

Move-In Checklist for Texas Landlords: Protect Your Property and Deposit

A thorough move-in inspection is the most important document in a Texas landlord-tenant relationship. Here is a complete move-in checklist and process for Austin rental property owners.

Why the Move-In Checklist Matters in Texas

The move-in inspection checklist is the foundation of your security deposit protection. Without a documented baseline of the property's condition at move-in, you have no legal basis to deduct from the security deposit at move-out.

Texas courts consistently rule against landlords who attempt security deposit deductions without move-in documentation. The few hours spent on a thorough move-in inspection protect thousands of dollars at move-out.

When to Conduct the Move-In Inspection

The move-in inspection should occur on the day the tenant takes possession — ideally with the tenant present and participating. Schedule it before handing over keys.

Allow adequate time: A thorough inspection of a 3BR/2BA home takes 45–90 minutes.

Move-In Checklist: Room by Room

General / Entire Property

  • [ ] Exterior condition (siding, paint, trim, gutters)
  • [ ] Roof visible condition (note any visible damage)
  • [ ] All windows functional (open, close, lock)
  • [ ] Window screens present and intact
  • [ ] All doors open, close, and lock properly
  • [ ] Door hardware functional (handles, deadbolts, hinges)
  • [ ] Smoke detectors present, tested, and functional (document battery replacement)
  • [ ] Carbon monoxide detectors present and functional (if applicable)
  • [ ] HVAC filter noted (clean/dirty — replace if dirty, document date)
  • [ ] All light switches and outlets functional
  • [ ] No obvious evidence of pests or pest damage
  • [ ] No evidence of water damage or mold

Living Room

  • [ ] Wall condition (note any holes, scuffs, stains)
  • [ ] Ceiling condition (note water stains, cracks)
  • [ ] Flooring condition (carpet wear, hardwood scratches, tile chips)
  • [ ] Window treatment condition (blinds, curtains)
  • [ ] Fireplace condition (if applicable)

Kitchen

  • [ ] Countertop condition (note burns, chips, stains)
  • [ ] Cabinet condition (note damage, missing hardware)
  • [ ] Refrigerator: functional, interior clean, ice maker works
  • [ ] Stove/oven: all burners functional, oven heats
  • [ ] Dishwasher: runs complete cycle, no leaks
  • [ ] Microwave: functional
  • [ ] Sink: no leaks, disposal functional
  • [ ] Exhaust fan: functional

Bathrooms (Each)

  • [ ] Toilet: flushes properly, no running water
  • [ ] Sink: no leaks, hot and cold water functional
  • [ ] Shower/tub: no leaks, water pressure adequate, drain clear
  • [ ] Caulk and grout condition (note missing or moldy sections)
  • [ ] Exhaust fan: functional
  • [ ] Mirrors: note chips or damage
  • [ ] Cabinet/vanity condition

Bedrooms (Each)

  • [ ] Wall condition
  • [ ] Flooring condition
  • [ ] Closet: doors functional, shelving intact
  • [ ] Windows: functional and secure

Garage

  • [ ] Garage door: opens/closes, auto-reverse safety functional
  • [ ] Interior condition: no oil stains, note existing damage
  • [ ] Water heater: note age and condition
  • [ ] Any storage shelving: document condition

Exterior / Yard

  • [ ] Lawn condition (note if mowed, landscaping present)
  • [ ] Fencing: intact, gates functional
  • [ ] Driveway/sidewalk: note cracks, existing damage
  • [ ] Outdoor spigots: functional
  • [ ] Patio/deck: note condition, any damage

Documenting with Photos and Video

Written checklists alone are not enough. Document every room with:

  • Photos: Timestamp-enabled, capture every wall, floor, ceiling, appliance
  • Video walkthrough: A 5–10 minute continuous video with narration is powerful evidence
  • Date stamp: Ensure your camera/phone records date and time in metadata

Store all documentation in cloud backup that timestamps uploads.

Having Tenants Sign the Move-In Checklist

Have tenants:

  1. Walk through the property with you during the inspection
  2. Note any additional items they observe (their chance to document pre-existing conditions)
  3. Sign and date the completed checklist
  4. Receive a copy of the signed checklist

A signed move-in checklist gives both parties agreement on the property's baseline condition. It prevents future disputes: "That hole was already there" claims are addressed on day one.

Move-In Checklist vs. Security Deposit Deductions

At move-out, compare the move-in checklist and photos to the current condition:

  • Items in same/better condition: No deduction
  • Normal wear and tear: No deduction (paint fading, minor carpet wear from normal use)
  • Damage beyond normal wear: Deductible (large holes in walls, carpet stains, broken fixtures)

Texas courts apply the "ordinary wear and tear" standard strictly. Document clearly which damages exceed this threshold in your move-out itemization.

Digital Tools for Move-In Inspections

Property management software with built-in inspection tools:

  • Buildium: Built-in inspection with photo upload
  • AppFolio: Mobile inspection app
  • Rentec Direct: Inspection checklist feature
  • Google Forms + Drive: Free option for independent landlords — create a form, fill out on phone during walkthrough, photos auto-upload to Drive

Frequently Asked Questions

Not explicitly, but without one you have no documented baseline to support security deposit deductions. Courts routinely side with tenants when landlords lack move-in documentation. It's essential practice.

Yes, but having the tenant co-sign the checklist is strongly recommended. It eliminates future disputes about whether damage was pre-existing.

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