Property Management

What Property Maintenance Should Cover

The difference between routine maintenance, preventive maintenance, and emergency repairs — and why the distinction matters for rental owners.

What Property Maintenance Should Actually Cover

Maintenance on a rental property isn't one category — treating routine upkeep, preventive maintenance, and emergency repairs the same way is how small issues turn into large bills.

Routine Maintenance

Lawn care, HVAC filter changes, gutter cleaning — the recurring tasks that keep a property from deteriorating between larger service visits. These are cheap and predictable, and skipping them is what leads to bigger repair costs down the line.

Preventive Maintenance

Annual HVAC servicing, water heater flushing, and periodic roof inspections catch problems before they become emergencies. A single missed HVAC service call in Central Texas summer heat can turn into a full system failure at the worst possible time.

Emergency Repairs

Burst pipes, AC failure in July, no hot water — these need a response plan with a real timeline, not a maintenance request sitting in an inbox for days. Tenants should have a clear, fast way to report emergencies, and someone needs to be able to respond quickly.

Who's Responsible for What

Texas law places baseline habitability obligations on landlords (functioning plumbing, heat, and other essential services), while lease terms typically define tenant responsibilities like lawn care or minor upkeep. Spelling this out clearly in the lease avoids disputes over who fixes what.

Why a Maintenance Plan Matters for Owners

A property without a maintenance plan tends to accumulate deferred issues that show up all at once — usually at the worst time, and usually costing more than they would have if addressed early. A property manager with an established contractor network can typically respond faster and often at better rates than an owner sourcing repairs ad hoc.

Frequently Asked Questions

Texas law requires landlords to maintain essential services like functioning plumbing, heating, and structural safety — specifics should also be spelled out in the lease.

Emergencies like no AC in summer heat or a burst pipe should be addressed same-day where possible — tenants need a clear, reliable way to reach someone immediately.

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