Property Management

Renting Out Your House During Deployment: An Austin Homeowner's Guide

What Austin homeowners need to set up before renting out their house during a deployment or extended PCS.

Renting Out Your House During Deployment: An Austin Homeowner's Guide

Deploying or PCSing while owning an Austin home puts owners in an unfamiliar position — landlord almost by circumstance rather than by plan. Here's what to set up before you leave.

Decide: Self-Manage or Hire a Property Manager

Given that you may be unreachable or on a limited communication schedule during deployment, hiring a local property manager is usually the more realistic choice over self-managing from overseas or from a new duty station. A trusted family member acting informally as a manager works for some owners, but a professional manager brings consistent Texas Property Code compliance and someone reachable for emergencies.

Notify Your Mortgage Lender and Insurer

Converting an owner-occupied home to a rental typically requires notifying your mortgage lender and switching your homeowner's insurance to a landlord policy — occupying the home as a rental without disclosing this can create coverage gaps exactly when you need protection most.

Understand SCRA Interest Rate Protections

The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act caps interest rates at 6% on debts incurred before active duty, including some mortgages, under specific conditions — worth discussing with your lender if your mortgage predates your current orders.

Set Up Power of Attorney

A power of attorney lets a trusted person sign leases, authorize repairs, or handle other property matters on your behalf while you're deployed — set this up before departure, since arranging it remotely afterward is far harder.

Screen Tenants Carefully

Whether you or a property manager handles leasing, consistent, documented tenant screening matters even more when you won't be available to manage a problem tenant in person for months at a time.

Plan for Your Return

Decide in advance — and put in writing with your property manager or tenant — how much notice you'll give before reoccupying the home, since deployment timelines can shift and a clear plan avoids a scramble at redeployment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Converting an owner-occupied home to a rental typically requires notifying your lender and switching to a landlord insurance policy to avoid coverage gaps.

It can — the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act caps interest rates at 6% on certain debts incurred before active duty, including some mortgages, under specific conditions worth discussing directly with your lender.

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