Property Management

Tenant Rights in Austin Texas 2025: What Every Renter Needs to Know

Texas is a landlord-friendly state — but tenants have meaningful rights under the Texas Property Code. Here is what Austin renters need to know about security deposits, habitability, eviction protections, and Austin-specific tenant ordinances.

Tenant Rights in Texas: The Foundation

Texas tenant rights are governed primarily by the Texas Property Code, Chapter 92. Texas leans landlord-friendly compared to states like California or New York — there is no statewide rent control, and eviction timelines are faster. However, tenants have meaningful protections that landlords must legally respect.

Austin has enacted several additional local ordinances that go beyond state law, providing extra protections for Austin renters specifically.

Security Deposit Rights in Texas

What Landlords Can Deduct

Your landlord may only deduct from your security deposit:

  • Unpaid rent
  • Damage beyond normal wear and tear
  • Cleaning costs if unit left excessively dirty
  • Violations specifically listed in the lease

Normal wear and tear (landlord CANNOT deduct):

  • Minor nail holes from picture hanging
  • Light scuffs on walls from furniture
  • Carpet fading from sunlight
  • Small scratches on hardwood

Security Deposit Return Timeline

Your landlord must return your deposit within 30 days of move-out. If deductions are made, you must receive an itemized deduction statement. If the landlord wrongfully withholds your deposit, you can sue for:

  • 3x the amount wrongfully withheld
  • Attorney's fees
  • $100 in additional damages

Protecting Yourself

  • Document everything at move-in with photos and video (dated)
  • Use the move-in condition checklist and keep your copy
  • Provide written notice of your move-out date well in advance
  • Send your forwarding address in writing

Habitability Rights: What Your Landlord Must Maintain

Texas law requires landlords to maintain rental properties in a habitable condition. Required maintenance includes:

  • Structural integrity: Roof, walls, floors, and foundation
  • Working HVAC: Functional heating and cooling systems (essential in Austin's climate)
  • Plumbing and hot water: Working toilets, sinks, hot water heater
  • Smoke detectors: Must be functional at move-in; landlord must replace batteries on request
  • Pest control: Landlord must treat for cockroaches in multi-unit buildings
  • Mold remediation: If mold materially affects habitability

Repair-and-Deduct Rights

If your landlord fails to make required repairs after written notice, you may:

  1. Give written notice of the repair need
  2. Wait a reasonable time (usually 7 days for non-emergency, 3 days for emergency)
  3. If landlord fails to act, hire a licensed contractor and deduct cost from rent (up to one month's rent)

Lease Termination for Habitability

For severe habitability failures, you may have the right to terminate your lease early without penalty. This requires following specific written notice procedures under Texas Property Code §92.056.

Entry Rights: When Can Your Landlord Enter?

Your landlord must provide at least 24 hours advance notice before entering your unit, except in genuine emergencies. Permitted reasons for entry:

  • Make repairs or improvements
  • Show the unit to prospective tenants or buyers
  • Conduct inspections (if specified in lease)

Entering without notice is a lease violation. Repeated unauthorized entries may give you grounds to terminate the lease.

Eviction Rights and Process

In Texas, an eviction can only happen through the court system — a landlord cannot lock you out, remove your belongings, or shut off utilities to force you out. These "self-help evictions" are illegal and subject landlords to significant penalties.

  1. Notice to Vacate: 3 days minimum for non-payment of rent
  2. Eviction suit filing: If you don't comply with the notice
  3. Court hearing: Typically 10–21 days after filing
  4. Judgment and Writ of Possession: If landlord wins in court

You have the right to appear in court and present your defense. Common valid defenses:

  • Rent was paid (with proof)
  • Notice was improper (wrong timeframe, wrong delivery method)
  • Landlord failed habitability obligations
  • Discrimination (protected class)

Austin-Specific Tenant Protections

The City of Austin has enacted local ordinances that provide additional protections beyond state law:

Source of Income Protection

Austin's Fair Housing Ordinance prohibits discrimination based on source of income — including Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers. A landlord cannot refuse to rent to you solely because you use a Section 8 voucher.

Relocation Assistance (Chapter 14B)

Austin landlords must provide relocation assistance in certain circumstances, including:

  • No-fault evictions (no lease violation, just non-renewal)
  • Substantial rent increases (defined as more than 10% above CPI or market rate)
  • Demolition or major renovation displacing tenants

Note: Texas state law has preempted some of Austin's local ordinances — consult a tenant's rights attorney for current status of specific ordinances.

Fair Chance Housing

Austin prohibits landlords from automatically disqualifying rental applicants based on criminal history without individual assessment.

Discrimination Protections

Federal and Texas law prohibit housing discrimination based on:

  • Race, color, national origin
  • Religion
  • Sex (including gender identity and sexual orientation under recent federal interpretation)
  • Familial status (families with children)
  • Disability

If you believe you've faced housing discrimination in Austin, contact:

  • Austin Fair Housing Office: fairhousing.austintexas.gov
  • HUD Fair Housing: hud.gov/fairhousing
  • Texas Workforce Commission Civil Rights Division

Resources for Austin Renters

  • Austin Tenants Council: Free tenant counseling, lease review, and mediation. austintenants.com
  • Texas RioGrande Legal Aid: Free legal assistance for income-qualifying tenants. trla.org
  • Austin Housing Authority: Section 8 and affordable housing resources. austinhousingauthority.net

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — Texas has no rent control. Landlords can raise rent to any amount at renewal with proper notice (30 days). During an active lease term, rent cannot be raised unless your lease allows it.

Send a written demand letter by certified mail. If no response, file in Travis County JP court — you can sue for 3x the withheld amount plus attorney's fees.

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