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Denton County Texas
Denton County · Texas

Denton County Landlord-Tenant Law

Texas landlord guide — county ordinances, courthouse info & local rules

📍 County Seat: Denton
👥 Pop. ~1.0 Million
⚖️ 6 JP Courts • County Courts at Law
🏙️ DFW North — Fast-Growing Suburban County

Denton County Rental Market Overview

Denton County is one of the fastest-growing counties in the United States, sitting directly north of Dallas and Tarrant counties on the I-35E and I-35W corridors connecting the Dallas and Fort Worth metro halves. With a population approaching one million, the county encompasses a strikingly varied mix of territory: the university city of Denton anchoring the north, a dense southern suburban band through Lewisville, Carrollton, The Colony, and Little Elm, and the affluent mid-county communities of Flower Mound, Highland Village, Argyle, and Southlake (shared with Tarrant). The county is home to the University of North Texas (UNT) and Texas Woman’s University (TWU), both in Denton, making it a significant college-town rental market at the same time as it is a premium DFW suburb market.

Denton County’s rental market spans a wide premium range. Denton city averages approximately $1,221–$1,541/month for a one-bedroom, while Flower Mound commands $1,502–$1,965 in what is one of the priciest suburban rental markets in the DFW metro. The county’s 6 JP courts serve geographically distinct areas from Carrollton in the south to Cross Roads in the rural north. A key operational note for 2025–2026: Precinct 1 went fully paperless for civil and criminal filings effective December 1, 2025, and several other precincts have mandatory e-filing requirements. All six courts now require or strongly prefer e-filing through efiletexas.gov.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Denton
Population ~1.0 Million (2024 est.)
Key Communities Denton, Lewisville, Carrollton (partial), Flower Mound, The Colony, Little Elm, Frisco (partial), Highland Village, Argyle, Aubrey, Sanger, Cross Roads
Court System 6 JP Courts (Precincts 1–6); County Courts at Law (appeals)
Avg. Rent (1BR Denton) ~$1,221–$1,541/mo
Avg. Rent (1BR Flower Mound) ~$1,502–$1,965/mo
Rent Control None
Just-Cause Eviction Not required

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 3-Day Notice to Vacate
Lease Violation 3-Day Notice to Vacate
Month-to-Month Term. 1-Month Written Notice
E-Filing Mandatory at Pct. 1 (eff. Dec. 1, 2025); required/preferred at all other precincts
Filing Fee ~$100–$150 (confirm with clerk)
Eviction Timeline 3–6 weeks typical
Security Deposit Return 30 days after surrender
Statute Tex. Prop. Code §§ 92.001 et seq.; 24.001–24.011

Denton County Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
Rental Licensing No county-level rental license required. Texas has no statewide landlord licensing statute. Denton, Lewisville, Flower Mound, Carrollton, and other Denton County cities do not require general residential rental registration for standard long-term leases. Verify short-term rental rules with individual city development departments, as requirements vary.
Rent Control None. Texas law preempts local rent control statewide. No city in Denton County may enact rent stabilization. Landlords may raise rents freely at lease renewal with proper notice.
Security Deposit No statutory cap on amount. Must be returned with written itemized accounting within 30 days after tenant surrenders premises (Tex. Prop. Code § 92.103). Normal wear and tear is not deductible. Bad-faith retention: $100 + 3x wrongfully withheld amount + attorney’s fees (§ 92.109). After 30 days without return or accounting, bad faith is presumed by law.
Eviction Filing — Which JP Court? Denton County has 6 JP courts, one per precinct. Eviction cases must be filed in the JP court for the precinct where the rental property is located. Use the Denton County precinct lookup at dentoncounty.gov/977 to confirm your precinct. E-filing via efiletexas.gov is mandatory at Precinct 1 (effective December 1, 2025) and mandatory or strongly preferred at all other precincts.
All 6 JP Court Locations Pct. 1 (Denton): 1 Courthouse Drive, Suite 1100, Denton 76208 • jp1.court@dentoncounty.gov • (940) 349-3170 • No paper filings accepted eff. Dec. 1, 2025
Pct. 2 (Judge James R. DePiazza — Frisco/south Denton County): 5533 FM 423, Suite 901, Frisco 75036 • jp2court@dentoncounty.gov
Pct. 3 (Lewisville): 400 N. Valley Pkwy., Suite 2012, Lewisville 75067 • jp3court@dentoncounty.gov • (972) 434-4750
Pct. 4 (Judge Hughey Harris — Flower Mound): 6200 Canyon Falls Dr., Suite 101, Flower Mound 76226 • jp4Court@dentoncounty.gov • (972) 434-3910
Pct. 5 (Judge Mike Oglesby — Cross Roads/rural north): 1400 FM 424, Suite 124, Cross Roads 76227 • Jp5court@dentoncounty.gov • E-file mandatory eff. Apr. 1, 2024
Pct. 6 (Carrollton/south Denton County): 1029 W. Rosemeade Pkwy., Carrollton 75007 • Jp6@dentoncounty.gov • E-file mandatory eff. Dec. 1, 2023
All courts: Mon–Fri 8:00 AM–4:00/5:00 PM (hours vary by precinct). Confirm at dentoncounty.gov/473.
E-Filing Timeline & 2026 Law Changes Pct. 1: Mandatory e-file for all civil & criminal cases eff. Dec. 1, 2025. Pct. 5: Mandatory e-file for civil cases eff. Apr. 1, 2024. Pct. 6: Mandatory e-file for civil cases eff. Dec. 1, 2023. All other precincts strongly prefer e-filing. Additionally, major changes to Texas eviction law took effect January 1, 2026. Confirm current procedures with your precinct before filing.
Late Fees Must be in written lease. Not collectible until rent is 2 full days past due. Maximum: 12% of monthly rent for 1–4 unit structures; 10% for 5+ unit structures (Tex. Prop. Code § 92.019). At Denton County’s premium rent levels, verify that your flat-dollar late fees do not exceed the percentage caps.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited. Landlords may not remove locks, cut utilities, or interfere with possession (Tex. Prop. Code §§ 92.008, 92.0081). All evictions require a court-issued Writ of Possession executed by the Denton County Constable for the appropriate precinct. Violations carry one month’s rent + $1,000 civil penalty + actual damages + attorney’s fees.
Firearms on Leased Premises Landlords may not prohibit tenants or guests from lawfully possessing, carrying, or storing firearms or ammunition in the rental unit or in a vehicle in a provided parking area (Tex. Prop. Code § 92.026). Lease clauses attempting to prohibit lawful firearm possession are void by statute.

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: Denton County JP Courts

🏛️ Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Texas

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Texas
Filing Fee 54-149
Total Est. Range $150-$500
Service: — Writ: —

Texas State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

3
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
3
Days Notice (Violation)
25-45
Avg Total Days
$54-149
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 3-Day Notice to Vacate
Notice Period 3 days
Tenant Can Cure? No - notice to vacate, not to pay. Tenant can pay during period but landlord not required to accept.
Days to Hearing 10-21 days
Days to Writ 5 days
Total Estimated Timeline 25-45 days
Total Estimated Cost $150-$500
⚠️ Watch Out

Texas notice is to vacate, not to pay. Landlord is not required to accept rent during notice period. Lease can shorten notice to 1 day or extend it. If tenant paid rent on time the prior month, landlord must give "Notice to Pay Rent or Vacate" instead. SB 38 (2025) streamlines squatter removal process.

Underground Landlord

📝 Texas Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Justice of the Peace Court (Forcible Detainer). Pay the filing fee (~$54-149).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Texas eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Texas attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Texas landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Texas — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Texas's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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🔎 Notice Calculator

📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
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🏘️ Communities & Screening Tips

Key communities: Denton (UNT/TWU, historic square), Lewisville (I-35E/SH 121), Carrollton (southern tip), Flower Mound (Precinct 4), The Colony, Little Elm, Frisco (partial, Precinct 2), Highland Village, Argyle, Aubrey, Sanger, Cross Roads, Oak Point, Pilot Point.

Denton / UNT & TWU: 50,000+ college students between two universities drive a large student rental market around campus. Screen co-signers carefully; require parental guarantee for students. Academic-year leases common (Aug–July). Denton’s independent arts and music scene also attracts non-student younger tenants.

Flower Mound / Highland Village / Argyle: Premium family market, top-rated LISD and Argyle ISD. SFH rentals $1,800–$3,500+. Low eviction risk, long tenancies, high maintenance expectations. Corporate relocatees and dual-income executive households.

Lewisville / Carrollton / The Colony: Mid-tier market anchored by SH 121 and I-35E employment corridors. Strong demand from DFW Airport adjacent workers, retail, and logistics employees. 1BR ~$1,300–$1,600. Higher turnover than Flower Mound but solid rental demand.

Denton County Landlords

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Denton County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: From the UNT Campus to Flower Mound’s Cul-de-Sacs

Denton County is one of the most internally diverse rental markets in the DFW metroplex. The same county that contains 50,000+ college students living near the UNT campus in Denton also contains the affluent lakeside communities of Highland Village and Flower Mound, where a single-family rental home can command $3,000 a month. In between sits a wide band of mid-tier suburban markets through Lewisville, Carrollton, The Colony, and Little Elm that serve the DFW Airport employment corridor and the working professional families that power much of the county’s growth. Understanding which of these three worlds your rental property occupies determines your tenant profile, your turnover expectations, and your screening strategy.

Six Courts, a Rolling E-File Mandate

Denton County operates 6 JP courts, one per precinct, spread across a county that runs from the DFW suburbs in the south to genuinely rural countryside in the north. Precinct 1 is the county seat court in Denton. Precinct 2 sits in Frisco (the portion of Frisco in Denton County). Precinct 3 covers Lewisville. Precinct 4 handles Flower Mound and the southwest. Precinct 5 serves the rural north from Cross Roads. Precinct 6 covers the Carrollton and southernmost portion of the county.

All six courts have moved decisively toward mandatory or strongly preferred e-filing over the past two years, on a rolling schedule. Precinct 6 went mandatory in December 2023. Precinct 5 went mandatory in April 2024. And crucially, Precinct 1 — the busiest court in the county serving Denton and the county seat — went fully paperless for all civil and criminal filings effective December 1, 2025. If you file an eviction in Denton County Precinct 1 after that date and try to hand in a paper petition, it will not be accepted. All filings must go through efiletexas.gov. Use the Guide and File self-help tool at efiletexas.gov for a step-by-step walkthrough if you are filing without an attorney.

Denton: The University Market

The city of Denton is home to the University of North Texas (enrollment ~44,000) and Texas Woman’s University (enrollment ~16,000), making it one of the largest double-university college towns in Texas. This drives a student rental market that is fundamentally different from the suburban family market in the southern part of the county. Average one-bedroom rents in Denton run $1,221–$1,541/month, with student-proximate units near the UNT campus averaging lower and newer luxury student-oriented apartments near Rayzor Ranch running higher.

The practical implications for landlords near UNT and TWU are similar to what Arlington landlords face near UT Arlington: academic-year demand patterns, co-signer requirements for student tenants, and higher turnover than in family neighborhoods. The key difference from Arlington is that Denton has a more developed independent arts, music, and creative community centered on its historic downtown square, which attracts a non-student younger tenant population that looks more like Austin’s Hyde Park than a typical suburban apartment market. These tenants tend to be employed in the arts, music, food service, and education sectors — income verification requires looking at annual earnings rather than single pay stubs, particularly for tip-based or gig workers.

For student leases specifically: always require a creditworthy co-signer or guarantor and complete a full credit and income application for the co-signer. The co-signer’s financial capacity is what backs the lease when the student defaults. A parent who co-signs without completing a full application is a co-signer whose capacity you have not verified — and in a contested case, you need that documentation.

Flower Mound, Highland Village, and Argyle: Premium Family Territory

The mid-county communities of Flower Mound, Highland Village, Argyle, and Bartonville represent the premium tier of the Denton County rental market. Flower Mound’s Lewisville Independent School District and Argyle Independent School District consistently rank among the top-performing school districts in Texas, which drives significant demand from corporate relocatees and professional families willing to pay a premium for school district access. One-bedroom apartments in Flower Mound average $1,502–$1,965, and single-family rental homes frequently run $2,200–$3,500+ depending on size and neighborhood.

Tenants in Flower Mound and Highland Village have long lease durations and low eviction risk — but they also have high expectations for property condition and maintenance responsiveness. Deferred maintenance on a $2,500/month rental in Flower Mound will generate formal repair requests quickly, and Texas law already requires landlords to make repairs within a reasonable time after written notice. In this market segment, responsiveness to maintenance issues is not just a legal obligation; it is the primary driver of lease renewal and positive word-of-mouth referral among the professional community.

The Southern Corridor: Lewisville, Carrollton, The Colony, Little Elm

The southern tier of Denton County — the Lewisville, Carrollton, The Colony, and Little Elm communities served by Precincts 3 and 6 — offers a mid-market that has benefited enormously from DFW Airport proximity and the SH 121 employment corridor. Major employers in this band include Fidelity Investments (Westlake), Deloitte, and the massive employment base around the DFW Airport itself. One-bedrooms in Lewisville and Carrollton typically run $1,300–$1,600. Tenants here skew toward working professionals in aviation, finance, logistics, and technology with solid but not extraordinary income profiles.

Little Elm and The Colony, on the shores of Lake Lewisville, have seen significant new apartment construction over the past several years and are attractive to younger professional households seeking a waterfront-adjacent lifestyle at prices below Flower Mound. These markets have higher turnover than the established Flower Mound/Highland Village tier but strong underlying demand that keeps vacancy rates manageable.

Security Deposits: Know the Clock

At Denton County’s rent levels — ranging from $1,200 in student-market Denton to $2,500+ in Flower Mound — security deposits of one to two months’ rent represent meaningful sums on both sides of the transaction. The 30-day return deadline starts the day the tenant surrenders possession, not the end of the lease term. Send your itemized accounting by certified mail within that window, keep photo documentation of every chargeable item, and know the difference between normal wear and tear (not deductible) and actual damage (deductible). A landlord who holds $2,000 in bad faith owes $100 plus $6,000 plus attorney’s fees — a $6,100+ liability on a single security deposit dispute.

This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Texas landlord-tenant law changed significantly on January 1, 2026. Denton County Precinct 1 no longer accepts paper filings for civil cases effective December 1, 2025 — all filings must be submitted electronically via efiletexas.gov. Confirm current e-filing requirements with your specific precinct court before filing. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant law is subject to change. Major changes to Texas eviction law took effect January 1, 2026. Denton County Precinct 1 no longer accepts paper filings for civil or criminal cases effective December 1, 2025 — all filings at Precinct 1 must go through efiletexas.gov. Confirm current e-filing requirements with your specific precinct before filing. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

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