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Ector County Texas
Ector County · Texas

Ector County Landlord-Tenant Law

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

📍 County Seat: Odessa
👥 Pop. ~175,000
⚖️ 4 JP Courts • 4 Precincts
🛢️ Permian Basin Oil Capital — Midland–Odessa MSA

Ector County Rental Market Overview

Ector County is the heart of the Permian Basin oil economy, home to Odessa — one of the most storied energy cities in American history and the county seat of what has been called the oil capital of the world. Situated on the flat, stark terrain of the West Texas Llano Estacado, Odessa grew from a cattle and railroad watering stop to one of the nation’s most economically significant cities through the discovery and production of Permian Basin crude oil, a reserve that has been producing continuously since the 1920s and experienced historic booms in the 2010s shale revolution and again in the early 2020s. With a population approaching 175,000, Ector County is part of the Midland–Odessa Combined Statistical Area, one of the nation’s highest-income oil-patch metros when production is booming. The county seat, Odessa, is the blue-collar counterpart to adjacent Midland’s white-collar executive character: while Midland houses the corporate and management workforce of the oil industry, Odessa houses the roughnecks, service company workers, truckers, welders, and equipment operators who physically produce the oil.

Ector County’s rental market is defined above all by oil price cycles. Average one-bedroom apartment rents run approximately $1,140–$1,149/month during normal-to-moderate production periods, but this figure can swing dramatically during boom periods — rents in Odessa spiked significantly during the 2018–2019 shale drilling boom, then retreated as rig counts fell. Landlords who understand Permian Basin cyclicality can time their investments and pricing strategies accordingly. The county operates 4 JP courts, all centrally located at the Ector County Courthouse at 300 N. Grant in Odessa. Evictions must be filed in the precinct where the rental property is located.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Odessa
Population ~175,000 (2025 est.)
Key Communities Odessa (dominant city), Gardendale, Goldsmith, Notrees
Court System 4 JP Courts (one per precinct); all at Ector County Courthouse, 300 N. Grant, Rm. 208, Odessa; County Courts at Law (appeals)
Avg. Rent (1BR) ~$1,140–$1,149/mo (normal cycle); can spike significantly during oil boom
Market Character Oil-cycle driven; boom-bust volatility; working-class Permian Basin economy
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
Filing Fee ~$100–$150 (confirm with clerk)
Wrong Precinct? Court must dismiss — verify before filing
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

Ector County Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
Rental Licensing No county-level rental license required. Texas has no statewide landlord licensing statute. The City of Odessa does not require general residential rental registration for standard long-term leases. Landlords operating short-term rentals (STRs) or oilfield man-camp style housing should verify applicable city and county regulations. Man-camp and workforce housing operations serving oilfield contractors may be subject to additional regulations — verify with the City of Odessa and Ector County.
Rent Control None. Texas law preempts local rent control statewide. No Ector County municipality 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). Bad faith is presumed by law after 30 days without return or accounting.
Eviction Filing — Which JP Court? Ector County has 4 JP courts, one per precinct, all centrally located at the Ector County Courthouse. An eviction must be filed in the precinct where the rental property is located. Filing in the wrong precinct requires mandatory dismissal. Use the Ector County precinct maps at co.ector.tx.us to verify your precinct before filing. Contact the specific court to confirm current filing procedures and fee schedules.
JP Court Locations All four JP courts are located at the Ector County Courthouse, 300 N. Grant, Room 208, Odessa, TX 79761.

Precinct 1 (Judge Carlos Chavez) • (432) 498-4201 • jp1@ectorcountytx.gov • Mon–Fri 8:00 AM–12:00 PM & 1:00 PM–5:00 PM
Precinct 2 • (432) 498-4202 • jp2@ectorcountytx.gov • Mon–Thu 8:00 AM–12:00 PM & 1:00 PM–5:00 PM (note: Mon–Thu only per court hours)
Precinct 3 (Judge W.T. “Bill” Bowen) • (432) 498-4203 • jp3@ectorcountytx.gov • Mon–Fri 8:00 AM–12:00 PM & 1:00 PM–5:00 PM
Precinct 4 (Judge Elizabeth R. Baeza) • (432) 498-4204 • jp4@ectorcountytx.gov • Mon–Fri 8:00 AM–12:00 PM & 1:00 PM–5:00 PM

Verify current information at co.ector.tx.us. All courts are closed daily during the 12–1 PM lunch hour.

2026 Eviction Law Changes Major changes to Texas eviction law took effect January 1, 2026. Confirm all current filing requirements, forms, and procedures directly with your Ector County JP court before filing after that date.
Oil Boom Rent Increases & Notice Requirements During Permian Basin boom cycles, demand for rental housing in Odessa surges and rents can increase dramatically. Texas law allows landlords to raise rents at lease renewal with proper written notice. For month-to-month tenancies, one month’s written notice is required before increasing rent. For fixed-term leases, rent increases take effect at renewal. Ensure all rent increase notices are delivered in writing and retained for documentation. Oral agreements about future rent adjustments are not enforceable — all changes must be in writing.
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 Odessa rent levels of ~$1,140–$1,149/month, the 12% cap allows approximately $137–$138/month maximum for smaller structures during normal cycles.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited. Landlords may not remove locks, cut utilities, or interfere with tenant possession to force a vacate (Tex. Prop. Code §§ 92.008, 92.0081). All evictions require a court-issued Writ of Possession executed by the Ector County Constable for the appropriate precinct. Violations carry one month’s rent + $1,000 civil penalty + actual damages + attorney’s fees.

Last verified: March 2026 · Source: Ector 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: Odessa (sole major city, 99%+ of county population), Gardendale (northern suburb), Goldsmith (rural west), Notrees (small rural community).

Oilfield workers: Largest tenant demographic. Income can be very high during boom periods but is cyclically vulnerable. Verify employment type (direct hire vs. contractor vs. short-term worker) and employment history spanning full cycles. Be cautious of boom-season pay stubs that don’t reflect sustainable baseline income.

Healthcare & education workers: Medical Center Hospital, UT Permian Basin (UTPB), and Odessa College employees represent a more stable, counter-cyclical tenant pool. These tenants provide income stability regardless of oil price fluctuations.

Boom-bust screening strategy: During boom periods, accept high income documentation at face value but consider requesting larger security deposits (within reason) and shorter initial lease terms for contract workers who may relocate when drilling slows. During busts, maintain rigorous income verification.

Ector County Landlords

Screen Every Applicant Before You Sign →

Background checks, eviction history, credit reports — get the full picture before handing over the keys.

Ector County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in Odessa and the Permian Basin

Ector County and its county seat Odessa operate under a set of economic and market forces that exist essentially nowhere else in Texas. The Permian Basin — the vast, oil-saturated geological formation underlying West Texas and southeastern New Mexico — is one of the most productive hydrocarbon-producing regions on earth, and Odessa sits squarely at its working heart. The city’s growth, decline, and revival have been dictated by oil prices for a century, and that reality shapes the rental market in ways that no amount of institutional or demographic analysis can fully anticipate. The landlord who thrives in Ector County is the one who understands the oil cycle, can manage the volatility it creates in rental demand and pricing, and knows how to screen tenants whose income profiles swing dramatically with the rig count.

During normal-to-moderate production periods, average one-bedroom apartment rents in Odessa run approximately $1,140–$1,149/month — roughly at the Texas statewide average and below what comparable units cost in DFW or Houston. But during Permian Basin boom cycles, that figure can increase dramatically in a very short time. During the 2018–2019 shale boom, rental rates in Odessa and adjacent Midland spiked to levels that made national headlines; some landlords saw rents double or triple within a single year as tens of thousands of oilfield workers flooded the area in response to elevated crude prices and surging drilling activity. The subsequent bust, triggered by the 2020 pandemic-driven oil price collapse, reversed those gains just as quickly. Understanding this volatility — and structuring your rental business to manage it rather than be whipsawed by it — is the defining challenge of being a landlord in Ector County.

Four Courts, One Building: Filing Correctly in Ector County

Ector County operates four JP courts, one per precinct, all housed at the Ector County Courthouse at 300 N. Grant, Room 208, in Odessa. The centralization of all four courts in a single building is operationally convenient for landlords — there is no driving to different parts of the county. However, the fundamental Texas rule still applies: evictions must be filed in the precinct where the rental property is located, and a wrong-precinct filing requires dismissal. Confirm your property’s precinct using the precinct maps at co.ector.tx.us before every filing.

One operational detail worth noting: Precinct 2 lists its office hours as Monday through Thursday only, while Precincts 1, 3, and 4 are open Monday through Friday. If you need to file an eviction for a Precinct 2 property or follow up with that court, plan your timeline around a four-day-per-week filing window. Contact the courts directly to confirm current hours, as these can change, and verify all current filing requirements given the major Texas eviction law changes that took effect January 1, 2026.

The Oil Cycle and Tenant Screening in Odessa

The most important tenant screening challenge unique to Ector County is the distinction between sustainable income and boom-cycle income. The Permian Basin produces three distinct types of oilfield worker income profiles, each carrying different risk characteristics for a landlord.

The first type is the direct employee of a major oil company or a large, established oilfield service company — an ExxonMobil completion engineer, a Schlumberger field supervisor, a Halliburton district manager. These workers have stable employment with benefits, predictable salaries, and strong credit profiles. They are excellent tenants whose income is relatively durable across moderate oil price swings because the major companies retain their permanent workforces through all but the most severe downturns. These tenants are the closest Ector County equivalent to a healthcare worker or government employee in stability terms.

The second type is the independent contractor or journeyman oilfield worker — a welder, a truck driver, a wireline operator, a mud engineer working through a staffing agency or on a self-employed basis. During boom cycles, these workers can earn extraordinary wages, sometimes $80,000–$150,000/year or more. During busts, their income can go to near zero when drilling activity stops and companies stop calling contractors. A landlord who bases a tenancy decision on boom-cycle contractor paychecks without evaluating the durability of that income is taking significant risk. For contractor tenants, review 12 months of bank statements and pay history rather than a single recent pay stub, look for evidence of sustained work history rather than a single recent spike, and consider requesting additional security deposit during boom periods as a hedge against the vacancy risk if the tenant leaves when a bust arrives.

The third type is the short-term boom worker — someone who has arrived in Odessa specifically to capitalize on a drilling surge, often from out of state, with no established ties to the community and no plan to remain if the boom fades. These workers are the highest-risk tenant category in the Permian Basin context. They may have excellent income at the time of application. They may also disappear within six months if rig counts drop, leaving behind a vacant unit, unpaid rent, and potentially significant damage from the compressed, intensive lifestyle of an oilfield boom camp. The shorter the initial lease term offered to this type of applicant, the lower your exposure when the cycle turns.

The Counter-Cyclical Tenant Pool

Odessa has a substantial employment base that is insulated from oil price fluctuations and provides a stable tenant pool regardless of what is happening in the Permian Basin at any given moment. The healthcare sector, anchored by Medical Center Hospital (the county’s largest employer) and a network of clinics, specialty practices, and long-term care facilities, employs thousands of workers whose incomes are not correlated with oil prices. A registered nurse or hospital administrator at Medical Center Hospital earns a stable salary in 2019 when oil is $70/barrel and in 2020 when it crashed to negative values — their employment is not affected by what is happening in the oil patch.

The University of Texas Permian Basin (UTPB) and Odessa College similarly provide stable educational employment that is not cyclically sensitive. UTPB has grown significantly in recent years and its faculty, staff, and administration represent a professional tenant pool with stable government-backed employment. For landlords who want to insulate their Ector County portfolio from boom-bust volatility, targeting properties near Medical Center Hospital, UTPB’s campus on University Boulevard, and Odessa College’s main campus provides access to a tenant pool that will reliably pay rent regardless of where oil prices are in the cycle.

Odessa’s Neighborhoods and Market Segments

Odessa’s rental geography divides roughly along a northwest-to-southeast axis, with newer, higher-end residential development concentrated in west and northwest Odessa (around the Westridge and Tanglewood areas near Loop 338) and older, more affordable housing stock in the central, east, and south portions of the city. The newer northwest Odessa neighborhoods attract the higher-income professional and management segment of the oilfield workforce, along with healthcare and education professionals, and command premium rents. Central and east Odessa, with older single-family homes and modest apartment complexes, serve the working-class and entry-level rental market at lower price points.

Downtown Odessa has experienced some revitalization activity, particularly around the Globe of the Great Southwest theater district and the areas near the Ellen Noël Art Museum. While not yet a strong urban rental market in the way that Lubbock’s downtown or Tyler’s historic districts are, downtown Odessa offers converted commercial-to-residential opportunities and some loft-style units that attract younger professional tenants interested in urban living.

Security Deposits and Boom-Cycle Documentation

At normal-cycle Odessa rent levels of $1,140–$1,149/month for a one-bedroom, security deposits typically run one month’s rent. During boom periods, when rents spike, deposits can be larger. Texas law sets no cap on deposit amounts but requires return with written itemized accounting within 30 days of surrender. The bad-faith penalty of $100 plus three times the withheld amount remains the same regardless of market cycle. In a market with high tenant turnover during busts — when oilfield workers leave quickly and may not leave forwarding addresses — having exhaustive move-in documentation with dated photographs is especially valuable. It allows you to process the deposit quickly and accurately without having to track down a tenant who has moved to the next boom somewhere else.

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. Confirm current procedures with the appropriate Ector County Justice of the Peace Court before filing. Evictions filed in the wrong precinct will be dismissed — verify your precinct at co.ector.tx.us 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 and may vary based on individual circumstances. Major changes to Texas eviction law took effect January 1, 2026. Ector County Precinct 2 may have limited office hours (Mon–Thu) — verify current hours before filing. Eviction cases filed in the wrong precinct will be dismissed — verify your precinct at co.ector.tx.us before filing. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.

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