Travis County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in Austin’s Boom-and-Correction Market
Austin is one of the most discussed rental markets in America, and for good reason. Between 2020 and 2022, rents in the city increased by more than 40% — a pace that ranked among the fastest rent growth of any major metropolitan area in the country. Then, starting in 2023, a tidal wave of new multifamily construction hit the market. By early 2026, the average one-bedroom rent in Austin had retreated to approximately $1,398–$1,623, down meaningfully from its peak. Downtown Austin — which saw a 7.66% rent increase in a single year — remains at stratospheric levels averaging $2,883 for a one-bedroom, but the broader market has given landlords and tenants alike a chance to recalibrate. Understanding where this market has come from, and where it is now, is essential context for any landlord operating in Travis County.
The Legal Framework: What Austin Cannot Do
Despite Austin’s progressive political reputation, the legal framework governing landlord-tenant relationships in Travis County is entirely set by the state of Texas — and Texas is one of the most landlord-friendly states in the nation. Rent control is preempted by state law, meaning Austin cannot cap rent increases regardless of how fast the market moves. Just-cause eviction requirements do not exist at the state or local level, meaning landlords may decline to renew a lease for any reason or no reason at all, provided proper notice is given. There is no mandatory cooling-off period, no relocation assistance ordinance, and no city-level tenant protection that goes beyond what the Texas Property Code already provides.
That said, Austin’s tenant population is unusually well-educated and legally sophisticated. Over 53% of Austin renters hold a bachelor’s degree or higher — the highest share of any major Texas city. Tenant advocacy organizations are active here, and tenants in Austin are more likely than in most Texas markets to know their rights, respond to eviction notices with legal counsel, or file counterclaims for security deposit violations or habitability failures. The practical implication: sloppy landlord practices that might go unchallenged in smaller Texas markets can generate real legal exposure in Austin. Run your operation by the book.
Five Courts Across a Fast-Growing County
Travis County operates 5 Justice of the Peace courts, one per precinct. The four judges confirmed as of early 2026 are: Hon. Yvonne M. Williams (Pct. 1), Hon. Randall Slagle (Pct. 2), Hon. Sylvia Holmes (Pct. 3), and Hon. Raúl Arturo González (Pct. 4). Eviction cases must be filed in the precinct where the rental property is located — not where the landlord lives or where the tenant lives. Use the Travis County GIS precinct map at traviscountytx.gov/maps/gis-jp-constable to confirm your precinct before filing a single document. Filing in the wrong precinct means starting over.
The filing process begins with e-filing through efiletexas.gov or through the court’s designated email address. A court date is set automatically at the time of filing and appears on the defendant’s citation — you do not have to separately request a hearing. The Writ of Possession fee in Travis County is $205, payable to the JP court, to authorize the Travis County Constable to physically execute the writ and remove the tenant and their belongings. This fee is distinct from the initial filing fee and only comes into play after you have a judgment and the tenant has not vacated voluntarily during the 5-day appeal period.
One Travis County procedural note worth knowing: Precinct 1 operates by appointment only — walk-up customers will be rescheduled if an opening is not available. Call (512) 854-7700 or email jp1@traviscountytx.gov before arriving. This is different from most other Texas JP courts where you can walk in during business hours.
The Appeal: When Tenants Fight Back
In Travis County more than almost anywhere else in Texas, landlords should plan for the possibility of a tenant appeal. Either party has 5 days after a JP judgment to appeal. If the tenant appeals and posts one month’s rent within those 5 days, they are entitled to remain in possession of the property while the case moves to County Court at Law — which operates on a much slower docket than JP court. A contested eviction that you thought would be resolved in 3 weeks can stretch to several months once an appeal enters the picture.
Austin’s tenant advocacy organizations — including Austin Tenants Council — actively help tenants understand and exercise this right. The city’s well-educated tenant base and the availability of free or low-cost legal help means contested evictions in Travis County require more preparation than in less legally active markets. Have your lease, all written notices with delivery documentation, payment records, and any relevant communications organized and ready. A default in presentation at the JP level can follow you into the County Court appeal.
Understanding Austin’s Rental Correction
The most important market dynamic for Travis County landlords to understand heading into 2026 is the structural shift in supply. Austin permitted and delivered more multifamily units per capita between 2022 and 2025 than virtually any other major American city. The Texas capital added tens of thousands of apartment units in a short window, and the market is still absorbing that supply. The practical result is that vacancy rates have risen, concessions (free month’s rent, waived fees, move-in specials) are common in the new construction segment, and renters in 2025–2026 have more options and more negotiating power than at any point since 2020.
For landlords, this means that the days of automatic rent increases at renewal — common from 2020 to 2022 — have been replaced by a more competitive renewal environment, particularly in the middle market of $1,200–$1,800/month apartments where new supply has been most concentrated. Landlords who want to retain good tenants in this environment need to be proactive about maintenance, responsive to repair requests (which Texas law already requires), and realistic about where their unit prices relative to comparable inventory that is now available on the open market.
At the same time, construction starts dropped sharply in 2024 as financing costs rose and developers pulled back. This pipeline reduction means the supply glut is likely temporary — the structural demand drivers that made Austin a magnet for migration (tech jobs, UT Austin, state government, lower cost than California and Northeast metros, no state income tax) have not changed. The current correction is a market pause, not a market reversal.
Austin’s Submarkets: A Tour by Precinct
Travis County’s rental geography has more internal variation than any other county in this top-15 list. The difference between a studio in East Riverside at $954/month and a one-bedroom in the Seaholm District at $4,581/month is not just price — it represents entirely different tenant profiles, risk environments, and operating strategies.
Downtown and the Inner Urban Core (Rainey Street, Seaholm, 2nd Street District, Clarksville, West Campus): These are the highest-rent, highest-turnover submarkets in the county. Tenants are disproportionately young professionals in tech, finance, consulting, and the creative industries. Many are recent transplants from higher-cost metros who view Austin as a relative value. Churn is high — 18 to 24-month tenancies are typical before a job change, life event, or purchase opportunity moves a tenant on. Screen rigorously for income-to-rent ratios since this is the Austin segment most exposed to tech layoffs.
East Austin and the Mueller District: A decade of gentrification has transformed East Austin from one of the city’s most affordable areas to one of its trendiest, though pockets of affordability remain. Mueller — the master-planned redevelopment of the old Austin airport — has a stable mixed-income tenant base with strong demand from UT faculty, hospital staff, and established professional families. East Austin’s creative corridor along 6th Street attracts tenants who skew younger and more mobile.
South Congress, South Lamar, Bouldin Creek: Some of Austin’s most desirable urban neighborhoods with a strong local identity. Tenants here tend to be long-term Austinites or committed newcomers who specifically chose the neighborhood. Lower turnover than the downtown core. One-bedrooms run $1,300–$1,900. These neighborhoods have seen significant price appreciation over the past decade and remain competitive even after the broader market correction.
East Riverside and Oltorf: The most affordable urban submarket in Austin, running $900–$1,100 for one-bedrooms. Heavily University of Texas student-adjacent, with a large population of service industry workers and lower-income households. This corridor has the highest eviction filing rates in the county and the oldest multifamily housing stock in the city. Landlords operating here benefit enormously from consistent, well-documented screening standards and written leases that are specific about every charge and policy. Verbal agreements and informal arrangements are litigation exposure in this submarket.
North Austin (North Loop, Hyde Park, North Lamar, Allandale): Established residential neighborhoods with a mixed tenant base of long-term Austin residents, UT faculty and graduate students, and working families. Hyde Park in particular is one of the city’s most stable rental submarkets. Rents run $1,100–$1,600 for one-bedrooms. Tenants in these neighborhoods tend to care about property condition and are more likely to request repairs formally — a good thing from a legal compliance standpoint, since it keeps the communication trail clean.
West Lake Hills, Rollingwood, Bee Cave, Lakeway: The wealthy western corridor along Lake Austin and the Hill Country edge. Single-family rental homes in these communities can run $2,500–$6,000+ and serve a tenant base of corporate relocatees, senior executives, and high-net-worth households temporarily renting while they evaluate Austin real estate purchases. Tenants in this segment have the means to litigate and the time to do it — make sure your lease is professionally drafted, your security deposit accounting is immaculate, and your maintenance response times are fast.
Short-Term Rentals: Austin’s Regulatory Patchwork
Austin has one of the most active short-term rental regulatory environments in Texas. If you operate or are considering operating a short-term rental (Airbnb, VRBO, or similar) in Austin, the City of Austin Development Services Department requires registration and has restrictions on the type and location of STR properties, particularly for Type 2 STRs (owner-absent rentals). This regulatory framework has been an active area of policy development and may have changed since this page was last updated. Always check the current requirements at austintexas.gov/department/short-term-rentals before listing a property on a short-term platform in Travis County.
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. Consult a licensed Texas attorney or contact the appropriate Travis County Justice of the Peace Court for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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