Harris County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: A Complete Guide for Houston-Area Rental Owners
Harris County is not just the biggest rental market in Texas — it is one of the largest and most economically complex rental markets in the entire United States. With roughly 4.8 million residents, a renter-occupancy rate approaching 58% in the City of Houston, and a metropolitan economy driven by energy, healthcare, aerospace, and international trade, the county presents a range of landlord-tenant dynamics that no single zip code can fully represent. Understanding the legal framework that governs residential tenancies here — and the practical realities of the local court system — is essential for anyone operating rental property in the greater Houston area.
Texas Governs: What the State Says and the County Cannot Change
Texas is a strongly preemptive state when it comes to landlord-tenant law. Chapter 92 of the Texas Property Code governs virtually all aspects of residential tenancy statewide, and Harris County — including the City of Houston — cannot enact local ordinances that contradict or expand upon it in most areas. The most important consequence of this for landlords is that rent control is permanently off the table. Texas law prohibits municipalities from enacting rent stabilization ordinances, which means that regardless of how tight the Houston rental market becomes, landlords retain full discretion over rental pricing at the time of lease renewal.
The Texas Property Code also sets the security deposit rules that apply countywide. There is no cap on the deposit amount — landlords may charge whatever the market will bear. The deposit must be returned, with a written itemized accounting of any deductions, within 30 days of the tenant surrendering possession of the property (§ 92.103). The landlord may not deduct for normal wear and tear. If the landlord retains all or part of the deposit in bad faith, the tenant can recover $100 plus three times the amount wrongfully withheld plus attorney’s fees (§ 92.109). A landlord who fails to return the deposit or provide an accounting within 30 days is presumed to have acted in bad faith — a presumption that is difficult to rebut in court.
The Eviction Process in Harris County: 16 Courts, One Precinct at a Time
Harris County’s eviction infrastructure is unlike anything else in Texas. The county operates 16 Justice of the Peace courts spread across 8 geographic precincts, each with a Place 1 and Place 2 court. Texas law requires that an eviction (called a “forcible detainer” action) be filed in the JP court for the precinct in which the rental property is physically located (§ 24.004, Texas Property Code). This is not optional — filing in the wrong precinct will get your case dismissed. Before you file, confirm your precinct using the Harris County JP Courts website at jp.hctx.net.
The process begins before you ever walk into a courthouse. Under Texas law, you must first serve the tenant with a written Notice to Vacate. For nonpayment of rent, the statutory minimum is 3 days (though many leases specify a longer period — always check what your lease says). For other lease violations, 3 days is also the standard unless your lease provides more. For month-to-month tenancies with no written lease provision, the notice period mirrors the rent payment period, typically one month. The notice must be delivered in person to the tenant, to someone over 16 at the premises, or posted on the interior of the main entry door. Many experienced Houston landlords also mail a copy via certified mail to create a paper trail.
After the notice period expires without compliance, you file a sworn Petition for Eviction with the appropriate JP court. Filing fees run approximately $120 to $175 depending on the precinct. The constable for that precinct will serve the citation on the tenant, adding a service fee. The court will schedule a hearing, typically 10 to 21 days after filing. Both parties appear before the Justice of the Peace, who renders a judgment. If you prevail and the tenant does not appeal within five days, you can request a Writ of Possession from the court, which authorizes the Harris County Constable to physically remove the tenant and their belongings. The median case length in Harris County was 24 days from filing to judgment in 2024 according to Texas Housers, making it one of the faster large-county eviction systems in the state.
One important procedural note: major changes to Texas eviction law take effect January 1, 2026. If you are reading this after that date, confirm current procedures directly with your JP court before filing. The Harris County JP Courts website posts updated guidance as changes take effect.
The Eviction Diversion Program: A Tool Landlords Should Know
Harris County and the City of Houston jointly operate an eviction diversion program that offers qualifying tenants up to 18 months of rental assistance. Each of the 16 JP courts has a unique QR code for enrollment. From a landlord’s perspective, this program is worth understanding because it can result in you receiving past-due rent you might otherwise never collect through a judgment. Participation is voluntary on the landlord’s side, and the landlord must agree to program terms, but for a tenant who is genuinely experiencing temporary hardship, it can be a faster path to resolution than a contested hearing. Judges Steve Duble (Pct. 1) and Dolores Lozano have been particularly active in connecting litigants to the program. Harris County’s Eviction Defense Program also provides qualifying tenants with free legal representation — something landlords in contested cases should factor into their expectations.
Navigating Houston’s Rental Submarkets
Houston’s rental market is not one market — it is dozens of distinct submarkets layered on top of each other across a sprawling county with no zoning. That absence of traditional zoning means Houston’s neighborhoods have developed in sometimes unexpected ways, and rental property values can shift dramatically within a few blocks. Understanding which submarket your property sits in shapes how you price, screen, and retain tenants.
The Inner Loop — the area inside Loop 610 — contains some of Houston’s most competitive rental submarkets. Montrose, Midtown, The Heights, Museum District, and the area around Rice University command rents in the $1,500 to $2,500+ range for one-bedroom units and attract a largely professional, college-educated tenant base. Turnover tends to be tied to job mobility and life stage transitions rather than financial distress. The Texas Medical Center, which employs more than 100,000 people and sees thousands of medical students and residents rotating through annually, generates one of the most reliable rental demand pools in the country. Medical Center-area landlords benefit from a tenant base with income guarantees (residents are salaried) but should build lease structures that account for the 1-, 2-, and 3-year training cycles.
The Energy Corridor along Interstate 10 West is home to dozens of major oil, gas, and engineering companies and generates strong demand for mid-to-upper tier rental housing. However, this submarket is sensitive to energy industry cycles — when oil prices drop and companies announce layoffs, vacancy rates in the corridor can spike quickly. Landlords in Katy, Memorial, and the Energy Corridor should maintain healthy cash reserves and screen for employment stability (at least 12–18 months with current employer) rather than relying solely on current income multiples.
The industrial and petrochemical suburbs east and southeast of Houston — Pasadena, Baytown, Deer Park, La Porte, and Channelview — have a different tenant profile entirely. Workers in refinery, chemical, and port operations can earn strong wages, but income is often hourly with overtime that varies season to season. Use annual W-2 earnings rather than recent pay stubs as your primary income verification tool when screening in these communities. The southeast Houston corridor also has some of the highest eviction filing rates in the county, so thorough screening upfront reduces your exposure significantly.
The northwest suburbs — Spring, Cypress, Tomball, and The Woodlands area (just north of Harris into Montgomery County) — are among the fastest-growing residential corridors in the country. These markets attract families drawn by exemplary school districts including Klein, Cypress-Fairbanks, and Tomball ISDs. Tenants in these markets tend toward longer lease terms and lower turnover. Single-family rental homes here command $1,600 to $2,400/month depending on size and school district, and the tenant profile heavily skews toward dual-income households with children. Screen for lease duration preference — families who specifically want a particular school district are likely to renew rather than move.
Late Fees, Lockouts, and Things Landlords Get Wrong
A few areas of Texas law catch Houston landlords off guard regularly. First, late fees. You cannot charge a late fee unless it is in the written lease, and you cannot charge it until the rent has been unpaid for two full days after the due date (§ 92.019). The fee must be “reasonable,” which Texas defines as no more than 12% of the monthly rent for 1–4 unit properties or 10% for 5+ unit properties. If you charge more than this and the tenant contests it, you’re looking at $100 plus three times the excessive fee plus their attorney’s fees. Make sure your lease language is specific and your fee is within the statutory cap.
Second, lockouts and utility cutoffs. Texas law is specific and punishing on both. A landlord may not cut off a tenant’s utilities or remove doors, windows, or locks to force a tenant out (§§ 92.008, 92.0081). If you lock out a tenant for rent delinquency, you must have that right specifically reserved in the lease, provide advance written notice, and make a key available 24 hours a day — regardless of whether the tenant has paid the back rent. Violating these provisions exposes the landlord to one month’s rent plus $1,000 in civil penalties plus actual damages and attorney’s fees. In Harris County’s active tenant advocacy environment, these violations are taken seriously.
Third, firearms. Texas law prohibits landlords from including lease clauses that prohibit tenants from lawfully possessing, carrying, or storing firearms or ammunition in their rental unit or in a vehicle in the provided parking area (§ 92.026). Any such lease clause is void by statute. Houston-area landlords operating large multifamily properties sometimes include such language inadvertently — review your lease template to ensure it does not contain a firearms prohibition.
This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Texas landlord-tenant law is subject to change, including significant statutory changes effective January 1, 2026. Consult a licensed Texas attorney or contact the appropriate Harris County Justice of the Peace Court for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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