Hays County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in San Marcos, Kyle, Buda, and One of America’s Fastest-Growing Counties
Hays County is running one of the most remarkable growth stories in American real estate. For several consecutive years leading up to 2025, it ranked among the fastest-growing large counties in the United States, driven by its position at the geographic and economic midpoint of the Austin–San Antonio I-35 corridor, its inclusion in the Austin metropolitan area, and the powerful demographic currents that have pushed hundreds of thousands of people southward from Travis County in search of more affordable housing while maintaining access to Austin’s job market. The result has been a county that barely resembles what it was two decades ago: Kyle has grown from a small town of fewer than 5,000 people in 2000 to a city approaching 80,000 today. Buda has followed a similar trajectory. Even San Marcos, already the county’s established population center as home of Texas State University, has seen sustained growth pressure.
For landlords, this growth context is both an opportunity and an operational challenge. A county that is adding tens of thousands of residents per year is a county with consistent new demand for rental housing. But a county growing this fast is also a county where precinct boundaries, court structures, and market conditions change frequently. Understanding Hays County as a landlord requires understanding not just where it is today but where it has been going — and being prepared to verify facts that may have changed since any reference source was last updated.
Seven Courts, Five Precincts: A Court System Adapting to Explosive Growth
Hays County’s JP court structure is a direct reflection of its growth story. The county operates seven Justice of the Peace courts across five precincts. Precinct 1, serving San Marcos, has long carried two courts (Place 1 and Place 2) given the university-driven population density. Precinct 2, serving Kyle and the central I-35 corridor, added its second court — Place 2 — in August 2023, appointed specifically because the volume of civil and criminal cases generated by Kyle’s population surge had outpaced the capacity of a single court. Precinct 3 serves the Wimberley area from an office in Wimberley. Precinct 4 serves the Dripping Springs area from an office on Roger Hanks Parkway. Precinct 5 serves Buda from 500 Jack C. Hays Trail.
The mandatory eviction-precinct rule applies here as everywhere in Texas: file in the wrong precinct and the case is dismissed. In a rapidly growing county like Hays, the practical challenge is that address-to-precinct mappings can change as the county grows and as precinct boundaries are redrawn to accommodate new development. A property in far north Kyle that was firmly in one precinct in 2021 may be in a redrawn precinct today. Use the official JP & Constable Precinct Map at hayscountytx.gov to confirm your property’s precinct before every eviction filing, not just the first time.
San Marcos and Texas State: The University Market
San Marcos is one of the most renter-dominated cities of its size in Texas. With approximately 70% of households renting, the city’s housing economy is overwhelmingly structured around Texas State University and its approximately 38,000 students. San Marcos is the most affordable city in the Austin metro area by median rent, which makes it accessible for investors and attractive for students who cannot afford Austin’s price levels. One-bedroom apartment rents in San Marcos average $1,120–$1,171/month, a level that remains far below what comparable units fetch in Austin proper.
The student rental market in San Marcos has the same structural characteristics as other large Texas university towns. The academic calendar dominates the lease cycle. Peak demand for the following fall arrives in spring, with most leases signed between January and April for August move-ins. Summer occupancy is lower, and landlords should plan for the summer gap as a regular feature of the San Marcos market rather than an anomaly. Guaranteed income through the academic year is strong; summer is where cash-flow-focused investors either accept a gap, sublet flexibly, or price annual leases to absorb it.
Guarantor requirements are essential in the San Marcos student market. Any tenant whose income is primarily parental support, student loans, or part-time work should be required to execute a written guarantor agreement signed simultaneously with the lease. The guarantor should be screened for creditworthiness and income with the same rigor as a principal tenant. San Marcos’s proximity to Austin also means some tenants are recent graduates or young professionals in early career stages whose income documentation is clean but thin — these tenants may not need a guarantor if their income meets the three-times-rent standard, but any whose income falls below that threshold should have co-signer support regardless of age or perceived stability.
Kyle and Buda: The Austin Overflow Market
Kyle and Buda represent a fundamentally different rental market from San Marcos. These are Austin commuter suburbs — communities that have grown explosively because they sit within 30 minutes of downtown Austin (in normal traffic; considerably longer during peak I-35 congestion) and offer housing prices and rents that are meaningfully lower than Travis County equivalents. The tenant demographic in Kyle and Buda is not students or Hill Country lifestyle seekers; it is working adults — tech workers, healthcare professionals, government employees, and skilled tradespeople — who commute to Austin or work for the growing number of employers who have located in the I-35 corridor itself.
For landlords, Kyle and Buda offer a more professionally oriented tenant pool than San Marcos, with stronger income profiles and generally lower turnover than the student market. Rents in Kyle and Buda run higher than San Marcos — one-bedroom units in newer Kyle complexes can reach $1,400–$1,600/month — reflecting the premium that Austin commuters are willing to pay for quality housing in a convenient I-35 location. The tradeoff is that Kyle and Buda have seen enormous new apartment construction over the past five years, and competition from newly delivered complexes with amenity packages and move-in specials is real. Older rental stock in Kyle and Buda needs to compete on price, condition, or both.
One practical note for evictions in Kyle: the city now generates enough caseload to support two JP courts, both at the same physical location on FM 2770. When filing an eviction for a Kyle-area property, confirm which of the two Precinct 2 courts (Place 1 or Place 2) handles your specific address. Both courts share the same building, but they are distinct courts with separate dockets, and filing in the wrong Place could complicate your case even within the correct precinct.
Wimberley and Dripping Springs: The Hill Country Premium Market
The western portion of Hays County — Wimberley, Dripping Springs, Driftwood, and the surrounding Hill Country communities — operates as a distinct luxury and lifestyle market that has almost nothing in common with the student housing of San Marcos or the commuter suburbs of Kyle. These communities attract a demographic of higher-income Austin exurbanites, remote workers, retirees, winery and agricultural tourism entrepreneurs, and weekend or seasonal residents. Dripping Springs in particular has emerged as one of the most sought-after residential communities in the greater Austin area, combining Hill Country scenery, good schools (Dripping Springs ISD), proximity to Austin, and a distinctive community character built around craft beverages, outdoor recreation, and rural aesthetics.
Rental housing in Wimberley and Dripping Springs commands premium prices relative to the rest of Hays County, and the STR market is active and financially significant. Properties positioned for weekend Hill Country tourism — vacation cabins, boutique guest houses, properties with pools or Hill Country views — can generate substantial STR income that significantly exceeds conventional long-term rental rates. However, both cities have adopted or are developing STR regulations in response to the growth of platforms like Airbnb and VRBO, and operating a non-compliant STR in these communities can result in fines and enforcement action. Verify current city and county STR requirements before investing in properties primarily intended for short-term rental operation in western Hays County.
Security Deposits Across Hays County’s Varied Market
Security deposit practices in Hays County vary by submarket. In San Marcos’s student market, where one-bedroom rents average $1,120–$1,171, deposits typically run one month’s rent — approximately $1,100–$1,200. In Kyle and Buda, where rents and the professional tenant pool are both stronger, deposits may run 1 to 1.5 months’ rent. In the Hill Country premium market, deposits can be higher still given the higher rents and greater damage potential of some property types.
Regardless of submarket, Texas law is uniform: return the deposit with written itemized accounting within 30 days of surrender, or face a bad-faith penalty of $100 plus three times the withheld amount plus attorney’s fees. In San Marcos, where student tenants are often legally aware and parent-supported, deposit disputes are common. Document unit conditions exhaustively at move-in and move-out, conduct inspections the day of surrender, and mail accounting by certified mail well within the deadline. The photography habit is worth building into every lease cycle — courts in Hays County see enough student-market deposit disputes that clean documentation is a meaningful competitive advantage in any contested case.
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 Hays County Justice of the Peace Court before filing. Evictions filed in the wrong precinct will be dismissed — verify your precinct at hayscountytx.gov before filing. Hays County is growing rapidly and precinct boundaries may have changed since any reference was last updated. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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