Jefferson County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in Beaumont, Port Arthur, and the Golden Triangle
Jefferson County sits in the heart of Southeast Texas’s “Golden Triangle” — the industrial and refinery corridor formed by Beaumont, Port Arthur, and Orange that has been the backbone of American petroleum refining for more than a century. It is a region with deep industrial roots, a distinctive Gulf Coast culture, and a rental market that operates by its own logic: shaped not by tech migration or suburban Houston overflow, but by the rhythms of the refining industry, the healthcare sector, and the working-class communities that have built their lives around some of the most economically significant industrial infrastructure in the country. For landlords who understand that context, Jefferson County offers affordable entry points, consistent occupancy demand, and a tenant population that, at its best, is among the most stable and long-tenured in Texas.
Average one-bedroom apartment rents in Beaumont run approximately $865–$965/month, well below the Texas statewide average and roughly half the cost of comparable units in Austin. The county’s overall cost of living is significantly lower than most Texas metro areas, driven in large part by affordable housing and land costs. For an investor seeking yield in a stable, low-competition market, the Jefferson County numbers are compelling. The challenge, as we will discuss below, is that this market requires a thorough understanding of its particular risks — above all, its exposure to hurricanes and flooding, and its sensitivity to industrial sector cycles.
Navigating Jefferson County’s Unusual JP Court Structure
Jefferson County’s JP court structure is one of the more unusual in Texas and deserves careful attention before any landlord files an eviction. The county operates seven JP courts across six active precincts numbered 1 (with Place 1 and Place 2), 2, 4, 6, 7, and 8. There are no Precincts 3 or 5 in the current active structure — a legacy of historical redistricting that can cause confusion for landlords who assume the numbering is sequential. Filing your eviction in the wrong precinct requires mandatory dismissal under Texas law, so verifying your property’s precinct before filing is non-negotiable.
Geographically, the precincts divide roughly as follows: Precinct 1 (two courts, both at 1085 Pearl Street in Beaumont) covers central and north Beaumont; Precinct 2 covers the Port Arthur area including the Lakeshore Drive courthouse; Precinct 4 serves the Mid-County area including Nederland; Precinct 6 covers another portion of Beaumont from a Pearl Street location; Precinct 7 covers South Beaumont from a Viterbo Road office; and Precinct 8 serves the Port Arthur area from the Lakeshore Drive location. Because Beaumont alone is served by courts from three different precincts (1, 6, and 7), a landlord who owns multiple properties in Beaumont may need to file in different courts depending on which part of the city the property is located in. Use the Jefferson County JP precinct map at jeffersonelections.com to confirm the precinct for each specific property address before every filing.
The Refinery Economy: What It Means for Tenant Screening
Jefferson County’s economy is dominated by petroleum refining and petrochemical manufacturing in a way that is true of almost no other county in Texas. Port Arthur is home to some of the largest oil refineries in the United States, including facilities that process hundreds of thousands of barrels per day. Beaumont’s industrial base includes multiple major refineries, chemical plants, and the Port of Beaumont, one of the nation’s top-ten ports by cargo tonnage. This concentration of industrial employment creates a tenant pool that is, in aggregate, well-paid and employment-stable during normal market conditions — but also cyclically vulnerable in ways that less industrially concentrated markets are not.
The petrochemical industry operates in cycles, and Jefferson County has experienced downturns that hit the rental market hard. When refineries cut contractor workforces, conduct extended turnarounds, or respond to drops in energy prices with layoffs, the effect on local rental demand can be swift and significant. A landlord who has filled a portfolio of properties with refinery contractors on short-term assignments will find vacancy rates spike when a major plant shuts down for an extended turnaround or reduces its contract workforce. The more resilient segment of the industrial tenant pool is the direct-hire workforce — employees of the refineries and chemical plants themselves rather than contract workers — who tend to have more stable employment and longer tenure in the region.
Tenant screening in Jefferson County should account for this cyclicality. Verify the type of employment (direct hire vs. contractor), the employer’s track record in the region, and whether the tenant’s income is tied to a single plant or diversified across multiple employers. Request at least 12 months of pay history rather than relying on a single recent pay stub, which may reflect peak contractor earnings that do not represent typical income. For tenants employed by the larger integrated energy companies with permanent presences in Jefferson County, the employment risk profile is considerably lower than for contract workers tied to project-based work.
Hurricane Harvey and the Flood Reality of Southeast Texas
No discussion of Jefferson County’s rental market is complete without addressing its most significant structural risk: flooding. Southeast Texas is one of the most flood-prone regions in the United States, and Jefferson County has been directly impacted by multiple catastrophic storms in the past two decades. Hurricane Rita in 2005 caused widespread evacuations and damage across the county. Ike in 2008 brought storm surge that devastated coastal and low-lying communities. Harvey in 2017 delivered historic rainfall that flooded tens of thousands of structures across Southeast Texas, including many properties in Beaumont, Port Arthur, and surrounding communities that had never flooded before.
The implications for landlords are profound and extend across multiple dimensions. From a property management standpoint, flood exposure must be understood at the property-specific level before purchase or rental. FEMA flood zone maps are a starting point, but Harvey demonstrated that properties in Zone X (outside the designated flood plain) flooded extensively across Jefferson County. Landlords should research the specific flood history of any property they own or are considering acquiring — this means checking with the local floodplain administrator, reviewing prior insurance claims history, and physically inspecting the property for signs of prior water intrusion. Properties that have flooded multiple times carry ongoing structural and mold risk that affects both habitability and long-term value.
From a lease and disclosure standpoint, Texas does not mandate flood disclosure in residential lease agreements the way it does in purchase contracts. However, the failure to disclose known flood history to a prospective tenant creates significant legal exposure. A tenant who discovers after moving in that the property flooded in prior storms — and that the landlord knew — has a potentially viable claim for fraudulent concealment and constructive eviction. The defensible and ethical approach is disclosure: inform prospective tenants of any known flood history, provide the FEMA flood zone designation for the property, and strongly encourage them to obtain renter’s insurance that includes flood coverage. National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) flood insurance for renters is available and relatively inexpensive, and a tenant with flood coverage is a less likely source of dispute in the aftermath of a storm.
Beaumont’s Healthcare and Professional Sector
Beyond the industrial economy, Beaumont has developed a significant healthcare sector that provides an important counterweight to the cyclicality of the refining industry. Baptist Hospitals of Southeast Texas, Christus St. Elizabeth Hospital, and the supporting network of clinics, medical offices, and long-term care facilities employ thousands of healthcare workers who represent a premium tenant demographic: steady income, consistent employment, strong credit profiles, and low-risk occupancy patterns. Beaumont is also home to Lamar University, a regional state university with approximately 16,000 students, which generates demand for off-campus student housing and creates a third segment of the rental market alongside the industrial and healthcare worker populations.
Landlords who concentrate on the healthcare corridor and the Lamar University area benefit from a more diversified tenant base that is less exposed to the boom-bust cycles of the petrochemical industry. The tradeoff is that rents in these areas can be more competitive and the units may require more maintenance to attract quality tenants who have options. Properties in the West End and North Outer Jefferson neighborhoods, which tend to be newer and command higher rents, attract professional and healthcare tenants who expect property quality to match the price.
Mid-County: Nederland, Groves, and Port Neches
The Mid-County communities of Nederland, Groves, and Port Neches occupy a specific niche in the Jefferson County rental market that is worth understanding separately from Beaumont and Port Arthur. These three small cities, clustered between Beaumont and Port Arthur along the SH-347 corridor, have historically been the preferred residential destination for industrial workers and their families who want a quieter, more suburban lifestyle within commuting distance of both the Beaumont and Port Arthur plant complexes. School quality in these communities, particularly in Nederland and Port Neches-Groves ISD, is generally considered superior to Beaumont and Port Arthur ISDs, which drives strong family tenant demand for single-family rental homes in these communities.
Mid-County rental properties tend to generate lower turnover, fewer lease violations, and more stable payment histories than comparable properties in Beaumont proper or Port Arthur. The tenant demographic skews toward established working-class and lower-middle-class families with children who are committed to the area for school reasons. For a landlord focused on long-term, low-maintenance tenancies rather than maximum rent optimization, Mid-County properties in Jefferson County are worth serious consideration.
Security Deposits in Jefferson County
At Jefferson County rent levels of $865–$965/month for a one-bedroom, security deposits typically run $800–$1,000. Texas law requires the return of the deposit with written itemized accounting within 30 days of tenant surrender. The bad-faith retention penalty — $100 plus three times the wrongfully withheld amount, plus attorney’s fees — makes careful deposit handling a financial imperative. Document every deduction with receipts or written estimates, perform the move-out inspection promptly, and mail the accounting by certified mail within the statutory window. Given Jefferson County’s flood exposure, move-out inspections should also specifically document water-related damage versus pre-existing conditions, particularly in properties that have experienced flooding in the past.
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 Jefferson County Justice of the Peace Court before filing. Evictions filed in the wrong precinct will be dismissed — verify your precinct at jeffersonelections.com before filing. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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