Nueces County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Corpus Christi, the Coast, and a Nine-Court System
Nueces County sits at the geographic heart of the Texas Gulf Coast, where Corpus Christi Bay meets the Laguna Madre and the open Gulf. The county’s economy has always been shaped by its maritime geography: the Port of Corpus Christi is among the busiest in the United States by tonnage, handling petrochemical exports, liquefied natural gas, grain, and manufactured goods with equal facility. Naval Air Station Corpus Christi and its associated installations have trained naval aviators for generations and represent one of the largest military footprints on the Texas Gulf Coast. Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi Independent School District, and a robust healthcare sector anchored by Christus Spohn Health System and Bay Area Medical Center round out an employment base that is unusually diversified for a mid-sized coastal Texas city. For landlords, this diversity — petrochemical, military, academic, healthcare, tourism — produces a tenant population that spans a wide range of income levels, employment stability, and housing preferences.
Nine Courts, Five Precincts — Know Yours Before You File
Nueces County operates 9 JP courts across 5 precincts. Precinct 1 has three places (1-1, 1-2, 1-3), all serving different geographic portions of Corpus Christi; Precinct 2 has two places (2-1, 2-2) covering the Southside and the Padre Island Drive corridor; Precinct 3 is a single court in Bishop serving the western agricultural corridor; Precinct 4 is a single court in Port Aransas serving the barrier island; and Precinct 5 has two places (5-1 in Robstown, 5-2 in Agua Dulce) serving the western and southwestern county.
For landlords with property inside Corpus Christi proper, the practical question of which Precinct 1 or Precinct 2 court to use depends entirely on the property’s geographic location within the city. Corpus Christi is a large city that spans three separate Precinct 1 courts and two Precinct 2 courts. Use the Nueces County precinct map at nuecesco.com to verify your specific property’s court before filing any eviction. Filing in the wrong court means dismissal, delay, and refiling fees.
Nueces County JP courts also maintain and publish local rules in addition to the statewide Texas Rules of Civil Procedure for Justice Courts. These local rules govern procedural specifics including evidence submission, hearing schedules, and virtual hearing eligibility. Review the current local rules at nuecesco.com before your first eviction filing in any Nueces County court, particularly following the January 1, 2026 statewide eviction law changes.
Military Tenants and SCRA Compliance
Naval Air Station Corpus Christi is one of the most consequential facts of life for Nueces County landlords. NAS Corpus Christi trains naval aviators and is home to a significant active duty population that cycles through training commands, operational squadrons, and support billets. The nearby Corpus Christi Army Depot adds additional military employment. Together, military personnel and their families represent a material fraction of the Corpus Christi rental market, particularly in neighborhoods near Flour Bluff (the community immediately adjacent to NAS Corpus Christi) and the Southside.
The federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) and Texas Property Code § 92.017 give active duty military tenants specific rights that override standard Texas landlord-tenant law in several important respects. Most practically for landlords: active duty servicemembers can terminate a lease with 30 days’ written notice upon receiving deployment, PCS (Permanent Change of Station), or certain other military orders — regardless of what your lease says about early termination penalties. You cannot charge a termination fee, keep the deposit for early departure, or evict a servicemember who has properly exercised SCRA rights.
Before issuing a Notice to Vacate to any tenant you believe may be on active duty, verify their military status through the Department of Defense’s SCRA search tool at scra.dmdc.osd.mil. Nueces County JP courts require a Military Status Affidavit be filed with every eviction petition — this is not optional and failure to file it correctly is a procedural defect that can delay or void your case. The SCRA applies to all branches of service and extends certain protections to the servicemember’s dependents as well.
Corpus Christi’s Coastal Rental Market
Average one-bedroom rents in Corpus Christi run approximately $999–$1,040/month, with the most affordable neighborhoods in the northwest and Calallen areas and premium pricing along the Bayfront, North Beach, Mustang-Padre Island, and the Marina Arts District where one-bedroom apartments can reach $1,457–$1,530/month. The market is broadly stable — rents are approximately flat year-over-year as of early 2026 — with demand anchored by the steady employment base rather than speculative growth. Approximately 42% of Corpus Christi households are renters, a relatively high rate for a mid-sized Texas city, which reflects both the cost of homeownership in a coastal market and the transient nature of military and academic tenant populations.
The petrochemical and industrial sector generates well-compensated shift workers who are often excellent rental tenants — steady income, predictable schedules, often single or in small households. Port of Corpus Christi employees, Corpus Christi Army Depot civilian workers, and refinery and LNG terminal employees in the Taft-Gregory-Sinton corridor (just outside Nueces County in San Patricio County) all contribute to the regional tenant pool.
TAMUCC, Students, and the Southside Market
Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi, situated on Ward Island in Corpus Christi Bay, enrolls approximately 12,000 students and drives significant rental demand in the Southside and South Padre Island Drive corridor — the territory primarily served by Precinct 2 courts. The TAMUCC student rental market follows predictable patterns: high summer vacancy, fall lease-up, and a tenant base that is often younger, may rely on financial aid income rather than employment income, and benefits from co-signer guarantees from parents. If you own property marketed to students, require co-signers for tenants without verifiable employment income, and set explicit policies for occupancy limits, noise, and subletting in your lease. TAMUCC’s enrollment growth over the past decade has been consistent and provides a reliable demand base for well-located Southside properties.
Port Aransas: Island Rules
Precinct 4 covers Port Aransas on Mustang Island, one of the most popular beach resort destinations on the Texas Gulf Coast. The JP court for this territory is based at 705 W. Avenue A in Port Aransas under Judge Duncan Neblett Jr. Port Aransas has an active short-term rental market — the city has regulated STRs with permitting requirements — and a year-round residential market that is much smaller. Long-term residential rentals on the Island command premium prices relative to the Corpus Christi mainland given waterfront access and amenity proximity, but come with real hurricane risk. Properties on Mustang Island are potentially exposed to Category 4+ storm surge in a major hurricane. Verify FEMA flood zone status, obtain adequate wind and flood insurance, and be transparent with tenants about hurricane evacuation protocols. The Texas coast from Port Aransas to the Valley is in an active hurricane corridor — these are not theoretical risks.
Security Deposits and Proper Procedure
Texas law imposes no cap on the security deposit amount. At Corpus Christi’s market rates, a standard one-month deposit of ~$1,000 is the baseline for most landlords; higher amounts are common for single-family rentals and premium coastal units. The 30-day return deadline runs from the date the tenant surrenders possession. Photograph the unit thoroughly at move-out, document every deduction with receipts, and send the itemized accounting by certified mail. The triple-damages penalty for bad-faith withholding creates real exposure even at Corpus Christi’s moderate rent levels. Proper documentation on every turnover is the only reliable defense.
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. Verify your JP court precinct at nuecesco.com before filing any eviction. Landlords with military tenants must comply with the federal SCRA and Texas Prop. Code § 92.017 — consult an attorney before proceeding with any eviction of a potential active duty servicemember. STR operators in Port Aransas and Corpus Christi should verify current city regulations. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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