Randall County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in Canyon, South Amarillo, and the Texas Panhandle
Randall County is one of the most geographically and economically distinctive counties in the Texas rental landscape. Its county seat, Canyon, is a small university town of around 14,000 residents anchored by West Texas A&M University and one of the most visited state parks in Texas — Palo Duro Canyon, the second-largest canyon system in the United States. But the county’s rental market is dominated numerically not by Canyon but by the vast south Amarillo residential suburbs that extend southward from Interstate 40 across the Potter–Randall County line. The Amarillo metropolitan area’s residential geography straddles two counties, and understanding which county a specific Amarillo address falls in is the single most operationally important geographic fact for any landlord with properties in the metro.
Randall County’s rental market is among the most affordable in Texas and in the United States. Average one-bedroom apartment rents in the Amarillo metro — including the south Amarillo portions of Randall County — run approximately $838–$929/month, figures that represent roughly 40–50% below the national average. For investors seeking affordable acquisition prices, sustainable cash flow without dependence on boom-cycle demand, and a stable working-class and professional tenant base, the Amarillo MSA and its Randall County portions offer genuine value in a state where most major rental markets have become significantly more expensive.
Three Courts, Two Precincts: The Randall County JP Structure
Randall County operates three Justice of the Peace courts across two precincts. Precinct 1 serves Canyon and the rural areas of the county from a courthouse at 501 16th Street, Suite 307, in Canyon — the historic county seat and home of West Texas A&M University. Judge J. Tracy Byrd has presided over Precinct 1, which handles evictions for Canyon-area rental properties and rural county addresses outside the Amarillo metro.
Precinct 4 is unusual among Texas county JP structures in operating two distinct courts at the same address. Both the elected Precinct 4 court and the appointed Precinct 4A court are located at 4320 S. Western Avenue in south Amarillo — the elected court in Suite 102 and the appointed court in Suite 104. Both courts serve the south Amarillo portions of Randall County and are available to handle evictions for rental properties in that area. Landlords with properties in south Amarillo that fall within Randall County should confirm which of the two Precinct 4 courts their specific case should be filed in by contacting the courts directly.
As with all Texas counties, filing an eviction in the wrong precinct — or in this case, the wrong county entirely — requires mandatory dismissal. Randall County’s website at randallcounty.gov provides a street-and-zip-code index that allows landlords to look up the JP precinct for specific addresses within the county. Use this tool before every filing, not just once, as boundary knowledge can change and street-level confirmation matters in a county that includes portions of a city (Amarillo) that spans two counties.
The Amarillo Potter–Randall Split: The Most Critical Filing Consideration
Amarillo’s split between Potter County (north, including the city’s downtown, historic core, and business district) and Randall County (south, including large residential suburbs developed from the 1950s through the present) is not always intuitive from a street-level perspective. Interstate 40, the historic Route 66 corridor that runs east-west through the city, serves as a rough geographic marker: most of Amarillo north of I-40 is in Potter County, and most of Amarillo south of I-40 is in Randall County. But this is not a universal rule — there are areas near the county line that do not follow this pattern cleanly, and a landlord should never rely on general geographic intuition rather than confirmed address-level verification.
A landlord with a rental property on a south Amarillo street who files an eviction in Potter County JP courts is filing in the wrong county, and the case will be dismissed. That dismissal requires the landlord to serve the notice process again from scratch, adding weeks to the eviction timeline and additional filing fees. The reverse situation — a north Amarillo property filed in Randall County — produces the same result. Before filing any eviction for an Amarillo property, confirm the county through the Randall County address index, the Potter County appraisal district records at prad.org, or by checking the property tax statement which will clearly identify the county. Once county is confirmed, confirm the precinct within that county.
Canyon and West Texas A&M: The University Town Market
Canyon is a small city with an outsized rental demand relative to its size, driven entirely by West Texas A&M University and the students, faculty, and staff it attracts. WTAMU enrolls approximately 10,000+ students, and the City of Canyon has a population of roughly 14,000 — meaning the university’s enrollment is nearly equal to the city’s total population, and the share of residents who are students or university-affiliated is extraordinarily high. This demographic concentration creates a rental market with characteristics that are similar in kind (though smaller in scale) to markets like College Station or San Marcos: intense demand during the academic year, concentrated turnover in May and August, and a large share of tenants who are students living away from home for the first time.
For landlords in Canyon, the practical implications are familiar: require guarantor agreements for all student tenants, structure leases on the August–July academic cycle, price for the academic-year demand rather than the slower summer market, and invest in durable finishes and fixtures that can withstand the elevated wear-and-tear of student occupancy. Canyon’s rental inventory is relatively small compared to the university’s enrollment, and well-maintained off-campus properties in good locations near the WTAMU campus hold their occupancy reliably. The Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum, the county’s other major attraction, does not generate significant rental demand, but the presence of a major museum facility contributes to Canyon’s stable cultural and institutional character.
South Amarillo: The County’s Residential Core
The south Amarillo neighborhoods within Randall County constitute the county’s largest rental population center. These are primarily post-World War II suburban residential neighborhoods — ranch-style single-family homes, garden apartment complexes from the 1970s and 1980s, and newer developments from the 1990s through the 2010s that pushed the city’s residential footprint further south and southwest. The tenant demographic in south Amarillo reflects Amarillo’s working-class and middle-class employment base: meatpacking workers (Tyson Foods is the area’s largest employer), healthcare workers from Baptist St. Anthony Hospital and Northwest Texas Healthcare System, retail and service industry employees, and skilled tradespeople.
Amarillo’s major employers are headquartered or primarily located in the Potter County portion of the city, but many employees live in the south Amarillo suburbs of Randall County for the same reasons suburban growth happens everywhere: lower housing costs, newer construction, larger lots, and specific school district access. Randall County properties near the major south Amarillo shopping corridors (S. Western Avenue, Bell Street, Coulter Street) and near the Amarillo Independent School District’s south campuses tend to have the strongest and most consistent rental demand.
Palo Duro Canyon and Tourism-Adjacent Opportunities
Palo Duro Canyon State Park, located in the southeastern portion of Randall County, is one of the most spectacular natural features in Texas and one of the state park system’s most-visited destinations. The canyon’s dramatic red and ochre geology, its extensive hiking and biking trail system, and its famous summer outdoor musical production — TEXAS, performed in the canyon’s natural amphitheater — attract hundreds of thousands of visitors annually. For landlords with properties in the rural southeastern portions of Randall County or in the small resort communities of Lake Tanglewood and Timbercreek Canyon, proximity to Palo Duro creates genuine STR opportunity during the park’s peak seasons (spring and summer) that conventional long-term rental cannot match on a per-night basis.
Security deposits in Randall County typically run one month’s rent — approximately $838–$929 in south Amarillo, somewhat less in Canyon’s more affordable off-campus market. Texas law requires return with itemized accounting within 30 days of surrender. The bad-faith penalty applies at the same level regardless of how affordable the market is. Document unit conditions thoroughly with dated photos at both move-in and move-out, process deposits promptly, and send accounting by certified mail within the window. In Canyon’s student market, where families and parents are often closely involved in lease and deposit matters, meticulous documentation is especially valuable.
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 Randall County Justice of the Peace Court before filing. Amarillo straddles the Potter–Randall County line — verify your property’s county before filing any eviction, as filing in the wrong county will result in dismissal. Verify your precinct at randallcounty.gov before filing. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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