Tarrant County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Fort Worth, Arlington, and the DFW West
Tarrant County sits at the western end of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex and covers a rental landscape that ranges from gritty urban neighborhoods in East Fort Worth to affluent enclaves in Southlake and Colleyville where single-family rentals can command $3,500 a month or more. With approximately 2.1 million residents and a county that contains two of America’s largest cities — Fort Worth and Arlington — plus the Mid-Cities corridor connecting them, Tarrant County is the kind of market where a landlord can own a $900/month duplex in Haltom City and a $2,500/month home near TCU within the same county and face entirely different tenant profiles. Understanding both the legal framework and the submarket dynamics is how you stay profitable and out of trouble.
Eight Courts, One Per Precinct
One structural difference that sets Tarrant County apart from both Harris and Dallas County is its JP court system. Tarrant County has exactly 8 Justice of the Peace courts — one per precinct, no dual-place arrangement. This means there is one judge per geographic area, and all eviction filings for properties in that area go to that single court. The practical effect is that there is less ambiguity about where to file, but it also means that individual courts can develop a distinctive tempo and culture depending on the judge. Precinct 2 in Arlington, for example, processes over 15,000 case filings annually and is consistently described as one of the busiest justice courts in Texas. Understanding the specific court that handles your precinct is worth knowing before you ever have an issue.
To find your precinct, use the Tarrant County Address Directory at tarrantcountytx.gov — input your property address and you will be directed to the correct JP court. Once you have that, e-file your Petition for Eviction through efiletexas.gov. Most Tarrant County JP courts now strongly encourage or require e-filing for eviction petitions and follow-up filings. The exception at nearly every Tarrant County court is appeals, which must be filed in person. Note this before you plan to appeal a judgment — showing up intending to e-file an appeal will send you back to the start.
What Changed on January 1, 2026
Tarrant County landlords filing evictions in 2026 and beyond face two significant changes that took effect January 1 of that year. First, Tarrant County Constable and Sheriff service fees increased: citations are now $90 per defendant (up from prior rates) and Writs of Possession are now $180. These are real costs that factor into the total expense of an eviction proceeding — budget accordingly. Second, Texas statewide eviction law changed substantially as of that same date, affecting procedures and forms across all JP courts in the state. JP Court 1 in Fort Worth specifically flagged a new default judgment requirement: effective January 1, 2026, plaintiffs seeking a default judgment must provide the court, in writing, the defendant’s known email address and mailing address at or before the time judgment is signed (Rule 510.16(b)). Courts that do not receive this information may deny the default and dismiss the case. If you are relying on a default judgment, come prepared with that documentation.
Fort Worth’s Rental Landscape
Fort Worth is often described as the more authentically Texan of the two DFW anchor cities, and that identity carries into its rental market. The Near Southside neighborhood has transformed over the past decade into one of Fort Worth’s most active rental corridors, driven by healthcare employment at JPS Health Network and Cook Children’s Medical Center, proximity to TCU, and an independent restaurant and arts scene centered along Magnolia Avenue. Renters in this area tend to be young professionals and healthcare workers with stable incomes and a preference for urban walkability — a segment that typically makes for reliable tenants.
The Cultural District and Sundance Square downtown areas attract similar demographics, with slightly higher price points. West 7th Street and the Stockyards district command Fort Worth’s premium urban rents, particularly among tenants relocating from higher-cost metros who perceive Fort Worth as a relative value. East Fort Worth and Haltom City offer the county’s most affordable rental stock — one-bedrooms in the $800–$1,100 range — and serve a largely working-class tenant base with higher eviction filing rates relative to the rest of the county. Rigorous income verification and eviction history checks are particularly important in these submarkets.
Arlington: Where Sports Meets Student Housing
Arlington is Tarrant County’s second-largest city and one of the most unusual rental markets in Texas. It contains the University of Texas at Arlington (enrollment ~40,000), AT&T Stadium (home of the Dallas Cowboys), Globe Life Field (home of the Texas Rangers), and Six Flags Over Texas — all within a few miles of each other. This creates a tenant mix that includes students, sports and entertainment industry workers, hospitality employees, and suburban families, often in the same zip code. Arlington has no public transit system connecting it to the rest of DFW, which means tenants are entirely car-dependent and proximity to employers, stadiums, and the university shapes demand significantly.
For landlords near UTA, student leases require planning around the academic calendar. Students typically move in August and sign 12-month leases, but summer vacancy can be a real issue in units specifically marketed to students. Screen co-signers carefully — parents or guardians signing as co-signers for students often have no actual knowledge of the tenant’s behavior. Require co-signers to complete a full application and credit check. For units near the entertainment district, anticipate higher turnover from hospitality workers whose employment can shift with seasonal event calendars and venue changes.
The Mid-Cities and Affluent Northern Tier
The HEB corridor — Hurst, Euless, and Bedford — sits in the geographic center of the county and serves as the backbone of the Mid-Cities rental market. These communities attract families priced out of Southlake and Colleyville but still seeking access to the respected Grapevine-Colleyville and Hurst-Euless-Bedford school districts. Rents in the Mid-Cities typically run $1,300–$1,900 for single-family homes. Tenants here tend toward longer lease terms and lower turnover than in the urban Fort Worth submarkets.
Southlake, Colleyville, and Keller represent the county’s luxury rental tier, where corporate relocatees, executives, and dual-income professional households seek high-end SFH rentals while they evaluate whether to purchase in the area. Rents range from $2,500 to $5,000+ depending on size and school district. Tenants in this segment rarely have eviction history but can walk away from a lease if a purchase opportunity arises — include a buyout clause or adequate notice-to-vacate provisions in your lease if you want downside protection.
Security Deposits and What Gets Landlords in Trouble
Texas has no cap on security deposit amounts in Tarrant County or elsewhere. The deposit must be returned with a written, itemized accounting of any deductions within 30 days of the tenant surrendering possession. Normal wear and tear — faded paint, minor carpet wear, small scuffs — is not deductible. If you hold a deposit in bad faith, the tenant can recover $100 plus three times the wrongfully withheld amount plus attorney’s fees. After 30 days without an accounting, the law presumes bad faith, shifting the burden entirely to the landlord. Set a calendar reminder: the clock starts the day the tenant surrenders keys, not the day the lease technically ends.
Late fees are another common source of disputes. Under Section 92.019, late fees must be spelled out in the written lease, cannot be charged until rent is two full days past due, and are capped at 12% of monthly rent for structures with four or fewer units (10% for five or more). Landlords operating apartment complexes in Arlington or Fort Worth who charge a flat $150 late fee on a $1,000/month unit are technically in compliance at 15% — but they are over the 10% cap for a 5+ unit building and exposed to the treble damages penalty. Know your structure’s unit count and set fees accordingly.
This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant law in Texas changed significantly on January 1, 2026. Consult a licensed Texas attorney or contact the appropriate Tarrant County Justice of the Peace Court for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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