Webb County Texas Landlord-Tenant Law: Renting in Laredo and the Nation’s Largest Inland Port
Webb County is unlike any other rental market in Texas, and the reason can be stated simply: geography. Laredo sits on the Rio Grande at the southern terminus of Interstate 35, the most important overland trade corridor in North America, at the precise point where American commerce meets Mexico. The Port of Laredo is the largest inland port in the United States by trade value, processing hundreds of billions of dollars in binational commerce annually through four vehicle bridges and one rail bridge. That infrastructure is the foundation of everything in this market — who lives here, who rents here, what they earn, and what they need from a landlord. To operate effectively as a landlord in Webb County, you have to understand Laredo’s economy, its demographics, and the practices that serve this distinctly binational community.
Average one-bedroom apartment rents in Laredo run approximately $966–$992/month — affordable by Texas standards and well below the national average. The market is stable and consistently occupied, underpinned by a large and permanent federal workforce, a robust trade and logistics sector, healthcare employment, and the organic demographic growth of one of the youngest median-age large counties in the United States. Webb County’s median age is approximately 30 years, and nearly 49% of households include children under 18 — a family-oriented market that sustains strong demand for two- and three-bedroom rental homes and apartments.
Webb County’s JP Court Structure
Webb County operates five JP courts across four precincts. Precinct 1 has two courts — Place 1 and Place 2 — both at 1110 Victoria Street in downtown Laredo, reflecting the high population and caseload density of central Laredo. Precinct 2 has two courts (Place 1 and Place 2) handling portions of the county’s civil caseload. Precinct 3 serves its area with a single court. Precinct 4 operates from 8501 San Dario Avenue in northwest Laredo, serving the rapidly growing northern and western portions of the city that have expanded along Loop 20 and the Mines Road corridor in recent decades.
As with all Texas counties, an eviction filed in the wrong precinct must be dismissed. Laredo’s growth has pushed in multiple directions simultaneously, and properties in newer northwest Laredo neighborhoods may be in a different precinct from older central Laredo properties. Use the Webb County precinct lookup at webbcountytx.gov to verify your property’s precinct before every filing. A single avoided wrong-precinct dismissal will repay this verification step many times over in time and fees.
The Federal Workforce: Laredo’s Most Stable Tenant Pool
U.S. Customs and Border Protection is the single largest employer in the Laredo metropolitan area, with more than 3,000 employees dedicated to the Port of Laredo alone. The broader federal law enforcement presence includes Border Patrol agents and officers from multiple other federal agencies with border security missions. Together, these federal employees represent a tenant demographic that is, from a landlord’s perspective, close to ideal: fixed, verifiable income documented on federal Leave and Earnings Statements; stable employment with low involuntary termination risk; and long-term tenure in the area, since federal assignments to border ports tend to last multiple years or longer.
Verification for federal employees is straightforward: request a recent LES or official pay stub, confirm gross monthly income, and calculate the standard rent-to-income ratio. Federal employees generally qualify easily at Laredo rent levels. The primary practical challenge in this segment is competition — other landlords are equally aware of the quality of this demographic. Properties that are well-maintained, appropriately priced, and located with a reasonable commute to the bridge approaches and federal facilities will have a natural competitive advantage.
Trade, Logistics, and Cross-Border Income Screening
Beyond the federal workforce, Laredo’s economy is built on international trade, freight brokerage, customs operations, warehousing, and logistics. The city has developed one of the largest concentrations of international trade infrastructure in the country, with distribution warehouses, customs brokerages, trucking companies, and freight forwarders clustered along the I-35 corridor and near the bridge approaches. The workforce in this sector is large, varied in income levels, and often includes self-employed entrepreneurs operating in cross-border commerce.
Tenant screening in the trade sector requires flexibility in income documentation. A significant portion of Laredo renters earn income from self-employment, family-owned import/export businesses, or commission-based roles in freight brokerage — none of which generate traditional pay stubs. For these applicants, bank statements showing 12 months of consistent deposit history are the most reliable income verification tool. Look for stable monthly deposit totals that meet your income threshold consistently over the full year, not just in peak months. Apply whatever verification standard you set consistently to all applicants regardless of income source or nationality.
The Bilingual Market: Operating Effectively in a Spanish-Dominant County
Webb County is one of the most linguistically homogeneous large counties in the United States. Approximately 95% of the population identifies as Hispanic, and a substantial majority of Laredo residents conduct daily life primarily or exclusively in Spanish. For landlords, this creates both a practical obligation and a competitive advantage. The obligation: written lease communications should be in a language the tenant can actually read and understand. The advantage: a landlord who operates effectively in Laredo’s bilingual environment — using Spanish-language documents, communicating comfortably in the community’s primary language — will attract better tenants, experience fewer disputes, and maintain stronger relationships than one who treats the language barrier as the tenant’s problem.
Texas provides Spanish-language forms for eviction filings and Notice to Vacate through the JP courts. Using them is not legally required, but failing to use them in a predominantly Spanish-speaking market creates unnecessary exposure: a tenant who claims they never understood what they signed is a more difficult eviction case than one who signed a lease in their primary language. Bilingual lease forms should include all substantive terms with both English and Spanish versions, with the Spanish version clearly marked as a translation.
Texas A&M International and the Student Rental Segment
Texas A&M International University (TAMIU), located in northern Laredo along Loop 20, contributes a student rental segment to the market that is smaller in absolute volume than the federal and trade sectors but creates distinct seasonal demand patterns. With enrollment of approximately 8,000 students, TAMIU generates consistent off-campus housing demand in the neighborhoods surrounding the campus along the San Dario and Loop 20 corridors in Precinct 4. Landlords in this area should plan for academic-calendar lease cycles — peak demand in July and August for fall move-ins, higher vacancy risk in May and December at academic year transitions — and should require co-signers for student applicants without independent income history.
Colonia Communities and Housing Obligations
Webb County includes colonia communities along the Rio Grande, including the incorporated cities of El Cenizo and Rio Bravo, which developed as residential subdivisions without adequate water, sewer, or road infrastructure. Colonia properties present distinct legal obligations for landlords. Texas has specific frameworks governing utility service, habitability, and seller-financed transactions in colonia settings. Landlords acquiring or operating property in Webb County’s colonia communities should verify that all utility connections are legal and functional before placing tenants, and should consult a licensed Texas attorney familiar with colonia housing law before leasing or entering into seller-financed land contracts in these areas.
South Texas Heat and HVAC as a Life-Safety Obligation
Laredo’s climate is among the hottest in the continental United States. Summer high temperatures regularly reach and exceed 100°F, with extended heat waves that make functioning air conditioning a life-safety issue rather than an amenity. Under the Texas Property Code, landlords are required to repair conditions that materially affect the health or safety of an ordinary tenant, and a non-functioning A/C unit in a Laredo summer clearly meets that threshold. Landlords in Webb County should service HVAC units before the summer season begins, respond to cooling failures as emergency repairs, and budget for HVAC replacement on a cycle appropriate to the extreme operational demands of the South Texas climate. A tenant who submits a written request for A/C repair and does not receive a timely response has statutory remedies under Texas law that can result in lease termination or repair-and-deduct rights. Proactive HVAC maintenance is substantially cheaper than the alternatives.
Security Deposits and Documentation
At Laredo rent levels of roughly $966–$992/month for a one-bedroom, security deposits typically run $900–$1,000. Texas requires the return of the deposit with written itemized accounting within 30 days of the tenant surrendering possession. The bad-faith penalty — $100 plus three times the wrongfully withheld amount, plus attorney’s fees — means a retained $1,000 deposit can generate $3,100 in statutory liability before legal fees. Document the unit’s condition with dated photographs at move-in and move-out, have the tenant sign a move-in condition checklist, and send the accounting by certified mail well within the deadline. In a tight-knit community like Laredo where professional reputation travels within a relatively contained market, operating with consistent fairness and clear documentation protects not just your legal exposure but your long-term standing as a landlord.
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 Webb County Justice of the Peace Court before filing. Evictions filed in the wrong precinct will be dismissed — verify your precinct at webbcountytx.gov before filing. Consult a licensed Texas attorney for specific guidance. Last updated: March 2026.
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