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Rent Control in Texas

No statewide cap — state law prohibits local rent control

Texas does not have a statewide rent cap, and Texas state law expressly preempts local rent control — meaning Texas cities, counties, and other political subdivisions are prohibited by state statute from enacting rent-stabilization or rent-control ordinances of their own. Any city-level ordinance purporting to cap residential rent in Texas is unenforceable as a matter of law. The preemption is codified in Tex. Prop. Code § 91 & § 92 (Residential Tenancies) and has been consistently upheld by Texas appellate courts.

Practically, this means a Texas residential landlord may raise rent at the end of a lease term by any amount the market will bear, subject only to three limits: (1) proper written notice of the rent increase — typically 30 days for a month-to-month tenancy, or whatever the lease provides for a fixed-term renewal; (2) anti-discrimination law — a rent increase that targets a protected class or is intended to drive out voucher-holders (Section 8 / housing-choice voucher program) can still be challenged under federal Fair Housing Act and Texas fair-housing law; and (3) anti-retaliation law — a sharp rent increase shortly after the tenant complains about habitability, contacts a code-enforcement agency, or organizes with other tenants can be presumed retaliatory. Preemption does not bar Texas localities from regulating related issues such as just-cause termination, source-of-income discrimination, habitability standards, security-deposit rules, tenant relocation assistance, or rent-registration — always verify the local ordinance before treating a Texas rental as completely unregulated.

Statewide Rules at a Glance

Annual rent increase cap No statewide cap
Just cause required for eviction No
Local rent control allowed? No — preempted by state law TX Local Gov Code §214.902 (state preempts local rent control)

Cap Details & Local Ordinances

Texas Preempts Local Rent Control

Texas state law expressly prohibits Texas cities, counties, and other political subdivisions from enacting rent-control or rent-stabilization ordinances, codified at Tex. Prop. Code § 91 & § 92 (Residential Tenancies). Any Texas city-level ordinance purporting to limit residential rent on private market-rate units is unenforceable as a matter of Texas law. The preemption has been consistently upheld by Texas appellate courts and has been in force for decades in most cases.

Practical Meaning for Texas Landlords

A Texas landlord may raise the rent on a residential unit by any amount at the end of a lease term or on a month-to-month tenancy, subject only to three limits: (1) proper written notice of the increase — typically 30 days for a month-to-month tenancy, or whatever the lease provides for renewal of a fixed-term lease; (2) compliance with federal and Texas fair-housing law — a rent increase targeted at a protected class (race, color, religion, sex, national origin, familial status, disability, and additional Texas state classes) or at voucher-holders in jurisdictions that protect source of income is actionable; and (3) compliance with Texas anti-retaliation law — a rent increase issued within 6 months after a tenant code complaint, habitability report, fair-housing contact, or tenant-organizing activity is presumed retaliatory and the landlord must rebut with a documented non-retaliatory business reason.

What Texas Preemption Does Not Block

Preemption of rent control does not bar Texas localities from regulating other aspects of the residential landlord-tenant relationship. Texas cities remain free to enact local just-cause termination ordinances, source-of-income discrimination rules, security-deposit interest requirements, stricter habitability and code-enforcement standards, mandatory tenant relocation assistance, eviction-filing moratoria, landlord-registration requirements, and rent-registry programs. Before treating a Texas rental as wholly unregulated, always check the current municipal code in the Texas city or county where the property is located for non-rent ordinances that still apply.

Cities with Local Rent Control in Texas

No cities. Texas law forbids municipalities from enacting local rent control.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Texas have rent control?

No. Texas does not have a statewide rent cap, and state law preempts local rent-control ordinances — cities cannot enact their own.

How much can a Texas landlord raise rent?

There is no statutory limit. Increases are limited only by the lease and market demand.

How much notice must a Texas landlord give for a rent increase?

Typically 30 days for month-to-month tenancies. The written lease governs for fixed-term tenancies.

Other Guides for Texas

Rent Control in Other States

Sources: Tex. Prop. Code § 91 & § 92 (Residential Tenancies). Last reviewed April 17, 2026. Informational only — not legal advice. Consult a licensed Texas attorney.