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.
| 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) |
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.
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.
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.
No. Texas does not have a statewide rent cap, and state law preempts local rent-control ordinances — cities cannot enact their own.
There is no statutory limit. Increases are limited only by the lease and market demand.
Typically 30 days for month-to-month tenancies. The written lease governs for fixed-term tenancies.
Sources: Tex. Prop. Code § 91 & § 92 (Residential Tenancies). Last reviewed April 17, 2026. Informational only — not legal advice. Consult a licensed Texas attorney.