Scurry County, Texas Eviction Risk: Very Low
3 incorporated cities and unincorporated areas. The county Eviction Risk Score is held aloft by the city of Snyder (2.5) and a small number of dense urban cores. Rent-control coverage varies by city.
Ranked #236 of 254 TX counties
12k residents · 3 cities · 4 tracts
Scurry County eviction risk score history
Key metrics
-
Tenant beats landlord13.2%/ 100 outcomesIn court-decided eviction outcomes for Scurry County, TX, tenants prevail in roughly 13.2% of contested cases. A higher number means landlords face stronger tenant defenses and longer calendars.
-
Timeline24dfiling → judgmentFrom the moment an unlawful-detainer notice is filed in Scurry County, TX until a money judgment is entered, a contested eviction takes about 24 days on average. Longer timelines mean more lost rent for landlords.
-
Cost range$1.1–3.7klegal + lost rentA typical eviction in Scurry County, TX costs landlords $1,129 to $3,694 all-in, covering court filing fees, process-server costs, attorney time, and lost rent.
-
Average rent$1,03921% stretched on rentAverage gross rent in Scurry County, TX is $1,039 per month per the U.S. Census American Community Survey. 21% of renter households here spend more than 30% of pre-tax income on rent.
-
Renters28.0%of households28.0% of occupied housing units in Scurry County, TX are renter-occupied. A higher renter share usually correlates with more eviction filings and a more active rental market.
-
Poverty10.7%2.6% unemp.10.7% of Scurry County, TX residents live below the federal poverty line, and unemployment runs at 2.6%. Both feed the economic-stress sub-score in our Eviction Risk Score model.
Scrub 50 years
Scurry County's 2/10 eviction risk score reflects a Very Low-risk operating environment. Scores across the county's three cities range from 1.9 to 2.5, a narrow spread that signals consistent conditions rather than localized hotspots. Ranked 236th of 254 Texas counties (1 = highest risk). Scurry County falls in the lower-risk of the state, with 235 counties carrying higher eviction risk and only 18 scoring lower.
How Scurry County ranks in Texas
Landlord guides for Texas
| City↕ | Population↕ | Risk↕ | % income on rent↕ | Average rent↕ | Lean↕ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 001 | Snyder | 11,241 | 2.0 | 21.2% | $1,033 | Rep |
| 002 | Hermleigh | 473 | 2.5 | 19.7% | $1,229 | Rep |
| 003 | Fluvanna | 130 | 1.9 | 24.1% | $875 | Rep |
County heatmap
One county, multiple regulatory regimes.
Scurry County, Texas eviction laws earns an eviction risk score of 2/10 (Very Low), placing it 236th out of 254 counties statewide -- well into the lower-risk of Texas eviction laws by eviction pressure. With only 18 counties scoring lower and 235 carrying higher risk, landlords operating here face some of the lightest legal friction in the state. The county's roughly 11,844 residents are spread across three incorporated places, and about 28% of households rent rather than own -- a relatively low renter share that reflects the region's deep roots in owner-occupied ranch and oil-patch housing. Average gross rent runs $1,039 per month, and the average rent burden sits at 21.2%, meaning a typical renting household spends just over a fifth of its income on housing -- well below the 30% threshold that housing economists treat as financially stressed.
Within Scurry County, scores range from 1.9 to 2.5 across its three cities. Snyder -- the county seat and home to the overwhelming majority of the county's population at 11,241 residents -- scores 2/10, consistent with the countywide average. The county's highest-risk reading belongs to Hermleigh, a small community of 473 people located roughly 17 miles southeast of Snyder, which scores 2.5/10. Fluvanna, a crossroads community on the county's eastern edge with a population of about 130, carries the lowest score in the county at 1.9/10. The spread between 1.9 and 2.5 is narrow by Texas standards, signaling that conditions are fairly uniform across Scurry County rather than driven by a single outlier city. That consistency tends to reflect the absence of the densely populated urban submarkets that push risk higher in metro-adjacent counties.
Texas eviction laws law sets the baseline for every landlord operating in Scurry County. Under Tex. Prop. Code § 24.005, landlords must give just 3 days' written notice before filing for eviction in almost every scenario -- non-payment of rent, lease violations, end of term, and holdover situations alike. Unauthorized occupants may receive no notice period at all under Tex. Prop. Code § 24.011 as amended by SB-38. Court filing fees typically run $54 to $125, and sheriff's lockout fees add another $50 to $175. An uncontested eviction generally concludes in 21 to 30 days; even contested cases rarely exceed 45 to 90 days. Texas eviction laws carries no statewide rent cap and explicitly preempts local rent control under TX Local Gov Code § 214.902, so Scurry County cannot independently restrict rent increases regardless of local conditions. There is no just-cause eviction requirement in Texas eviction laws, and source-of-income protections -- which bar landlords from rejecting tenants on the basis of housing vouchers -- are likewise absent at the state level. The poverty rate in Scurry County runs about 10.7%, modestly below the Texas eviction laws statewide average, which contributes to the county's relatively contained eviction pressure.
Scurry County's 2/10 score reflects a landlord-friendly operating environment driven by Texas eviction laws's short 3-day notice requirements, no rent control, no just-cause eviction mandate, and streamlined courts. Low renter density (28% of households) and a below-average rent burden of 21.2% further limit the structural conditions that fuel high eviction filings in larger Texas eviction laws counties.
Historical eviction filings in Scurry County
From 2000 to 2018, eviction filings in Scurry County increased 113%. The peak was 51 filings in 2015.1
- 162000
- 51Peak (2015)
- 342018
Data covers 2000–2018, the full span of the Princeton Eviction Lab's national county court-records dataset.
How Scurry County compares
Scurry County's 2/10 sits below the Texas statewide average of 2.6/10 and below its nearest peer group -- counties like Pecos, Burleson, Andrews, Lamb, and Gaines, all of which score in a similarly low range but trend slightly above Scurry County. This places Scurry County among the least eviction-pressured jurisdictions in West Texas eviction laws, a pattern consistent with the region's sparse renter population, modest rent levels, and limited urban density. Counties in the Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston metro rings regularly score well above the state average, making Scurry County's Very Low rating especially notable in a state that otherwise ranges widely on this index.