
Texas Rent Increase Laws (2026)
Texas has NO statewide rent control. Increases limited only by lease terms and federal/local fair-housing law.
Statute: Tex. Prop. Code (no specific cap)
Stop tracking rent increase laws by hand
Proprietio handles rent increase laws automatically — deadlines, notices, and state-aware lease terms built into rent collection, leases, and maintenance. One flat plan, all features included.
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No statewide cap
Texas Property Code does not regulate rent increase amounts. Landlords can raise rent any amount at lease renewal.
Notice requirements
For month-to-month tenancies: 30 days written notice. For fixed-term leases: increase only at renewal, with notice per lease terms (typically 30-60 days).
Local rent control
Texas law preempts city rent control. No Texas city has enforceable rent control ordinances as of 2026.
Discrimination limits
Increases targeted at protected classes (race, religion, etc.) violate federal Fair Housing Act regardless of state silence.
Stop tracking Texas notice rules manually.
Proprietio handles Texas month-to-month rent changes automatically. Tex. Prop. Code § 91.001 notice, every time.
- Confirms Texas has no statewide rent-control cap
- Computes the 30-day notice required for month-to-month per Tex. Prop. Code § 91.001
- Tracks any local pre-emption or municipal rules
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