Life Intelligence

Texas tenant rights: Your landlord must make repairs and here is the law that says so

Your landlord is ignoring repair requests? Texas law is on your side, but you need to follow the process exactly.

Texas Property Code 92.0561 — Landlord's Duty to Repair:

This is the key statute. It requires landlords to make a diligent effort to repair conditions that materially affect the physical health or safety of an ordinary tenant.

The process (follow this EXACTLY):

  1. Written notice. Send a repair request in writing. Certified mail, return receipt requested. Include:

    • Your name and address
    • Specific description of the problem
    • Date the problem started
    • Request for repair within a reasonable time
  2. Reasonable time. Texas law says a "reasonable time" — courts generally interpret this as 7 days for urgent issues (no hot water, no heat, sewage backup) and 30 days for non-urgent.

  3. If they don't repair: You have several remedies under 92.0563:

    • Repair and deduct: Hire someone to fix it and deduct the cost from rent (limits apply — must be under $500 or one month's rent, whichever is greater)
    • Terminate the lease: If the condition materially affects health/safety
    • Sue for damages: Actual damages, one month's rent + $500, court costs, and attorney's fees

What qualifies under 92.0561:

  • No hot water
  • No heat (in winter)
  • Sewage backup
  • Broken locks/security devices
  • Rodent/pest infestation
  • Mold affecting health
  • Structural issues affecting safety

What does NOT qualify:

  • Cosmetic issues
  • Minor inconveniences
  • Issues caused by the tenant

CRITICAL: You must be current on rent. If you're behind on rent, the repair remedy is weaker.

Sources:

  • Texas Property Code 92.0561, 92.0563 (landlord repair obligations)
  • Texas Property Code 92.056 (notice requirements)
  • Texas Tenant Advisor (texastenant.org) — free legal guides
  • Lone Star Legal Aid (lonestarlegal.org) — free legal help for qualifying tenants

Certified mail creates a paper trail. The paper trail wins in court.

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 3, 2026, 6:13 PM

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