Locked into a contract you want out of? Here are the legal tools.
General contract cancellation rights in Texas:
-
Three-day cooling off period (Texas Business & Commerce Code 601.052):
- Applies to door-to-door sales and certain in-person transactions
- 3 business days to cancel with full refund
- Must be exercised in writing
-
Material breach by the provider:
- If the other party fails to deliver what was promised, you can cancel for breach
- Document the breach in writing
- Cite the specific contract term being violated
-
Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA) — Texas Business & Commerce Code Chapter 17:
- If the company used false, misleading, or deceptive practices to get you to sign, the contract may be voidable
- DTPA allows for actual damages + up to 3x damages for knowing violations
Specific contracts:
Gym: Texas Health Spa Act (Occupations Code 702) — 3-day cancellation right, relocation cancellation, disability cancellation. See the full gym contract post.
Cell phone: FCC rules require carriers to unlock your phone after contract fulfillment. Early termination fees are legal but negotiable. Tip: call retention department, not customer service.
Cable/Internet: No specific Texas law limiting ETFs, but file with FCC (fcc.gov/consumers/guides/filing-informal-complaint) if the service isn't as advertised.
Timeshare: Texas Property Code 221.041 gives you 6 days (not 3) to cancel a timeshare purchase.
The universal strategy:
- Read the cancellation clause in your contract
- Follow it EXACTLY (certified mail if required)
- Document everything
- If they charge improper fees, dispute with your credit card (chargeback)
- File with TX AG for deceptive practices if applicable
Sources:
- Texas Business & Commerce Code 601.052 (cooling off)
- Texas DTPA (B&C Code Chapter 17)
- Texas Occupations Code 702 (Health Spa Act)
- Texas Property Code 221.041 (timeshare)
- FCC — informal complaint process
Read the cancellation clause BEFORE you sign. Not after.