Before you can sue a Texas business under the Deceptive Trade Practices Act, you have to send a demand letter at least 60 days before filing. Done right, the letter usually resolves the dispute. Done wrong, it''s legally useless.
What Texas law requires
Under DTPA § 17.505, the letter must:
- Identify the specific complaint in reasonable detail.
- State the economic damages being claimed.
- State attorney fees claimed, if any.
- Describe other relief being sought (refund, performance, etc.).
Send it by certified mail, return receipt requested. Keep the receipt. This is the single most important piece of administrative evidence in a later filing.
The anatomy of a good letter
Header: Your name, address, date, business name and address. "Sent via certified mail, return receipt requested."
Opening paragraph: "This letter serves as written notice under Texas Business and Commerce Code § 17.505. I am the consumer of goods and services provided by [business name] pursuant to a contract dated [date]."
Facts section: Bullet the facts cleanly.
- On [date], I contracted with you for [describe services] at a price of $[amount].
- On [date], I paid [amount] as a deposit.
- You failed to [specific failure].
- On [date], I attempted to resolve this by [steps taken].
Legal basis section: "Your conduct violates the DTPA, including but not limited to § 17.46(b)(5) [representations that goods or services have characteristics they do not have], § 17.46(b)(7) [representing goods or services of a particular standard when they are another], and § 17.46(b)(24) [failing to disclose information with intent to induce the transaction]."
Damages section: List every dollar. Contract price, replacement costs, consequential damages.
Relief demand: "I demand payment of $[total] within 60 days. If this amount is not paid, I will pursue all legal remedies, including treble damages and attorney fees under the DTPA."
Closing: Include your contact info. Sign and date.
Common mistakes that invalidate the letter
- Sending by regular mail (no proof of delivery).
- Skipping the specific statutory citations.
- Vague damage numbers ("around $3,000").
- Emotional language. Judges read these; so do opposing counsel.
- Demanding an unreasonable amount. Anchor to actual damages; treble damages are a court remedy, not a demand anchor.
What happens after you send it
- 30-day offer window: the vendor has the option to settle by offering an amount. If the offer equals or exceeds your actual damages, accepting it forecloses some claims.
- Most disputes resolve within 30–45 days of a properly-drafted letter, because the vendor''s carrier (if they have one) or their attorney will advise settlement.
When to hire an attorney to draft
If damages exceed $5,000 or the vendor has counsel, a $400–800 consumer-law attorney draft is usually worth it. Many take DTPA cases on contingency, meaning the fee is conditional on recovery.
Sources: Texas Business and Commerce Code § 17.505 — DTPA Notice, Texas Law Help — DTPA Guide, Texas State Law Library — DTPA Relief.