How much notice is required to raise the rent in Texas?

Verified July 7, 2026 All Texas topics →

Texas has no statute requiring a specific notice period for rent increases; for month-to-month tenancies the practical rule comes from the termination statute — a month-to-month tenancy can be ended with a month's notice, so an increase is effectively a month's-notice proposition the tenant can accept or leave on.

There is no rent control anywhere in Texas, and state law bars cities from enacting it outside declared-disaster conditions.

Texas rent increase notice at a glance

Notice — month-to-month No rent-increase statute — notice derives from tenancy-termination rules (see summary)
Varies by increase size Not addressed by statute
Fixed-term leases Rent is fixed for the lease term unless the lease provides otherwise; increases take effect at renewal.
Statewide rent control / stabilization No
Rent control details No statewide rent control; local rent control is effectively prohibited except in narrow disaster circumstances with gubernatorial approval (Tex. Local Gov't Code § 214.902).
Local rent control preempted Yes
Frequency limits Not addressed by statute

Notes and caveats

notice_days_month_to_month null: derived from § 91.001 termination mechanics (notice equal to at least one month for month-to-month), not a rent-increase statute. Page copy must explain the derivation.

Statute citations

How this record was verified: Web verification against the Texas State Law Library landlord-tenant guides (guides.sll.texas.gov, official state source summarizing Prop. Code ch. 92) and full statute text of Prop. Code §§ 92.019, 92.103, 92.104, 92.107, 92.109 via legal databases; statutes.capitol.texas.gov URLs cited for the official text.