Security Deposit Demand Letter: Texas

A formal demand letter citing Texas Property Code §92.103 often gets results before court. Learn what to include and how our tool generates a personalized letter for your Texas claim.

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Law verified March 11, 2026

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Why a Demand Letter Works

A formal demand letter citing Texas Property Code §92.103 demonstrates that you know your rights and are prepared to enforce them. Most landlords comply once they receive a legally specific letter, especially one that calculates the potential 3x penalty they face.

Sending a demand letter before court is also viewed favorably by Texas judges. It shows you made a good-faith attempt to resolve the dispute. In some jurisdictions, a pre-filing demand letter may be required before certain remedies are available.

What Your Texas Demand Letter Must Include

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    Your full name and the rental address

    Identify yourself and the property clearly so there is no ambiguity.

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    Move-out date

    State your move-out date clearly; this is when the 30-day clock started under Texas Property Code §92.103.

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    Statutory deadline cite: Texas Property Code §92.103

    Reference the specific statute. This signals to your landlord that you know the law and are serious.

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    Amount owed + potential 3x penalty

    Calculate both the deposit amount and the potential 3x penalty under Property Code §92.109(a). Make the cost of non-compliance explicit.

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    Response deadline (14 days is standard)

    Give your landlord a clear deadline to respond. 14 days is standard: long enough to be reasonable, short enough to move quickly if they don't comply.

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    Statement of intent to file in small claims

    State clearly that you will file in Texas small claims court (up to $20,000) if the demand is not met. Many landlords settle to avoid court.

Generate Your Texas Demand Letter

Our $19 package generates a personalized demand letter referencing Texas Property Code §92.103, your specific facts, and the exact penalty calculation. Landlords take letters that cite specific statutes and amounts far more seriously than generic templates.

Generate My Demand Letter ($19)

Legal Reference

Wear & Tear Protected
Primary StatuteTexas Property Code §92.103
Penalty StatuteProperty Code §92.109(a)
Small Claims Limit$20,000
Statute of Limitations2 years

Questions

Common questions answered.

Your Texas landlord has 30 days after your move-out date to return your security deposit along with an itemized statement of any deductions. This deadline is set by Texas Property Code §92.103.

If your landlord misses the 30-day deadline, you may be entitled to up to 3× the amount wrongfully withheld under Property Code §92.109(a). The penalty applies when your landlord acted in bad faith.

No. Texas law under Texas Property Code §92.103 explicitly prohibits landlords from deducting for normal wear and tear. This includes faded paint, minor scuffs, small nail holes, and carpet thinning from regular use. Deductions must be for actual damage beyond what normal living causes.

Your demand letter should: (1) state your name and the rental address, (2) identify the move-out date, (3) state that the 30-day deadline has passed under Texas Property Code §92.103, (4) specify the deposit amount owed plus any penalty up to 3x the withheld amount, and (5) set a response deadline (typically 14 days).

Yes. Sending a demand letter before filing demonstrates good faith to the court and may be required before certain remedies are available in Texas. It also gives your landlord an opportunity to pay, which many do once they see the specific statute cited and the potential penalty.

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