Skip to main content
Rent Clarified
Dallas, TexasLast reviewed April 2026

Rent increase rules in Dallas

No rent cap (Texas state preemption). Increases follow lease terms with typical 30-day month-to-month notice.

Skip to the tool ↓

Check your situation

Step 1 of 50%
Location

Where do you rent?

Local market context

Your neighborhood (by ZIP)

Compare your rent to U.S. Census Bureau estimates for your specific Dallas ZIP code.

Enter a 5-digit U.S. ZIP code in Dallas to see Census Bureau rent statistics for that neighborhood.

Free legal help in Texas

Free legal help in Texas

Walk through three quick steps to find the right tenant-rights program for your situation.

What do you need help with?
When you call, ask about: a tenant intake appointment

Say: "I'm a tenant and need help understanding my rights and options."

Bring: your lease, recent rent receipts, and any letters or notices from your landlord.

State listings sourced from the federal Legal Services Corporation (LSC) grantee directory. Educational information, not legal advice or endorsement.

State rules that apply in Dallas

No rent control allowed by state law. Landlords can raise rent any amount with proper notice at lease end. Month-to-month: ~30 days notice typical (lease terms control). Required notice: 30 days.

Local resource

Texas Tenant Advisor (opens in new tab)

State source

Tex. Prop. Code §92.013 (opens in new tab)

Educational information, not legal advice. Consult a local attorney or tenant-rights organization for your specific situation.

Compare Dallas to other Texas cities

Each tracked city in Texas has its own local ordinances stacked on top of state law. Tap one to see the rules side-by-side.