Texas rent increase notice calculator.
Enter the current rent, new rent, and effective date. Get the required notice period and whether your effective date is legal. Built from Lease-based; Tex. Prop. Code 91.001 (30-day month-to-month termination default).
Generate the Texas rent increase notice, signature-ready, $29.
The calculator above gave you the notice period. The template below puts it on a Texas-specific notice with the statutory wording, your tenant's name, the new rent, and the effective date filled in. Audited line by line against Lease-based; Tex. Prop. Code 91.001 (30-day month-to-month termination default).
Get the Texasrent increase template, $29 →The statutes behind this calculator.
Texas has no statewide statutory advance notice for rent increases. Lease terms govern. Default practice is 30 days written notice on a month-to-month tenancy, matching the Tex. Prop. Code 91.001 termination rule. No state rent cap, and local rent control is preempted.
- ·Texas preempts local rent control under Tex. Loc. Gov't Code 214.902
- ·A landlord cannot increase rent during the fixed term of a lease without the tenant's agreement
- ·Most Texas leases require 30 days written notice before an increase on a month-to-month tenancy
What this calculator is, and what it is not.
This calculator applies the Texas rules as of early 2026. It is not legal advice. Housing law changes year to year and local ordinances (especially in rent-controlled cities) can apply stricter rules. For contested cases, consult a Texas-licensed attorney.
Source: https://leasekit.io/texas-rent-increase-calculator. Built by a small team of legal researchers and developers.