TL;DR: Your landlord has 30 days after you move out to return your security deposit or send an itemized deduction list, but only after you’ve provided a forwarding address in writing. If they miss that deadline or withhold your deposit in bad faith, Texas Property Code §92.109 lets you sue for the deposit amount plus $100 plus three times the amount wrongfully withheld, plus attorney fees. In Travis County, you file at a JP court for under $200 in total court costs. No lawyer required.

You moved out. You cleaned the apartment. You returned the keys. And now it’s been 30, 45, maybe 60 days with no check, no itemized list of deductions, no response to your emails.
We hear this from Austin renters constantly, and our team has helped hundreds of people navigate exactly this situation. It almost always follows the same pattern: the renter assumes they’re stuck, the landlord assumes the renter won’t follow up, and the deposit just disappears.
Here’s what most renters don’t realize: Texas security deposit law is one of the most tenant-friendly in the country when it comes to enforcement. Penalties for bad faith withholding are steep. We’re talking potential liability of several thousand dollars on a typical Austin deposit. But the problem isn’t that the law is complicated. Most renters don’t know the steps, don’t document properly, or give up after getting ignored once.
This article walks you through the entire process, from confirming your 30-day deadline to collecting a court judgment if it comes to that. Every step is designed to be handled by a regular person without a lawyer. We’ve included a template demand letter you can copy and customize, because that single document resolves more deposit disputes than anything else.
Why Most Austin Renters Lose Their Deposit Disputes
Texas Property Code §92.103 gives your landlord exactly 30 days to return your deposit or send an itemized list of deductions. §92.109 imposes harsh penalties for bad faith withholding. Nothing about the statute is ambiguous. Judges in Travis County JP courts see these cases regularly.
So why do renters still lose?
Three reasons. Almost every time.
No written forwarding address. Under §92.107, your landlord has no obligation to return your deposit until you provide a forwarding address in writing. Not verbally. Not “they know where I moved.” In writing. This single requirement trips up more renters than anything else, and landlords know it. If you didn’t send your forwarding address in writing, your landlord’s legal clock hasn’t started yet.
No move-out documentation. You cleaned the apartment, but you didn’t take photos. Now the landlord claims $600 in cleaning fees and you have no evidence to dispute it. A judge needs to see something. Testimony alone is weaker than timestamped photos.
Giving up after being ignored. One unanswered email and most renters assume there’s nothing they can do. There is. Sending a demand letter is Step 2. Court is Step 4. Each step escalates pressure, and most disputes resolve before you ever see a judge.
Here’s what the math looks like when a landlord withholds your deposit in bad faith:
| Deposit Wrongfully Withheld | Statutory $100 | 3x Penalty | §92.109 Damages* |
|---|---|---|---|
| $500 | $100 | $1,500 | $1,600 |
| $1,000 | $100 | $3,000 | $3,100 |
| $1,500 | $100 | $4,500 | $4,600 |
| $2,000 | $100 | $6,000 | $6,100 |
Damages under §92.109 for bad faith withholding. Attorney fees and court costs are additional. A landlord’s separate obligation to return the deposit itself under §92.103 may be awarded on top of these penalties, increasing total recovery further. Amounts shown assume the full deposit was wrongfully withheld. If only a portion was wrongful, the 3x applies only to that portion.
On a typical Austin apartment deposit of $1,000–$1,500, a landlord acting in bad faith faces potential liability in the thousands. That’s the number you put in your demand letter. And that’s why most management companies with legal departments settle before court.
Understanding your rights as an Austin renter is the foundation. But knowing the enforcement steps is what actually gets your money back.
The Five-Step Process to Recover Your Security Deposit
Before walking through each step, here’s the full timeline at a glance:
| Phase | What Happens | Approximate Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Move-out | Surrender unit, return keys, send forwarding address in writing | Day 0 |
| Waiting period | Landlord’s 30-day deadline to return deposit or send itemized list | Days 1–30 |
| Demand letter | Send certified letter citing §92.103 and §92.109 | Day 31 |
| Response window | Wait for landlord to respond or pay | Days 31–61 |
| Court filing | File petition in Travis County JP court | Day 62+ |
| Hearing | Judge reviews evidence, usually rules same day | ~60–90 days after filing |
| Appeal window | Defendant has 21 days to appeal | 21 days post-judgment |
| Collection | Judgment is final; collect or pursue enforcement | 30+ days post-judgment |
Total timeline from move-out to potential judgment: roughly 5–7 months if the case goes all the way to court. Most disputes resolve at the demand letter stage, somewhere around weeks 5–9.
Step 1: Confirm the 30 Days Have Passed
Before you do anything, confirm two dates.
Date 1: When did you surrender the unit? This means you vacated the apartment AND returned all keys to the landlord or management office. If you returned keys on March 1, that’s your surrender date.
Date 2: When did you provide your forwarding address in writing? This is the one that catches people. Under §92.107, the 30-day clock doesn’t start until both conditions are met. You’ve surrendered the unit AND provided a written forwarding address. If you moved out March 1 but didn’t send your forwarding address until March 15, the landlord’s deadline runs from March 15, not March 1.
Your forwarding address doesn’t have to be your new home. A friend’s address works. So does a family member’s place or a P.O. box. Any reliable place where you can receive mail.
If you never sent a written forwarding address: you haven’t forfeited your right to the deposit. §92.107 is clear on this, you still have the right to a refund. But you’ve given the landlord a legitimate reason for the delay. Fix this now. Send your forwarding address in writing today, by certified mail and email. The 30-day clock starts when they receive it.
One critical exception. If you owe undisputed back rent, the calculus changes. Under §92.104(c), a landlord who deducts from the deposit for unpaid rent that you don’t dispute isn’t required to send an itemized deduction list. If you skipped your last month’s rent or have an outstanding balance you know is legitimate, the landlord can apply your deposit to that debt. This process works for renters who fulfilled their lease obligations and are being wrongfully denied their deposit, not for recovering money you genuinely owe.
Step 2: Send a Demand Letter
A properly written demand letter citing the specific statutes and penalty amounts resolves the majority of deposit disputes without ever going to court. It’s the single most effective tool in this process.
Your letter needs to accomplish four things: identify the deposit, cite the law, state the consequences, and set a deadline. Here’s a template you can copy and adapt:
TEMPLATE: Security Deposit Demand Letter
[Your Name] [Your Forwarding Address] [City, State, ZIP] [Date]
Landlord/Management Company Name] [Their Address] [City, State, ZIP]
RE: Demand for Return of Security Deposit — [Former Apartment Address, Unit #]
Dear [Landlord/Property Manager Name],
I am writing to demand the return of my security deposit in the amount of $[AMOUNT] paid in connection with my lease at [apartment address, unit number].
I surrendered the premises on [move-out date] and provided my forwarding address in writing on [date forwarding address was sent]. As of today's date, more than 30 days have elapsed, and I have not received my security deposit or an itemized list of deductions as required by law.
Under Texas Property Code §92.103, a landlord must refund the security deposit on or before the 30th day after the tenant surrenders the premises. Under §92.104, any deductions must be accompanied by a written, itemized list of damages and charges.
Under Texas Property Code §92.109, a landlord who acts in bad faith by retaining a security deposit may be held liable to the tenant for the sum of $100, three times the portion of the deposit wrongfully withheld, and the tenant's reasonable attorney fees in a suit to recover the deposit.
I demand the full return of my $[AMOUNT] security deposit within 30 days of the date of this letter. If I do not receive the deposit or a lawful itemized accounting of deductions by [date — 30 days from letter], I intend to file suit in Travis County Justice of the Peace Court to recover the deposit and all penalties available under Texas law.
Sincerely,
[Your Signature] [Your Printed Name] [Your Phone Number] [Your Email Address]
Adapting for partial withholding: Many disputes don’t involve a landlord who returned nothing. More often, they return part of the deposit with deductions you believe are inflated or fraudulent. In that case, adjust the letter. Replace the demand for the “full return” with a demand for the specific amount you believe was wrongfully withheld. Reference §92.104’s requirement for an itemized list of deductions, and challenge the specific line items you’re disputing.
An example: “I received $400 of my $1,500 deposit along with a deduction list totaling $1,100. I dispute the following charges: ‘general cleaning — $500’ (no receipts provided, unit was left in broom-clean condition as documented in attached photos) and ‘carpet replacement — $400’ (carpet was installed in 2018 and had reached the end of its useful life before my tenancy).”
Be as specific as possible about which deductions are wrongful. That specificity strengthens your position in court if it gets there.
Both Texas Tenant Advisor and TexasLawHelp offer demand letter tools if you want a second reference point.
How to send it:
Certified mail with return receipt requested, addressed to the landlord’s official business address. That return receipt (the green card) proves delivery date and serves as evidence in court. Send the same letter by email to the property manager and any corporate contact you have. Keep copies of everything: the letter, the certified mail receipt, the email with timestamp.
| Demand Letter Checklist | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Your name and forwarding address | Required under §92.107 for landlord’s obligation to begin |
| Former apartment address and unit number | Identifies the specific lease and deposit |
| Exact deposit amount (or disputed portion) | States what’s owed with no ambiguity |
| Move-out date | Establishes when the 30-day clock started |
| Date forwarding address was provided | Confirms the legal deadline has passed |
| Citation of §92.103 and §92.109 | Shows the landlord you know the specific law |
| Bad faith penalty language ($100 + 3x + attorney fees) | Creates financial pressure, which is what motivates response |
| Specific disputed deductions (if partial withholding) | Shows you’ve reviewed the charges and have evidence |
| 30-day response deadline | Sets a clear timeline before escalation |
| Sent via certified mail + email | Certified mail proves delivery; email creates backup documentation |
Step 3: Wait for Response
Give the landlord 30 days to respond. Mark the calendar.
What typically happens depends on who you’re dealing with.
Large management companies (Lincoln, Greystar, MAA, and similar firms operating in Austin) have legal departments or outside counsel who know exactly what §92.109 penalties look like. When a properly cited demand letter arrives from a former tenant, someone in risk management flags the liability exposure. These companies often settle. Not because they’re generous, but because writing a $1,500 check is cheaper than defending a several-thousand-dollar judgment.
Smaller property management firms vary. Some respond quickly, some need a second nudge. If you don’t hear back in 30 days, you’re moving to Step 4.
Individual landlords are the most likely to ignore a demand letter. Someone who owns one or two rental properties may not understand the penalty structure, or may assume you won’t follow through. For these landlords, the court filing itself is often what produces the check.
And if the landlord responds with a partial refund and an itemized deduction list? Review every line item carefully. You can still file suit for the portion you believe was wrongfully withheld. The 3x penalty applies to whatever amount the court determines was held in bad faith.
Step 4: File in Travis County Justice of the Peace Court
If the demand letter didn’t resolve it, you’re filing a lawsuit. That sounds intimidating. But JP court is specifically designed for self-represented people handling exactly these kinds of disputes.
How to file: All five Travis County JP courts now accept electronic filings through eFileTexas.gov. You’ll file a “small claims” petition naming your former landlord (or management company) as the defendant. Filing fees in Travis County were updated effective January 1, 2026. Budget approximately $50–$75 for the court filing fee, plus constable service fees ($65–$90) to serve the defendant. Total out-of-pocket: typically $125–$175. Contact the Travis County JP court in your precinct for exact current amounts. For a step-by-step walkthrough, the JP1 filing guide has detailed step-by-step guidance.
Which court: File in the precinct where the rental property is located.
| Travis County JP Court | Address | Phone |
|---|---|---|
| Precinct 1 | 4717 Heflin Lane, Suite 107, Austin, TX 78721 | (512) 854-7700 |
| Precinct 2 | 10409 Burnet Road, Suite 180, Austin, TX 78758 | (512) 854-4545 |
| Precinct 3 | 8656-A West Hwy 71, Bldg B, Suite 100, Austin, TX 78735 | (512) 854-6763 |
| Precinct 4 | 4011 McKinney Falls Pkwy, Suite 1200, Austin, TX 78744 | (512) 854-9479 |
| Precinct 5 | 1000 Guadalupe Street, Austin, TX 78701 | (512) 854-9049 |
Source: Travis County JP courts. Hours: Monday–Friday, 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. (some precincts close at 4:00 p.m.). All courts close for county holidays. Confirm hours before visiting.
What to bring to court:
- Copy of your signed lease
- Move-in and move-out photos (timestamped if possible)
- Your demand letter with certified mail receipt showing delivery
- Written proof you provided a forwarding address (and when)
- Landlord’s itemized deduction list (if you received one)
- Any receipts for cleaning or repairs you did before moving out
- Any email or text communication with the landlord about the deposit
What to expect: JP court is informal compared to higher courts. No jury. A judge hears both sides, reviews evidence, and usually rules the same day. You don’t need a lawyer. Maximum claim amount in justice court is $20,000, which covers virtually any security deposit dispute. Bring organized documentation, be factual, and let the evidence speak.
Can’t afford the filing fee? You can file a Statement of Inability to Afford Payment of Court Costs. Courts won’t deny you access based on financial hardship.
Step 5: Collect the Judgment
You won. Now what?
After the judge rules in your favor, the defendant has 21 days to appeal to County Court. If no appeal is filed within 21 days and no Motion for New Trial is filed within 14 days, the judgment becomes final.
Corporate landlords and management companies typically pay. A court judgment creates liability on their books, and they don’t want a lien on their property. Expect payment within 30 days of the judgment becoming final.
Individual landlords who refuse to pay require enforcement action. Two options:
An Abstract of Judgment can be filed with the county clerk to place a lien on any real property the defendant owns in that county. They can’t sell or refinance without satisfying the judgment.
A Writ of Execution can be requested from the court to have a constable seize non-exempt assets.
Enforcement takes persistence, but the judgment doesn’t expire quickly and it accrues interest. Most defendants pay once they realize it follows them.
If your situation is complex (multiple roommates on the lease, a landlord who’s filed for bankruptcy, or a property that changed ownership during the dispute), call us at 512-360-0852. We can’t represent you in court, but we can help you understand how the pieces fit together.
[INTAKE FORM: “Planning Your Next Austin Apartment?”]
Common Landlord Tactics (and How to Counter Them)
Every deposit dispute has a pattern. Landlords who withhold deposits in bad faith rarely invent new excuses. They recycle the same five or six tactics that work on renters who don’t know any better. Once you recognize the playbook, you can counter every move.
| Tactic | Why They Use It | Your Counter |
|---|---|---|
| “We never received your forwarding address” | Shifts blame to you; exploits §92.107 requirement | Certified mail receipt proves delivery date. If you sent by email too, you have a second timestamp. |
| “The charges exceed your deposit” | Inflated deductions designed to justify keeping everything | Request the itemized list per §92.104. Challenge each line item, ask for receipts, and compare against the wear and tear standard. |
| “We mailed the check” | Buys time; forces you to prove non-receipt | Ask: to what address? Request proof of mailing (tracking number, certified mail receipt). If they mailed to the wrong address, that’s on them. |
| “The property was sold, we don’t have your deposit” | Attempts to pass responsibility to someone you don’t know | Under §92.105, the new owner assumes liability for your deposit. Sales don’t erase the obligation. They transfer it. Sue the current owner. |
| “You broke your lease, so you forfeit the deposit” | Conflates two separate legal issues | Early termination may trigger a reletting fee (per lease terms), but it does not eliminate your right to the return of your deposit minus legitimate deductions. These are separate obligations. |
| “We deducted for carpet/painting” | Most common inflated charge; banks on renters not knowing depreciation standards | Carpet has a useful life, typically 5–10 years depending on quality. If the carpet was already 7 years old when you moved in, charging you full replacement cost isn’t a legitimate deduction. Same applies to paint. Ask for the age and original cost of whatever they claim you damaged. |
Documentation beats tactics. Every time. Certified mail receipts, timestamped photos, a copy of your lease. None of these tactics survive contact with a JP court judge. Landlords who get away with bad faith withholding do so because the renter didn’t have the paperwork.
If you’re dealing with a landlord cycling through multiple tactics at once, or if the deduction list includes charges you don’t recognize, call us at 512-360-0852. We see these patterns regularly and can help you figure out which charges are legitimate and which are padding.
What Nobody Tells You About Austin Deposit Disputes
Working with Austin renters every day gives us a different perspective than what you’ll find on legal reference sites.
Management companies respond to demand letters more often than renters expect. Large national operators managing thousands of Austin units have compliance teams that calculate risk. When a properly cited demand letter lands citing §92.109 penalties, someone runs the math. Writing a $1,200 deposit check is easier than defending a potential judgment several times that size. We’ve seen renters get checks within two weeks of mailing their demand letter to large management companies. Renters who skip the demand letter and go straight to court? They’re often doing more work than they need to.
Smaller independent landlords are a different story. An individual who owns two or three rental units may not have a lawyer reviewing their mail. They’re more likely to ignore your demand letter, not out of strategy, but out of stubbornness or ignorance of the penalty structure. For these landlords, the court filing itself is the wake-up call.
Be honest with yourself about your case. If your landlord sent an itemized deduction list within 30 days and the charges are for actual damage you caused (a hole in the wall, a broken appliance, significant stains beyond normal wear), this process probably won’t help you. Texas law protects against bad faith withholding and unreasonable deductions. It doesn’t protect against legitimate repair costs.
Not sure whether the deductions are fair? Compare them against the normal wear and tear standard and check whether the landlord included receipts or estimates. Vague line items like “general cleaning — $500” with no supporting documentation? Worth challenging. A $200 receipt from a licensed plumber to fix a garbage disposal you broke? Probably legitimate.
Unresolved balances can follow you. If a deposit dispute leaves an outstanding balance on your account, that balance can show up on rental history screening reports when you apply for your next apartment. Some screening services pull data from property management software, and an unresolved charge at your previous address can flag your application. Regardless of the outcome, make sure the account shows a zero balance when the dispute is closed. If you’re unsure whether a deposit situation might affect your next apartment application, call us at 512-360-0852. We can help you understand how screening typically works and which management companies run the most thorough history checks.
Security Deposit Recovery in Austin: Your Questions Answered
How long does my landlord have to return my security deposit in Texas?
Thirty days from the date you surrender the unit, provided you’ve given your forwarding address in writing. Per Texas Property Code §92.103, the deadline is 30 days after you surrender the premises. Didn’t provide a forwarding address? Then the 30-day clock hasn’t started yet. Send one in writing immediately.
What happens if my landlord doesn’t return my deposit within 30 days?
You can sue under Texas Property Code §92.109. If the court finds the landlord acted in bad faith, penalties include $100 plus three times the amount wrongfully withheld plus your reasonable attorney fees and court costs. On a $1,500 deposit, that could mean $4,600 in statutory damages alone, before attorney fees are added.
Can my landlord keep my deposit for normal wear and tear?
No. §92.104 explicitly prohibits this. Normal wear and tear means deterioration from ordinary use: worn carpet, minor scuffs on walls, faded paint. Your landlord can only deduct for damage beyond normal wear and tear, unpaid rent, or other charges specifically listed in your lease. Texas Attorney General has examples of what counts and what doesn’t.
What’s the difference between normal wear and tear vs. actual damage?
Normal wear and tear: carpet showing traffic patterns after two years, small nail holes from hanging pictures, minor scuffs on baseboards, worn finish on countertops. Damage: large holes in walls, broken windows, pet urine stains in carpet, burns on countertops, broken appliances due to misuse. Landlords frequently try to charge for wear and tear items. And if your lease has specific clauses about painting or cleaning on move-out, those terms may be enforceable. Read [what your lease actually commits you to][INTERNAL LINK: /blog/austin-lease-clauses/ — PUBLISH FIRST (article 4.5)] carefully.
Do I need a lawyer to sue for my security deposit in Texas?
No. Justice of the Peace court is designed for self-represented individuals. File a petition, pay the filing fee (approximately $50–$75 plus service costs), show up on your court date with documentation. Most deposit cases are heard and decided the same day. Lawyers aren’t required to represent you in JP court, though you can hire one if you want.
How much does it cost to file a security deposit case in Travis County?
Court filing fees run approximately $50–$75. Constable service fees add another $65–$90 to serve the defendant. Total cost is typically $125–$175. Fees were last updated January 1, 2026, so contact your Travis County JP for exact current amounts. If you can’t afford the fees, you can file a Statement of Inability to Afford Payment of Court Costs.
Can I sue if my landlord sent an itemized list but the deductions seem unfair?
Yes. If you believe any portion of the withheld deposit was wrongful, you can sue for that specific amount. The 3x bad faith penalty under §92.109 applies to whatever amount the court determines was wrongfully withheld, not necessarily the full deposit. Request receipts or repair estimates for every deduction and compare them against the normal wear and tear standard.
What if my apartment was sold and the new owner won’t return my deposit?
Under §92.105, the new owner inherited your deposit obligation. Doesn’t matter that they weren’t the ones who collected it. Texas law transfers the responsibility to whoever currently owns the property. Your demand letter and any lawsuit should be directed at the current owner.
How long does a security deposit case take from filing to hearing in Austin?
After filing, the defendant must be served and given at least 14 days to respond. Once the defendant answers, trial is set no earlier than 45 days later (per Texas Rules of Civil Procedure), unless both sides agree to an earlier date. From filing to resolution, expect roughly 2–3 months, though defaults (when the landlord doesn’t respond) can resolve faster.
Can my landlord charge me for carpet replacement when I move out?
Depends on the carpet’s age and condition. Carpet has a recognized useful life, typically 5–10 years depending on quality and lease terms. If the carpet was seven years old when you moved in and shows normal traffic wear, charging you full replacement cost isn’t a legitimate deduction. If you spilled bleach on two-year-old carpet, a prorated replacement charge is reasonable. Always ask for the carpet’s installation date and original cost when challenging this deduction.
What if I didn’t give my landlord a forwarding address when I moved out?
You haven’t forfeited your right to the deposit. §92.107 pauses the landlord’s obligation to return the deposit until you provide a forwarding address, but your right to the refund itself doesn’t expire. Send your forwarding address in writing now (certified mail plus email), and the 30-day clock starts when the landlord receives it.
Does my pet deposit follow the same rules as my security deposit?
Not necessarily. Pet deposits are governed by the pet deposit agreement you signed, which is often separate from the standard security deposit. Some pet deposits are explicitly non-refundable. Check the language in your agreement. If it says the deposit is refundable (contingent on no pet damage), then §92.103 rules likely apply. If it says “non-refundable pet deposit” or “pet fee,” you probably can’t recover it. The word “deposit” vs. “fee” matters.
Where can I get free legal help with my security deposit dispute in Austin?
Austin Tenants Council (now a project of Texas RioGrande Legal Aid) offers landlord/tenant counseling, self-help forms, and referrals at (512) 474-1961. TexasLawHelp.org provides free guides and a demand letter tool. Texas State Law Library publishes research guides on landlord-tenant law. And if you need help finding your next apartment after a deposit dispute, reach out to us. Our search service is free.
Texas built the security deposit system to protect renters who do the work. Real enforcement power. Penalties steep enough that most landlords can’t afford to gamble on bad faith withholding. But that power only activates when you document every step: written forwarding address, timestamped photos, certified demand letter, organized court file.
Most deposit disputes never reach a courtroom. A properly cited demand letter, the kind that puts the penalty math right in front of the landlord, resolves the majority of cases. The disputes that go to court are overwhelmingly decided in favor of tenants who brought their documentation.
Every step in this process is something a regular person can handle without a lawyer, without special legal knowledge, and for under $200 in court costs. Your landlord’s risk is measured in thousands. Yours is measured in a stamp and a filing fee.
The Austin Apartment Team helps renters find apartments, understand their leases, and navigate the realities of renting in Austin, including deposit disputes. Our apartment search service is free to renters (apartment communities pay our fee). Call us at 512-360-0852 or start your search to get matched with communities that fit your budget, location, and situation.
The information in this article is for general guidance and does not constitute legal advice. Security deposit laws are governed by Texas Property Code §§92.101–92.111. For legal advice specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney or contact the Austin Tenants Council at (512) 474-1961. Apartment availability, pricing, and screening criteria are determined by individual communities and are subject to change.