Last updated: April 2026
Beaumont renters are protected by Texas state law on security deposits, habitability, and eviction — but there is no rent control anywhere in the state.
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Beaumont is a mid-sized city in Jefferson County in Southeast Texas. Like all Texas cities, Beaumont operates entirely under state landlord-tenant law — there are no additional local rent regulations or tenant protections beyond what the Texas Property Code provides. State law does give renters meaningful rights around security deposits, habitability repairs, retaliation, and illegal lockouts.
Beaumont has no rent control, and Texas state law explicitly forbids any city or county from creating one (Tex. Prop. Code § 214.902). Landlords may raise rent by any amount, but they must provide proper written notice before a new rent amount takes effect. For month-to-month tenancies, that means at least one month's advance notice.
Texas state law provides the following core protections for all Beaumont renters:
Under Tex. Prop. Code § 92.101–92.109, a Beaumont landlord may collect a security deposit in any amount, but must return it — along with an itemized written list of deductions — within 30 days of you vacating the unit. If the landlord wrongfully withholds all or part of your deposit without cause, you can sue for three times the withheld amount plus reasonable attorney's fees. Always document the unit's condition at move-in and move-out with photos and written records.
To evict a tenant in Beaumont, a landlord must first provide written notice to vacate — typically 3 days for nonpayment of rent — and then file an eviction suit in Justice of the Peace court if the tenant does not leave. Texas does not require just cause to end a month-to-month tenancy; landlords may simply give one month's written notice of non-renewal (Tex. Prop. Code § 91.001). Tenants have the right to appear in court and contest the eviction. Self-help evictions (lockouts, utility shutoffs, removing doors) are illegal under Tex. Prop. Code § 92.0081.
No. Beaumont has no rent control, and Texas state law (Tex. Prop. Code § 214.902) prohibits any city or county from enacting rent caps.
There is no limit. Texas has no rent control, so a landlord can raise rent by any amount. For month-to-month leases, they must give at least one month's written notice before the increase takes effect.
30 days from the date you vacate, along with an itemized statement of any deductions. Wrongful withholding can result in 3× damages under Tex. Prop. Code § 92.109.
For nonpayment of rent, the landlord must give at least 3 days' written notice to vacate before filing suit. For ending a month-to-month tenancy, at least one month's written notice is required (Tex. Prop. Code § 91.001).
No. Self-help eviction is illegal in Texas. A landlord cannot lock you out, remove doors, or intentionally cut off utilities without a court order. Violations give you the right to sue for damages (Tex. Prop. Code § 92.0081).
Send a written repair request. If your landlord fails to fix conditions that materially affect health or safety within a reasonable time, you may be able to repair-and-deduct (up to $500 or one month's rent) or terminate the lease under Tex. Prop. Code § 92.056. Contact Lone Star Legal Aid for help.
This article provides general information about tenant rights in Beaumont and is not legal advice. Laws change — verify current rules with a local attorney or tenant organization.
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