Texas ESA Landlord Rights in 2026: What Your Landlord Can and Cannot Do
Texas landlords hold real, defined powers in the ESA process, and knowing them makes you a stronger applicant, not a weaker one. This guide lays out both columns honestly: what your Texas landlord may lawfully do, and where their authority ends.
Key Takeaways
- May: request reliable documentation from a licensed professional
- May: verify the letter's authenticity and the provider's license
- May: enforce behavior standards and charge for actual damage
- Cannot: demand diagnoses, impose breed rules, or require registration
- Cannot: charge pet deposits, fees, or pet rent for an approved ESA
The Full Picture
The verification power is the one Texas landlords use most and tenants fear most needlessly. A Dallas operator confirming your letter with the issuing provider is exercising a lawful step that ends in your favor when the letter is genuine. Cooperate with it cheerfully; the verification record becomes your protection if anything is disputed later.
The damage rule deserves clarity because it is the honest limit of your protections: an ESA that destroys carpet costs its owner the repair bill like any tenant-caused damage, deducted from the standard security deposit. What Texas landlords cannot do is charge in advance for damage that has not happened, which is precisely what pet deposits and pet rent are.
What This Means for Your Lease
The practical takeaway threads back to one action: documentation a landlord can verify, submitted with a calm written request. Everything else on this page supports that single move, because the tenants who succeed are the ones who make the reviewer's job easy rather than adversarial.