Austin is a city of majority renters, and Texas will be making some changes to the way it handles evictions starting in the new year. Senate Bill 38 will take effect for all eviction filings starting Jan. 1, empowering landlords and property owners to more easily evict “squatters” – individuals illegally occupying someone else’s property – from their apartment or other rental unit.
Last legislative session, an early version of SB 38 would’ve allowed landlords to evict tenants in as little as five days through what’s called “summary disposition,” allowing landlords to obtain an eviction judgment without giving the tenant a hearing in court, if the tenant does not respond to the court within four days. After heavy pushback by attorneys and tenants’ rights advocates, arguing that the bill eliminated due process for tenants, lawmakers limited those abilities, giving landlords summary disposition rights solely to evict squatters.
“I think most people would agree that I think we don’t want to encourage squatting; we want to make sure property rights are preserved. But I think what the bill really did, and it became very clear early on, was it really conflated what a squatter and a renter is,” said Awais Azhar, executive director of the nonprofit HousingWorks Austin. “The bill is so much less harmful than it was.”
Nonetheless, other aspects of the eviction process have changed that will affect all Texas tenants. Shoshana Krieger, project director of BASTA, a nonprofit legal aid organization for tenants, explained that, before SB 38, the law made clear how landlords needed to deliver a written “notice to vacate” to tenants at least three days before filing for eviction: It could be placed inside of their front door, sent via mail, or given in-hand to an adult resident in the unit.
Now, SB 38 allows an eviction notice to be placed anywhere inside the unit, and electronic communication is also now possible if all parties agree to it. It also allows any form of delivery as long as the tenant receives the notice.
Krieger told the Chronicle that those blurring requirements for notice delivery complicates how legal aid groups like BASTA can educate the community about the eviction process. “It makes it harder for us to say, ‘How should you get the notice? Here are the places to check. You know you’re behind on rent, so keep an eye out for these things,’ right?” Krieger said. “We can’t do that in the same way.”
Moreover, the writ of possession – the court order that forcibly removes a tenant and their belongings from a property – previously could only be delivered and executed by a sheriff or constable. Now, after a certain number of days have passed, landlords can use hired off-duty or plainclothes officers with identification to physically evict tenants. “They don’t have to use someone uniformed, and trained, and a constable to be serving papers,” Krieger said.
One pro-tenant change that SB 38 brings is the right to “cure” a late rent payment offense to avoid eviction, which hasn’t existed previously in Texas, Krieger explained. For the first time a tenant has ever been late on rent, they can repay the late payment within the one-to-three-day “notice to vacate” period listed in their lease. “So that means, for most tenants in Austin, they would have a one-day right to ‘cure’ the first time they’re late on rent,” Krieger clarified. “So it’s not much, but it’s something.”
Krieger emphasized that, even after SB 38 goes into effect, renters should know that they cannot be evicted, even after being given a notice to vacate by a landlord, until a judge actually orders them to vacate. “It doesn’t matter if your landlord says otherwise: You have your due process rights,” Krieger says.
This article appears in January 2 • 2026.
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