Dallas County does not regulate cash-for-keys voluntary buyout agreements. Texas Property Code Chapter 92 governs landlord-tenant relations and allows landlords and tenants to negotiate any voluntary surrender of possession in exchange for payment, without county-mandated disclosure forms or cooling-off periods.
Cash-for-keys is a private buyout where a landlord pays a tenant a lump sum to vacate voluntarily and waive defenses to eviction. Texas Property Code Chapter 92 leaves these agreements to ordinary contract law. Unlike Los Angeles or Seattle, neither Texas nor Dallas County imposes written-disclosure rules, county filing, or rescission windows. Best practice in Dallas County is a written settlement signed by both parties identifying the payment amount, move-out date, possession surrender, and a mutual release. If a tenant signs under duress or with material misrepresentation, ordinary contract or fraud remedies apply through Dallas County Justice of the Peace or district courts under Texas common law.
Misrepresenting the buyout, signing under duress, or failing to honor a written cash-for-keys agreement may give rise to breach-of-contract or fraud claims under Texas law. Dallas County imposes no separate municipal penalties on cash-for-keys offers.
See how Grand Prairie's cash-for-keys agreements rules stack up against other locations.
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