When to Raise Rent on Your Fort Worth Rental (And When to Hold)
Most Fort Worth rental owners approach rent increases one of two ways: they raise rent every year no matter what, or they never raise rent because they are afraid the tenant will leave.
Both approaches leave money on the table.
The Cost of Not Raising Rent
If market rent in TCU area increases 3% per year and you hold flat for three years, you are leaving $1,800-$3,600 on the table annually by year three. Over a five-year hold, that compounds to $10,000-$20,000 in lost income. Your taxes, insurance, and maintenance costs are not holding flat. Your rent should not either.
The Cost of Raising Rent Too Aggressively
A good tenant who pays on time, takes care of the property, and never causes problems is worth $3,000-$5,000 in avoided turnover costs. Pushing a $50/month increase that drives them out costs you: 30-45 days of vacancy ($2,000-$3,000), turnover costs (cleaning, paint, repairs: $1,500-$3,000), leasing costs, and the risk of a worse tenant.
That $50/month increase ($600/year) just cost you $5,000-$8,000.
The Framework
Step 1: Know your market. What are comparable rentals leasing for in TCU area, Arlington, and Keller right now? Not listed. Leased. If your rent is more than 5% below market, an increase is justified.
Step 2: Assess the tenant. Do they pay on time? Do they take care of the property? Have they been low-maintenance? A great tenant at $50 below market is better than a gamble at market rate.
Step 3: Consider timing. Lease renewals in Fort Worth's peak season (May-August) give you leverage. Renewals in November-January do not. Time your increases when demand supports them.
Step 4: Communicate early and clearly. Give 60-90 days notice. Explain the increase matter-of-factly. No apologies. No negotiations via text. A professional notice with a clear effective date.
The Sweet Spot
For most Fort Worth rentals, a 3-5% annual increase keeps pace with the market without triggering turnover. Anything above 8-10% needs strong market data to justify.
The goal is not maximum rent. The goal is maximum long-term income. Sometimes those are not the same number.
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