Legal AI Chat for Texas Tenants — Free Property Code Q&A

Backed by Microsoft For Startups
Guided by Grayver Law Group
AES-256 Encryption
Personal (PII) & Corporate Data Redacted Before AI
Free during early access

Texas tenants — get cited answers from Texas Property Code Ch. 92 in seconds.

Free first questions — no sign-up required.

Texas has its own landlord-tenant regime under Texas Property Code Ch. 92, with state-specific deposit, repair, and eviction rules. Justee's free legal AI chat for Texas tenants returns cited, Texas-specific answers — useful for tenants, small landlords, and pro-se litigants. Free first questions.

Key Takeaways

Texas Property Code Ch. 92 cited.

Repair-and-deduct, deposit, eviction Q&A.

Free first questions; no signup.

Information, not legal advice.

Legal Framework & Sources

Justee's legal AI chat for Texas tenants is grounded in Texas-specific primary sources: Texas Property Code Chapter 92 (residential tenancies), Texas Property Code Chapter 24 (forcible-entry-and-detainer / eviction), Texas Government Code, and the Texas Justice Court Rules of Procedure. The federal Fair Housing Act (42 USC §3601 et seq.) and HUD regulations at 24 CFR layer additional fair-housing protections. Authoritative guidance is drawn from the Texas Office of Court Administration (eviction procedures), Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, Texas Lawyers for Texas Tenants, and Texas Tenant Advisor. Secondary cross-references include the State Bar of Texas free-legal-help directory and Cornell LII. The chat provides legal information, not legal advice; for eviction defense, fair-housing complaints, or significant Texas-specific disputes, consult a Texas-licensed attorney or local Texas Legal Aid.

Benefits

Texas-Specific Citations

Answers cite Texas Property Code Ch. 92 and Ch. 24.

Eviction-Process Q&A

JP Court timelines, notice requirements, and tenant defenses.

Repair-and-Deduct Q&A

Tex. Prop. Code §92.0561 limits and notice procedure.

Deposit-Return Q&A

Tex. Prop. Code §92.103 timeline and itemization rules.

Free First Use

No signup or credit card.

Limitations to Know Before Using

Not Advice

Information only — eviction defense needs counsel.

No Privilege

Conversations are not attorney-client privileged.

Local Variation

Some TX cities have additional protections.

JP Court Deadlines

Eviction response windows are short — meet them regardless.

No Court Representation

AI cannot defend you in JP Court.

How Legal AI Chat for Texas Tenants Works

1
Ask Texas Question

Plain English; specify city for local nuance.

2
Get Cited Answer

AI references Texas Property Code chapters.

3
Drill Deeper

Upload lease or notice for TX-specific review.

“Texas eviction proceedings move fast — often days, not weeks. AI chat that knows Tex. Prop. Code §24.005 by name is the difference between an informed tenant and a defaulted one.”

Artem Dolukhanyan
Artem Dolukhanyan

CEO & Founder, Justee

Real-world example

A Texas tenant asked Justee about a 3-day notice to vacate. Justee cited Tex. Prop. Code §24.005 (3-day notice requirement), confirmed the notice complied with format rules, and explained the JP Court eviction timeline — letting the tenant prepare a defense within the available window.

Example interaction

User: "I got a 3-day notice in Texas — what's next?" — Justee cites Tex. Prop. Code §24.005 and walks through JP Court eviction process.

Authoritative Resources

Texas Property Code Ch. 92

Primary Texas residential-tenancy statute.

Texas RioGrande Legal Aid

Free Texas legal aid for tenants.

HUD Fair Housing

Federal fair-housing rights.

Important Legal Disclaimer

What Justee AI is — and what it is not. Justee AI is a software platform, not a law firm. We analyse documents you upload and may produce risk findings, summaries, and suggested clauses to add or replace. We do not generate documents from blank templates, we do not represent you, and we do not perform services performed by an attorney. Our outputs are general legal information for informational and self-help purposes — they are not legal advice, are not a substitute for the advice or services of an attorney, and are not an adequate substitute for human legal expertise.

No attorney in the loop. Justee AI is AI-powered. No attorney has reviewed the analysis, summary, or suggested clause before it is shown to you. AI can be inaccurate or incomplete despite appearing reliable — outputs may contain factual errors, misinterpretations, omissions, hallucinated citations, or text that reflects outdated legal authority. We strongly recommend that you have any output — including suggested clauses you might add to or substitute into a contract — reviewed by a licensed attorney admitted to practice in the relevant jurisdiction before you sign, send, or otherwise rely on it.

No attorney–client relationship. Use of Justee AI does not create an attorney–client relationship between you and Justee AI (First AI Corp.) or any of its personnel. Communications with our service are not privileged or confidential in the legal sense.

Consult a licensed attorney. Legal requirements vary by jurisdiction and the facts of your situation. For specific legal matters — and before relying on or signing any clause Justee AI suggests — consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.

Performance Estimates (*): All statistics, metrics, and numerical claims on this page — including review times, cost comparisons, accuracy percentages, and database size — are estimates based on internal testing, industry research, and typical use cases. Actual results vary based on document type, complexity, length, jurisdiction, and other factors. Cost comparisons reference publicly available average attorney rates and are not guaranteed savings. "1M+ laws and regulations" refers to the breadth of Justee's reference database and does not imply that every provision is checked against every law for every document.

By using our service, you acknowledge that you have read and agree to our Terms of Use and understand the limitations of AI-powered legal analysis. You are solely responsible for verifying the accuracy and applicability of any information to your situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — answers cite Texas Property Code chapters.

It explains rights and timelines. Defense in JP Court needs an attorney or Legal Aid.

Justee cites Tex. Prop. Code §92.0561 with the specific notice/amount rules.

Yes — documents encrypted in transit and at rest.

No. For litigation, consult a Texas-licensed attorney.

Last updated: March 2026

Privacy

Legal

Terms of servicePrivacy policy

Follow us

LinkedIn

logo

© 2026 Justee. All rights reserved.