EvictFlow is a professional eviction service built exclusively for Texas landlords and property managers. We handle every step of the Texas eviction process, from preparing and delivering a legally compliant notice to vacate under Texas Property Code Section 24.005, through filing the forcible detainer suit in the correct Justice of the Peace court, representing you at the hearing as an authorized agent under Section 24.011, and coordinating the writ of possession with the constable to return your property. Our service covers all 254 Texas counties, including Dallas, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, and Fort Worth. We follow a proven 14-step process grounded in Texas Property Code Chapter 24 and the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 504. Whether you are dealing with nonpayment of rent, lease violations, holdover tenants, or unauthorized occupants under the new SB 38 summary disposition process, EvictFlow provides the structure, legal compliance, and coordination that gets your property back. Most cases resolve in 21 to 60 days.

Texas Eviction Services - Fast, Legal, Done Right

Professional eviction management for landlords and property managers across all 254 Texas counties. From notice to possession, we handle the process so you do not have to.

21-60 days
days typical timeline
254
counties served
14-step
proven process
24/7
case dashboard

Five Steps to Getting Your Property Back

Our process follows Texas Property Code Chapter 24 and TRCP Rule 504 to the letter. No shortcuts, no gaps, no surprises.

step 01

Notice

We prepare and deliver a legally compliant notice to vacate under TX Property Code 24.005.

step 02

File

Eviction petition filed in the correct JP court for your property's precinct.

step 03

Hearing

We appear at the JP court hearing as your authorized agent with full evidence.

step 04

Judgment

Court rules in your favor. We manage the 5-day appeal window and next steps.

step 05

Possession

Writ of possession issued. Constable removes the tenant and returns your property.

Senate Bill 38 Changed Texas Eviction Law

Effective January 1, 2024, SB 38 introduced major changes to the Texas eviction process. The new law created a summary disposition process for removing squatters faster, requires tenants who appeal to swear good faith under penalty of perjury, allows off-duty police officers to execute writs of possession, and added new provisions about partial rent payments and landlord notice requirements.

Squatter removal
New summary disposition process for unauthorized occupants
Appeal reform
Tenants must swear good faith under penalty of perjury
Writ execution
Off-duty police can now assist with writs of possession
Rent provisions
New rules on partial rent payments and notice requirements

Ready to Start Your Eviction?

Tell us about your situation and we will tell you exactly what needs to happen, what it costs, and how long it takes. No pressure, no obligation.