The 14-Step Texas
Eviction Process

Every step must be completed correctly, or the case risks dismissal. Here is exactly how it works, from notice to possession.

21-60 Days

From notice to possession

3-30 days

Notice period

10-21 days

Filing to hearing

5-10 days

Judgment to writ

1

Delinquency Detection

Day 0

Rent is overdue. We review the delinquency, verify lease terms, and determine the correct notice type and waiting period required under Texas Property Code Section 24.005.

2

Pre-Eviction Communications

Days 1-3

Payment reminders and demand letters are sent to the tenant. This gives them a chance to pay or communicate before formal legal action begins.

3

Notice Generation

Days 3-4

A legally compliant notice to vacate is generated with the correct tenant names, property address, amounts owed, and notice period. The notice meets all TX Property Code 24.005 requirements.

4

Notice Delivery

Days 4-5

The notice is delivered via personal service, door posting, or certified mail as required by Texas law. Proof of service is documented with timestamps and delivery method.

5

Notice Period Monitoring

Days 5-8 or 5-35

The notice period runs: 3 days for nonpayment, 30 days for month-to-month, or per lease terms. We track the countdown and monitor for tenant response or payment.

6

Decision Point: File or Resolve

Day 8+

If the tenant pays or vacates, the case closes. If not, you decide whether to proceed with filing. We advise on the strength of your case and next steps.

7

Petition Preparation

Days 8-9

The sworn eviction complaint (forcible detainer petition) is prepared with all required information. We identify the correct JP court precinct based on the property address.

8

Court Filing

Days 9-10

The petition is filed electronically via eFileTexas in the correct Justice of the Peace court. Filing fees are paid and a hearing date is set, typically 10-21 days out.

9

Citation Service

Days 10-14

The court issues a citation that must be served on the tenant at least 6 days before trial. The constable serves the citation at the property address.

10

Hearing Preparation

Days 14-20

We prepare the evidence package: signed lease, notice to vacate with proof of service, rent ledger, and communication records. Everything is organized for court presentation.

11

Court Hearing

Days 21-31

An authorized agent appears at the JP court hearing on your behalf under Texas Property Code Section 24.011. The case is presented, evidence submitted, and judgment requested.

12

Post-Judgment Processing

Days 31-36

After a favorable judgment, we monitor the 5-day appeal window. If the tenant appeals, we prepare for County Court. If no appeal is filed, we proceed to the writ of possession.

13

Writ of Possession

Days 36-40

The writ of possession is requested from the court clerk and coordinated with the constable. A 24-hour warning is posted, then the constable executes the writ and returns possession.

14

Case Closure and Reporting

Day 40+

The case is closed with full documentation: timeline, costs, outcome, and lessons learned. A final report is generated for your records and future reference.

Ready to Start Your Eviction?

From the first notice to final possession, EvictFlow manages the entire 14-step process. You stay informed while we do the work.

You will speak with Ketan Parikh directly. Not a bot, not a form.