Texas homeowners dealing with construction defects face strict deadlines and mandatory pre-suit procedures. Know exactly where you stand before the clock runs out.
Texas law is a maze of hard deadlines and mandatory procedures. Missing any one of them can permanently forfeit your right to recover — even if your contractor's work was clearly defective.
The Residential Construction Liability Act (Texas Property Code Chapter 27) requires you to send written notice to your contractor at least 60 days before you can file suit. That notice must specifically describe each defect. If you skip this step, your lawsuit will be dismissed — no matter how strong your claim.
Under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code §16.009, no action for damages from construction defects may be brought more than 10 years after the date of substantial completion. This is an absolute deadline — courts have no discretion to extend it. Latent defects discovered after year 10 are legally unrecoverable.
Texas is the largest construction market in the United States by volume, with Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin, and San Antonio driving massive residential and commercial builds. High volume means more disputes — and more contractors who cut corners to keep pace with demand.
Understanding these statutes is the difference between a viable claim and a missed opportunity. Each law shapes what you must do, when you must do it, and what you can recover.
The RCLA governs nearly all residential construction defect disputes in Texas. Before any homeowner can file suit against a contractor, builder, or subcontractor, they must deliver a written notice describing the alleged defects and give the contractor 60 days to inspect, offer repairs, and make a settlement offer. The contractor's timely response can limit your damages — which is exactly why your initial notice letter must be carefully crafted and documented.
✓ Governs all residential defect claimsTexas Civil Practice & Remedies Code §16.009 is the absolute outer limit for any construction defect lawsuit. It begins running from the date of substantial completion — not from when you discovered the problem. A leaking foundation discovered in year 11 is unrecoverable at law, no matter how severe. This repose period applies to claims against contractors, architects, and engineers alike.
✓ Absolute — no exceptions for discoveryTexas imposes a 4-year limitations period for breach of contract claims (§16.004) and a 2-year period for negligence and tort-based claims (§16.003). If you believe your contractor breached the contract, you have 4 years from the breach. If your theory is negligence causing property damage, that 2-year clock may already be running. Both periods are subject to the 10-year repose ceiling.
✓ Separate clocks for contract vs. tortTexas is one of only a few states with no statewide general contractor license requirement. The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) licenses specific trades — electricians, plumbers, HVAC technicians, and others. If your contractor performed licensed trade work without a valid TDLR license, that is a separate violation that can support a fraud or negligence per se claim. Always verify license status as part of your claim documentation.
✓ Unlicensed work strengthens your claimTexas's climate extremes — intense heat, periodic flooding, expansive soils, and severe storms — create a predictable pattern of construction defects. These are the disputes we see most frequently from Texas homeowners.
Texas's notorious black and red clay soils expand dramatically with moisture and shrink in drought — cycles that stress foundations constantly. Slab foundations that weren't engineered for soil movement, poor drainage designs, or inadequate post-tension cables lead to cracking, sloping floors, and door/window misalignment. Foundation claims are among the most expensive and common defect cases in the state.
Improper flashing, substandard underlayment, and inadequate pitch angles leave Texas homes vulnerable to the state's violent thunderstorms and hail events. When contractor-installed roofing fails within its design life, homeowners are entitled to recovery beyond insurance proceeds — especially when building code violations are documented.
Texas's extreme summers mean HVAC systems are life-critical infrastructure. An improperly sized, installed, or ducted HVAC system not only fails to cool but can cause chronic moisture problems, mold growth, and energy bills that are thousands of dollars above normal. TDLR-licensed HVAC contractors who install non-compliant systems face both civil liability and license consequences.
Synthetic stucco (EIFS) systems are widely used in Texas construction but require precision installation. Improper weep screed placement, missing drainage layers, or inadequate caulking allow water to penetrate behind the system and rot the sheathing silently. By the time damage is visible, structural repairs can cost $50,000 or more. Early detection and documented notice to the contractor are critical.
Improperly sloped drain lines, undersized supply pipes, inadequate pressure regulation, and the use of substandard materials are common in both new construction and renovation work. Texas plumbers must hold a valid TDLR license — unlicensed plumbing work is a separate cause of action that can support a deceptive trade practices claim under the DTPA.
Texas's booming subdivision market has produced a wave of quality complaints from buyers in master-planned communities. Production builders often subcontract to the lowest bidder, creating systematic defects across an entire development. If your neighbor has the same problem, that pattern evidence is powerful. Class-style defect claims against production builders are an active area of Texas construction litigation.
These attorneys have been vetted for their focus on construction defect and contractor dispute litigation in Texas. BuildRight does not receive referral fees — these are introductions based on expertise and reputation.
Karalynn Cromeens is one of Texas's most prominent construction attorneys, representing contractors, subcontractors, and owners in disputes across Texas and Oklahoma. She is particularly well-known for her deep command of the RCLA notice procedures and Texas lien law — the two areas most likely to trip up homeowners attempting to navigate disputes without counsel. Her firm handles everything from single-family disputes to large commercial construction litigation.
✓ Licensed TX & OKRobert Lovein leads a boutique construction law firm with offices serving both Texas and California clients. Lovein Ribman focuses exclusively on construction law — contracts, defect claims, delay disputes, and payment disputes — which means clients get depth rather than a generalist's surface knowledge. If your defect claim involves a contractor who operated across state lines or a project with complex contract structures, Lovein's cross-jurisdictional experience is a significant asset.
✓ Licensed TX & CAChip Moster is a Dallas-based trial attorney with a reputation for taking on complex and high-value construction disputes. His firm serves homeowners and property owners in North Texas — one of the nation's fastest-growing residential construction markets. Moster's litigation experience is particularly valuable when RCLA pre-suit negotiations break down and the case heads toward trial or arbitration. For Dallas-Fort Worth area homeowners, his local court relationships and knowledge of the regional construction industry are meaningful advantages.
✓ Licensed TXTexas law is unforgiving about deadlines and procedures. An AI-powered feasibility review tells you whether your claim has merit and what steps you must take — before you spend a dollar on legal fees.
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