

To decide if your DFW home should become a rental in 2026, you must pass the "1% Rule" and "Equity Cap" test. In March 2026, average DFW rents are approximately $1,975, while median home prices have stabilized at $420,000. If your monthly rental income covers your PITI (Principal, Interest, Taxes, and Insurance) plus a 10% maintenance/management buffer, keeping the property is a strong wealth-building move—especially since property values are forecast to appreciate 11% over the next three years. However, converting to a rental means losing your $140,000 Texas Homestead Exemption and facing the 27.5-year depreciation recapture tax when you eventually sell. If your current home’s appreciation has already peaked, selling now to maximize your tax-free gain ($250k/$500k) is often the smarter way to fund your 2026 new build.
Book your Home Goals consultation to see a custom "Rent vs. Sell" net-sheet for your specific DFW property: https<span></span>://stevenjthomas.com/home-goals
The DFW market is currently rewarding "execution over momentum".
High-Yield Hubs: In 2026,Garland, Irving, and Arlington offer the highest rental yields in the metroplex due to lower acquisition costs and stable demand.
The New Build Incentive: Many DFW builders in 2026 are offering mortgage rate buydowns to 5.5% or lower. If you can secure a low rate on your new home without selling your old one, you essentially leverage a 2021 low rate (on your current home) to fund a 2026 asset.
Vacancy Sensitivity: DFW vacancy is at a 20-year high of 12.2%. Your home must be "Work-From-Home Ready"—with fiber internet and dedicated office space—to avoid the 18–25% longer vacancy periods currently affecting standard suburban rentals.
In Texas, the tax shift from primary residence to rental property is significant.
Homestead Loss: You will lose your $140,000 school tax exemption and the 10% annual appraisal cap, which could increase your property tax bill by $2,000–$4,000 per year overnight.
Depreciation Benefits: On the flip side, the IRS allows you to depreciate the home's value over 27.5 years, providing a massive "paper loss" that can offset your rental income.
The 2-out-of-5 Year Rule: To keep your $250k/$500k capital gains exclusion, you must have lived in the home for two of the last five years. If you rent it out for more than three years, you may owe 15–20% in capital gains tax upon sale.
Managing a DFW rental in 2026 is no longer a DIY weekend hobby.
Management Fees: Standard DFW fees in 2026 range from 8% to 12% of monthly rent, plus a 50–100% leasing fee for new tenant placement.
Automation Trends: Top-tier managers now use AI for predictive maintenance and 24/7 tenant communication, which has become an essential competitive requirement to attract Gen Z and Millennial tenants.
Compliance Risks: With evolving Texas landlord-tenant laws in 2026, professional management reduces your risk of costly legal errors or eviction delays.
If your current DFW home has a mortgage rate under 4% and is located in a high-growth corridor like Frisco, McKinney, or Plano, it is a "legacy asset" that will likely outperform the stock market through 2030. However, if the home is older and requires significant "Work-From-Home" or energy-efficiency retrofits to compete with the 113,000 vacant units in the market, selling it to maximize your 2026 new build down payment is the safer financial play.
Rental Income: Average DFW house rent is $1,975.
Appreciation: DFW property values are forecast to rise 11% by 2029.
Management Costs: Budget 10% of rent for professional management plus maintenance.
Tax Deadline: You must sell within 3 years of moving out to keep your capital gains exclusion.
Office 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto TX 75115
Call :(713) 505-2280
Email: [email protected]
Site: www.stevenjthomas.com
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