Why Choose us for Your Fort Worth Texas Property Management?
For investors owning single-family rental homes in Fort Worth, Texas, partnering with a local property management company can be a game-changer. Our team or property managers, well-versed in the nuances of Fort Worth’s rental market, offers a range of specialized services that streamline property management. From thorough tenant screening and reliable rent collection to timely maintenance and adherence to local regulations, we handle it all. Our local expertise ensures that your property is competitively marketed, maintaining high occupancy rates, and that any issues—from minor repairs to major emergencies—are addressed promptly. By outsourcing these tasks, you free yourself from day-to-day management headaches, ensuring your investment runs smoothly while maximizing your rental income and keeping tenants satisfied.
Directions to our Property Management Offices from Fort Worth, Texas –
Tenants as well as investors, in some circumstances, may need to visit us at our offices in Plano, Texas. Accordingly, here are driving directions to our property management office from Fort Worth, Texas:
Property Management Office Directions
- Continue to State Hwy 121 N
- Continue on State Hwy 121 N. Take Texas 121 TEXpress and President George Bush Tpke N to TX-190 in Richardson.
- Take the exit toward Custer Pkwy from President George Bush Tpke N
- Take Custer Rd to your destination in Plano
- Arrive at North Texas Property Management from Fort Worth, Texas.
We service many clients who are looking for property management in Fort Worth. Our team of property managers is very familiar with Fort Worth, Texas, and with surrounding cities in North Texas. Our focus is solidly on being the best residential property management service in Fort Worth, Texas; we focus on single family homes and rental properties.
- CONTACT US – You can contact us via email or call us at 214-227-7669
Property Management Services Provided for Fort Worth Properties:
- Complete make ready services of investment properties ensuring they meet Texas Rental Property Codes as well as being clean, presentable, and habitable.
- Handling of all home owner association and city concerns, notices, violations including city registration of rental properties and scheduling of city inspections prior to occupancy.
- Superior marketing and advertising of each individual property utilizing yard signs and approximately fifteen different on line advertising sites maximizing exposure.
- Efficient and thorough tenant application process with optional requirements based on the individual needs of each home owner or real estate investor.
- Provide executed (T.A.R.) Texas Association of Realtors lease and all appropriate agreements/documents such as pool liability waivers, lead based paint disclosures, etc.
- Provide owners detailed information and estimates of repair costs for approval while coordinating those repairs between vendors/subcontractors/handymen and tenants.
- Processing of any and all rents/funds collected each month in a timely manner and providing end of year reports for taxes.
- Filing of any eviction court paperwork as needed, represent owner/investor in eviction court, file writ of possession, and enforce the writ in person. This is all on a case by case basis.
Things to Do in Fort Worth, Texas
Explore The Fort Worth Botanic Garden established in 1934 or the Fort Worth Nature Center & Refuge. Fort Worth Texas also has inclusive playgrounds and working Dog Parks.
Fort Worth, Texas: Historical Factoid
Two things saved Fort Worth from drying up and blowing away after the Civil War: the cattle drives, which gave it the famous nickname “Cowtown,” and the coming of the railroad, which literally put Fort Worth on the map. In 1867 the first “long drive” of longhorn cattle from South Texas up the trail to Kansas railheads came through Fort Worth. The drives continued to come through seasonally every year until the early 1880s. By that time Fort Worth had built its own stockyards and was shipping cattle north on rail lines. In the 1890s the city built its own packing plant north of the river where the animals could be slaughtered and dressed for refrigerated shipment to northern markets (see MEAT PACKING). The long drives ended, but Fort Worth would always be known as “Cowtown”; that was the face it showed to the world.
Source: https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/fort-worth-tx