
Texas realtors had a remarkable run. From 2020 through 2023, the market moved faster than anyone could have planned for -- multiple offers, waived contingencies, sellers calling every shot. That era is over. Houston, DFW, and Austin are now seeing days on market stretch to 45-70 days. Price cuts are common. Buyer expectations have shifted -- and sellers who priced based on 2022 valuations are watching their listings age.
That gap between expectation and reality is where realtors either lose clients or differentiate themselves. The Sell2Rent sale-leaseback model is one of the clearest differentiators available in Texas's 2026 market -- and realtors who know how to offer it are closing deals that everyone else is walking away from.
FREE WEBINAR -- March 25th, 2026 | 10:00 AM EST
The Portfolio Accelerator: How Realtors Are Unlocking New Opportunities with the Sell2Rent Model
Texas in 2026: The Boom Is Over -- The Opportunity Isn't
After years of cyclical overbuilding and sustained mortgage rates above 6%, the previously supercharged Texas housing market has normalized -- and in some metros, overcorrected. In Houston and DFW, days on market have extended to 45-70 days for many property types. In Austin, the correction has been sharper: days on market reaching 60-85 days in some segments, with year-over-year price declines of 2-4%.
Overbuilding in Houston's suburbs has created inventory pressure. Buyer concessions -- repairs, rate buydowns, closing cost contributions -- are now standard in Texas markets that once saw cash offers over asking. Sellers who entered the market expecting a quick, premium sale are finding a fundamentally different environment.
But cooling markets create real opportunity for realtors who are prepared. Sellers who genuinely need to move -- financially, personally, or logistically -- still exist in every Texas market. They just need the right tool.
45-70 days on market | Flat to -1% price movement in key metros
Houston, DFW, and Austin are seeing extended cycles after years of rapid growth. Overbuilding and elevated mortgage rates have shifted negotiating power toward buyers. Sellers with financial pressure need faster options.
Why a Cooling Texas Market Is the Right Environment for Sale-Leaseback
Counterintuitively, a softer market is where the Sell2Rent model shines brightest for Texas realtors. When buyers have leverage and sellers are under pressure, the leaseback creates an entirely different category of solution -- one that bypasses the retail buyer market altogether.
1. Close the deals that are slipping away
In a market where 45-70 days is the new normal, sellers who need equity in 30 days or less have almost no options through traditional channels. A Sell2Rent transaction closes in as few as 15 days. For a Texas homeowner facing financial pressure, that timeline is not just convenient -- it's the only path forward.
2. Serve sellers who can't afford to wait or repair
One of the reasons Texas days on market have extended is buyer expectations. In a buyer's market, buyers ask for repairs, credits, and concessions -- and they get them. For sellers who cannot front repair costs or absorb further price cuts, the Sell2Rent model removes both barriers: zero repairs required, and the transaction closes on a defined timeline without concession negotiations.
3. The Texas investor base is one of the strongest in the country
Despite the slower consumer market, Texas investor activity remains robust. Dallas, Houston, and Austin continue to attract institutional and individual investors seeking cash-flowing properties. The Sell2Rent marketplace in Texas taps directly into this investor demand -- generating competing offers for properties that might otherwise sit on the MLS for 60+ days.
4. Your commission, faster and more reliably
A traditional Texas listing that sits for 60-70 days and closes at a reduced price is a long road to a smaller paycheck. A Sell2Rent transaction pays your full commission in as few as 15 days, with no repair negotiations, no failed financing contingencies, and no second price reduction. In a cooling market, that reliability has real value.
Joe Says
"Texas cooled down hard. That's not bad news -- it's a filter. The realtors who only knew how to operate in a seller's market are struggling. The ones who add a tool like this to their practice are finding deals in the same market everyone else says is slow. Different tools, different outcomes." -- Joe, Sell2Rent Brand Mascot and Investor Guide
How to Bring Sell2Rent to a Texas Client: The Process
The workflow is designed to be simple for the realtor and clear for the homeowner. Here is how it works in Texas:
Q&A -- What Texas Realtors Are Actually Asking
These are the questions that come up most often when Texas realtors are introduced to the sale-leaseback model.
My client in Houston has been listed for 55 days with no serious offers. How do I introduce the leaseback without it feeling like a last resort?
Frame it as expanding options, not admitting defeat. The language that works: 'The market has shifted -- we have more control over this deal than the MLS does right now. There's a way to get you to cash in the next 15 days and keep you in the home.' That is not a consolation -- that is a better outcome than waiting another 30 days for an offer that will likely come in below asking.
How does the Sell2Rent model hold up in a Texas buyer's market where investors are also more cautious?
Joe's take: The Sell2Rent model is built around investor competition, not investor charity. When multiple buyers bid on the same property, the homeowner gets fair market value -- not a distressed-sale discount. In Texas markets where retail buyers are cautious, investor demand for tenanted off-market properties through platforms like Sell2Rent is actually growing.
What if my client still wants to try a traditional listing first?
That's completely reasonable, and you can hold both options open simultaneously. Let the client list traditionally, and if the listing stalls past 30-45 days, introduce the Sell2Rent conversation from a position of preparation -- not desperation. The best realtors set the expectation early: 'If we don't get the outcome we want in the next 30 days, here is exactly what we do next.'
Does a Texas homeowner lose value by selling through a leaseback instead of the open market?
Not necessarily. The Sell2Rent marketplace generates multiple investor offers based on real market data -- not arbitrary lowball valuations. Investors compete for each property, which produces fair pricing. In a soft Texas market where retail buyers are asking for repairs and concessions, the effective net to the seller on a traditional listing can actually be lower than what the leaseback delivers.
I work with investors in Texas. How does the Sell2Rent platform benefit them?
Joe's take: Investors on the Sell2Rent platform acquire Texas properties with a tenant already in place -- the previous homeowner who elected to stay as a renter. That means zero vacancy on day one, immediate rental income, and a tenant with strong attachment to the property. In a Texas market where finding and placing reliable tenants can take 30-60 days, that built-in tenant structure is a meaningful financial advantage.
The Portfolio Accelerator Webinar -- March 25th, 2026
If you are a Texas realtor who wants to understand exactly how to apply this model with your clients, the Portfolio Accelerator Webinar is the clearest starting point. Special guest Merinda Gabr will walk through practical strategies for working with homeowners who need flexibility and liquidity in today's Texas market.
Date: March 25th, 2026 at 10:00 AM EST
Format: Live on YouTube -- free attendance, registration required
Who should attend: Texas realtors, real estate professionals, investors, agents with distressed or stalling listings
The Portfolio Accelerator Webinar | Live on YouTube | Sell2Rent
The Texas Market Has Shifted. Your Toolkit Should Too.
The realtors who built their practice entirely on a seller's market are finding 2026 difficult. The ones adding tools built for a different market are finding deals everywhere else sees a slowdown. The Sell2Rent sale-leaseback model is that tool for the Texas market -- structured for speed, designed for sellers under pressure, and backed by a real investor marketplace.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Sell2Rent currently available in Texas?
Yes. Texas is one of Sell2Rent's primary service markets, with active transactions across Houston, DFW, Austin, and San Antonio metro areas.
How is the Sell2Rent fee structured for a Texas seller?
Sell2Rent charges a single flat fee of 6% (or a minimum of $11,500, whichever applies). Compare that to the 8-12% total cost of a traditional Texas home sale when you factor in agent commissions, repair costs, buyer concessions, staging, and carrying costs during the listing period.
Can a seller still use their realtor if they go through Sell2Rent?
Yes. Realtors participate in and earn their full commission on Sell2Rent transactions. Your role is to guide the client through their decision -- the Sell2Rent team handles the mechanics, legal, paperwork, and lease structure.
What happens after the sale closes for the Texas homeowner?
The homeowner transitions to renter status under a lease agreement with the new investor-owner. Lease terms -- rent amount, duration, and conditions -- are established transparently before closing. Same house, same neighborhood, defined terms.
What is the Portfolio Accelerator Webinar?
A free live webinar on March 25th, 2026 at 10:00 AM EST on YouTube. Designed for Texas realtors -- covers how to apply the sale-leaseback model with cooling-market clients, which sellers are the best fit, and how to introduce the conversation. Special guest Merinda Gabr joins for live Q&A.
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