Know Your Fair Housing Rights

What is the Fair Housing Act?

The Fair Housing Act (FHA) is a federal law that protects certain people from housing discrimination. It protects your rights related to: renting/buying housing; receiving housing-related services; requesting accommodations, modifications, and maintenance/repairs; and not being retaliated against. It protects people based on their disability, race, color, national origin, religion, sex, and familial status.

You are protected under the FHA under disability if you are:

Reasonable Accommodations

If you are protected under disability, you can request a reasonable accommodation under the FHA to change a policy if it is necessary for you to be able to use your home. The request must be:

The request for reasonable accommodation should be in writing and include:

You should include a letter of support from a medical provider that explains how the symptoms of the disabilities stop you from using your current housing or securing new housing.

Examples of reasonable accommodations include:

Reasonable Modifications

You can also request a reasonable modification, such as structural changes to the home. Make the request the same way that you would request a reasonable accommodation. Examples of reasonable modifications include:

Who pays for a reasonable modification? In general, if the modification is in a:

If your landlord/housing provider ignores your request, denies your request, makes discriminatory statements, or retaliates against you because you are a person with a disability, call the Disability Rights Texas housing team at 1-800-252-9108 or request help online at Intake.DRTx.org. Our website also has additional resources to help you address discrimination.

 

Fair Housing Rights flyer

 

Publication Code: HS30


Disability Rights Texas logo

www.DRTx.org
Statewide Intake: 1-800-252-9108
Sign Language Video Phone: 1-866-362-2851
Purple 2 Video Phone: 512-271-9391
Online Intake available 24/7: intake.DRTx.org

Disclaimer: Disability Rights Texas strives to update its materials on an annual basis, and this handout is based upon the law at the time it was written. The law changes frequently and is subject to various interpretations by different courts. Future changes in the law may make some information in this handout inaccurate.

The handout is not intended to and does not replace an attorney’s advice or assistance based on your particular situation.


To request this handout in ASL, Braille, or as an audio file, contact us.