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Seller's Disclosure Guide

Texas real estate disclosure requirements and seller obligations for transparency.

The Seller's Disclosure Notice is a legal document required in Texas for most previously occupied single-family homes. If you are selling a home you have lived in, you will need to fill one out. It is one of the first documents buyers review, and it plays an important role in the transaction for both sides.

Understanding what this document is — and what it is not — will help you complete it accurately and confidently.

What the Seller's Disclosure Is

The Seller's Disclosure is a snapshot of your knowledge about your property at the time you fill it out. It asks you to share what you know about the condition of the home — things like whether you have had foundation issues, roof leaks, plumbing problems, or previous flooding. It also covers systems like HVAC, electrical, and appliances.

The key phrase is "to the best of your knowledge." You are not expected to hire an inspector or discover problems you did not know about. You are expected to honestly share what you do know.

What It Is Not

The disclosure is not a warranty. It is not a guarantee that everything works. And it is not a substitute for a professional inspection. Buyers will still hire their own inspector, and that inspection may uncover things you were not aware of. That is normal and expected.

The disclosure is also not a reason to panic. It is a straightforward form. Most sellers complete it in 20 to 30 minutes.

Why It Matters for Buyers

Buyers use the disclosure to get a sense of the home's history before they make an offer or finalize their decision. It helps them understand what they are buying and factor any known issues into their evaluation. A thorough, honest disclosure builds trust and can actually make the negotiation process smoother.

Why It Matters for Sellers

Full disclosure protects you. Texas law requires it, and failing to disclose known issues can create legal liability after the sale. If a buyer discovers a problem after closing that you knew about and did not disclose, you could be held responsible. Being thorough and honest is both the right thing to do and the smart thing to do.

What It Covers

The Texas Seller's Disclosure covers a wide range of topics, including:

  • Structural components — foundation, roof, walls, fences
  • Major systems — HVAC, plumbing, electrical, water heater
  • Appliances — what is included, what is functional
  • Water and sewer — well, septic, municipal connections
  • Flooding history — previous water intrusion, drainage issues
  • Environmental hazards — lead paint, asbestos, mold
  • HOA information — dues, restrictions, pending assessments
  • Previous repairs — what was fixed and when

How to Fill It Out

Go through the form one section at a time. For each question, answer based on what you actually know. If you are unsure about something, say so — there is usually an "unknown" option, and using it is perfectly fine. Do not guess or speculate.

If you have had work done on the home — a roof replacement, foundation repair, plumbing fix — include those details. Showing that you addressed issues responsibly actually strengthens buyer confidence.

When to Complete It

Ideally, you should fill out the disclosure before your home goes on the market. Having it ready from day one means interested buyers can review it immediately, which keeps the process moving and avoids delays once you receive an offer.

The Takeaway

The Seller's Disclosure is not something to stress over. Be honest, be thorough, and fill it out based on what you actually know. It protects you, it helps the buyer, and it keeps the transaction on solid ground.

Watch the full guide (2:06)

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