Texas Heat Protection: Essential Summer Home Maintenance for North Texas

An educational home maintenance infographic titled Texas Heat Protection: North Texas Summer Home Maintenance. The visual is divided into three clean, numbered sections outlining critical care tips for DFW properties. Section one is labeled Defend Your Foundation and shows a soaker hose watering the soil perimeter of a concrete slab foundation under a home. Section two is labeled Optimize Your HVAC and features a central air conditioning condenser unit sitting on a green lawn next to an outdoor thermometer reading 100+ degrees Fahrenheit. Section three is labeled Maximize Outdoor Living & Curb Appeal and highlights a beautifully manicured backyard lawn with a stained wooden deck and a clean perimeter fence. The official white Energy Realty Group logo is positioned in the bottom-left corner, and a professional watermark business card for Managing Broker Nick Getzendanner is embedded cleanly in the bottom-right corner.

We all know that summer in the Fort Worth, Aledo, and Weatherford areas is no joke. While we are busy cooling off at our local lakes and water parks, our homes are taking the absolute brunt of the brutal Texas sun. Triple-digit streaks and shifting clay soils can do a number on your property if you aren’t proactive.

As a local real estate broker, I always tell my clients that the best way to protect your home’s resale value is through consistent, preventative maintenance. Taking care of your property now ensures that when the time comes to sell, you won’t be hit with costly repairs during the inspection period. Here is your hyper-local, practical summer home maintenance checklist to keep your property protected, efficient, and running strong all season long.


1. Defend Your Foundation: The North Texas Clay Battle

If you live anywhere in the greater DFW metroplex, you are dealing with expansive clay soil. When it gets hot and dry, this soil shrinks and pulls away from your concrete slab, which is the number one cause of costly foundation shifting and structural cracking.

  • The Fix: Implement a consistent foundation watering routine. You want to maintain a uniform moisture level in the soil entirely around the perimeter of your slab.
  • How to Do It: Lay a dedicated soaker hose about 12 to 18 inches away from your foundation. Running it for 15 to 20 minutes a few times a week during the hottest months keeps the soil from drying out and contracting. Just remember to check your local city or county water restrictions first!
  • What to Look For: Keep an eye out for gaps wider than an inch between the dirt and your concrete base—that is your signal that the ground is desperately thirsty.

2. Optimize Your HVAC: Surviving the 100-Degree Streaks

Your air conditioning unit works harder in July and August than just about any other appliance in your home. Giving it a little preventative love will prevent catastrophic mid-summer breakdowns and keep your monthly electric bills from skyrocketing.

  • Change Your Filters Monthly: This is the simplest, most effective thing you can do. High-efficiency filters get clogged quickly with dust and dander, restricting airflow and forcing your system to work twice as hard.
  • Clear the Outside Condenser: Head outside and look at your exterior A/C compressor unit. Ensure it is completely clear of overgrown weeds, brush, debris, or summer lawn clippings. Your system needs breathing room to efficiently exhaust heat away from the house.
  • Clear the Condensate Drain Line: Pour a cup of regular white vinegar down your indoor A/C condensate drain line once a summer to clear out algae buildup and prevent an overflow clog that could damage your drywall.

3. Maximize Outdoor Living Space & Curb Appeal

Summer is prime time for backyard barbecues and outdoor relaxation. It’s also the first thing buyers notice if you are thinking about testing the real estate market later this year.

  • Smart Landscaping: Water your lawn deeply and early in the morning to minimize evaporation loss. Add a fresh layer of hardwood mulch to your flower beds; this acts as a protective blanket, retaining moisture for your plants and regulating soil temperature.
  • Inspect Your Deck and Fence: The intense Texas UV rays will bake unprotected wood. Take a weekend to check your fences and decks for loose boards or popping nails. If water no longer beads up on the wooden surfaces, it is time to apply a fresh coat of protective stain or sealer before the late summer storms hit.

Protecting Your Real Estate Investment

Your home is likely your largest financial asset. Spending a little bit of time and money on these basic summer maintenance tasks goes a long way toward preserving your property’s equity, comfort, and structural integrity for years to come.

If you are planning to sell your home soon and want a professional evaluation of your property’s current market value, or if you are looking to purchase a home with great outdoor bones west of Fort Worth, I’ve got your back. Feel free to reach out anytime for local market guidance or to chat about your next real estate move!


Nick Getzendanner

Broker | REALTOR® | MLO | Marine Veteran

Helping veterans and families secure their piece of Texas. Whether you’re hunting for the perfect acreage or navigating the VA loan process, I’ve got your six.

Contact:

469-323-5295

nick@energyrealtors.com

TREC Broker #0692467
NMLS #2582615
PO Box 134, Aledo TX 76008

Join The Discussion