MAKE READY · DALLAS-FORT WORTH, TX
Dallas-Fort Worth make‑readies, run by a local Lula W‑2.
Your local Lula field manager scopes the work, lines up vetted Dallas-Fort Worth Pros, sequences the trades, and walks the unit before it hands back to you. One quote. One schedule. One owner of the outcome.
4-6
Avg days per turn
40+
Service verticals
17 Markets
Each with a local W‑2 field manager
YOUR LOCAL FIELD MANAGER
Meet Your Dallas-Fort Worth Field Manager
Justin Hulsey
Dallas-Fort Worth Field Manager
Justin Hulsey is a seasoned project management professional with over 14 years of experience in the building and construction industry. Throughout his career he has led diverse projects from concept to completion, consistently delivering on time and within budget, and his strong communication skills and ability to lead through adversity have been key to his success. Outside of work, his faith is a cornerstone of his life, and he is a devoted family man who cherishes time with his loved ones, whether on a family vacation, a day at Six Flags, or just everyday moments together.
WHAT LOCAL ACTUALLY MEANS
Why Dallas-Fort Worth Turns Are Different
Metro Dallas rental coordination has its own rhythm. School-year timing, corporate relocation, extreme heat and winter freezes, and pre-1978 intown stock all shape how a turn should be scoped and sequenced.
The May–August school-year and relocation crunch
Most metro Dallas SFR moves happen May through August, set by the Dallas ISD, Plano ISD, and Frisco ISD calendars and the summer corporate-relocation window. A unit listed by early July catches families before the fall semester. Miss the window and the unit can sit into winter.
Triple-digit summers, winter freezes, and seasonal sequencing
Triple-digit summer heat (June through September) makes HVAC servicing and exterior-paint cure time the top sequencing constraints. Episodic winter ice events, as the 2021 freeze showed, push plumbing freeze-protection and insulation checks onto the make-ready punch list.
Pre-1978 intown stock and lead-paint rules
East Dallas (Lakewood, the M Streets, Lower Greenville, Junius Heights), Oak Cliff (Winnetka Heights, Kessler Park, Bishop Arts), older sections of Preston Hollow, and inner-ring areas like Casa Linda hold significant pre-1978 stock. EPA RRP lead-safe certification is required for any work disturbing painted surfaces.
Corporate relocation and employer-cluster leasing
Dallas-Fort Worth is a corporate relocation hub, with major employers like Toyota in Plano, JPMorgan Chase in Legacy West, Charles Schwab in Westlake, and AT&T downtown driving steady transferee demand. Clusters in Legacy West, Las Colinas, and the Richardson Telecom Corridor anchor north-suburb turnover, and your field manager stacks Pro availability around these windows.
WHAT YOU’RE DOING WITHOUT ONE
Every Vacant Day Is Rent You’re Not Collecting
Punch lists split across a dozen 1099 vendors who don’t talk to each other. You chase quotes, juggle schedules, and hope someone shows up.
Vendor sprawl
Six different 1099s for paint, plumbing, carpet, cleaning, and prep. None of them coordinate with each other, and none of them own the outcome.
Quote-chasing
Different scopes, different price models, different turnaround times. Comparing apples to apples eats hours per turn.
Schedule juggling
One trade slips and the next four cascade. Someone on your team becomes a part-time project manager by default.
No accountability
When something gets missed or the unit isn’t actually ready, nobody owns the redo. The cost falls back on you.
WHAT YOU GET BACK
One Contact, Full-Service Turn Management in Dallas-Fort Worth
SERVICES COVERED IN DALLAS-FORT WORTH
Every Service Your Field Manager Coordinates
From scope to handoff: paint, drywall, plumbing, HVAC, cleanouts and more. One coordinated quote, one schedule, one local W‑2 owning the outcome.
Paint
Drywall
Flooring
Cleaning
Plumbing
HVAC
Cleanouts
Trim & Caulk
Appliances
Final Inspection
BUILT FOR DALLAS-FORT WORTH RENTAL PORTFOLIOS
Single-Family, Multifamily, or Both
Make-ready services for residential rental properties across metro Dallas-Fort Worth, at the scale and pace your leasing calendar demands.
Dallas-Fort Worth Single-Family Rentals
Scattered portfolios from East Dallas bungalows to Plano and Frisco subdivisions. Same workflow per door regardless of build year or finish level, with lead-paint scoping baked into pre-1978 intown stock.
Dallas-Fort Worth Multifamily
From Uptown and Oak Lawn mid-rises to garden-style communities around Plano and Las Colinas. Stacked-schedule turns sequenced so HVAC, paint, and flooring don’t fight each other for the unit.
LOCAL COVERAGE
Make-Ready Coverage Across Dallas-Fort Worth
From intown Dallas neighborhoods out to the north suburbs and across into Tarrant County, spanning Dallas, Tarrant, Collin, and Denton counties.
Dallas County, TX
Collin County, TX
Denton County, TX
Tarrant County, TX
Coverage spans major ZIP codes across Dallas, Tarrant, Collin, and Denton counties, including 75201, 75204, 75205, 75206, 75214, 75230, 75240, 75248, 75024, and 75093.
FREQUENTLY ASKED
Dallas-Fort Worth Make-Ready Questions
How quickly can a Lula field manager start on a new Dallas-Fort Worth make-ready?
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Most Dallas-Fort Worth scoping walks happen within 24 to 48 hours of intake. For portfolios with regular volume, a vetted Pro is typically on site the day after quote approval.
How much does a make-ready cost in metro Dallas?
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Most Dallas-Fort Worth SFR turns price between $2,000 and $5,000 depending on scope, with paint, flooring, and cleaning the biggest line items. You see the full flat-rate quote upfront. No surprise change orders.
What’s the daily cost of a vacant rental in metro Dallas?
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Metro Dallas rents average around $1,900 a month, which works out to roughly $63 per day in lost rent per door. A turn that takes two weeks longer than it should is about $880 per door in foregone income.
Do you cover inside the LBJ loop only, or the suburbs too?
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Both. Coverage runs from intown Dallas neighborhoods like Uptown, Lakewood, and Oak Cliff out to north-suburb submarkets including Plano, Frisco, and Richardson, and across into Tarrant County, including Fort Worth and Arlington.
How does flat-rate pricing work for Dallas-Fort Worth make-readies?
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Every service comes from a published flat-rate price list, scoped during the punch-list walk. You see the total before any work starts, with no PM markup and no surprise change orders.
What happens if the unit needs work beyond the original scope?
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Anything beyond original scope is surfaced before the trade arrives, as a separate flat-rate line item you approve or decline. Nothing gets billed without sign-off.
Do you handle pre-1978 lead-paint disclosures for Dallas intown homes?
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Yes. Many East Dallas, Oak Cliff, and older Preston Hollow homes pre-date 1978 and fall under EPA RRP lead-safe rules. Your field manager scopes any disturbance to painted surfaces with proper containment from the start.
When is peak SFR turnover season in metro Dallas?
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May through August, tied to the school year and the summer corporate-relocation window. Dallas ISD, Plano ISD, and Frisco ISD calendars push most family moves before fall semester. Your field manager stacks crews and reserves Pro availability across this window to keep turn times consistent.
Which Dallas-Fort Worth counties do you cover?
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Dallas, Tarrant, Collin, and Denton. Major submarkets include Uptown, Lakewood, the M Streets, Bishop Arts, Oak Cliff, Preston Hollow, Lake Highlands, Plano, Frisco, Richardson, McKinney, Fort Worth, and Arlington.
Do you handle both single-family and multifamily Dallas-Fort Worth turns?
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Yes. Scattered SFR portfolios across metro Dallas-Fort Worth and multifamily lease-ups in Uptown, Oak Lawn, Las Colinas, and the north suburbs all use the same workflow, with one field manager coordinating across multiple buildings or units.
GET STARTED
Ready to Hand Off Your Next Dallas-Fort Worth Turn?
Talk to your local Dallas-Fort Worth field manager. We’ll walk a unit, scope the punch list, and send a flat-rate quote within 48 hours.
Make Ready Service



