May 26, 2026 น

Texas Business Licenses & Permits: Industry-Specific Requirements

โš ๏ธ EDUCATIONAL INFORMATION ONLY โ€” NOT LEGAL ADVICE This article provides general educational information about Texas business licensing and permit requirements. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Licensing requirements change frequently, vary significantly by industry and location, and the information in this article may not reflect the most current requirements or apply to every business situation. This content is intended for U.S. businesses operating specifically in Texas and may not apply in other jurisdictions. Always verify current requirements directly with the relevant Texas state agency, your city or county clerk's office, and any applicable federal agency. Consult a qualified Texas attorney or licensed professional for guidance specific to your business. This material may be considered attorney advertising in some jurisdictions.
Do I Need a Business License in Texas?

Texas does not issue a single statewide general business license. Licensing requirements depend on your specific industry, profession, and location. Most Texas businesses will need some combination of state agency permits, professional licenses, local city or county approvals, and potentially federal authorizations โ€” determined by what the business does, not simply how it is organized.

Get Updates on New Texas Business Guides

Forming a Texas LLC or corporation is only the beginning. Once your entity is established, a separate and equally important question arises: what licenses, permits, and regulatory approvals are required before you can lawfully open your doors? The answer depends almost entirely on your industry, location, and the specific activities your business will conduct. This guide provides an organized overview of how Texas licensing works, which state agencies regulate which industries, what local approvals are commonly required, and how to determine what applies to your specific situation.

Texas Has No General Business License โ€” What That Means

Unlike some states that issue a single statewide business license covering all commercial activity, Texas does not have a general business license. There is no single document you obtain from the state that authorizes you to operate a business in Texas broadly.

This creates a common misunderstanding among new business owners who assume that once they have filed their LLC or corporation with the Secretary of State โ€” and perhaps obtained a Sales Tax Permit from the Comptroller โ€” they are fully licensed to operate. In many cases, that is not accurate.

What Texas has instead is a large and varied set of industry-specific, profession-specific, and activity-specific licensing requirements administered by dozens of state agencies, local governments, and in some cases federal authorities. Whether a particular license is required depends on:

  • The industry or sector in which the business operates
  • The specific activities the business conducts (e.g., preparing food, providing medical care, performing electrical work)
  • The physical location of the business (city, county, and whether the premises are in a zoned area with specific restrictions)
  • Whether any employees or principals hold state-regulated professional credentials
  • Whether federal law imposes licensing requirements independent of state requirements

The absence of a general Texas business license does not mean your business requires no licenses. It means you must investigate your specific industry, activities, and location to identify what applies.

The Three Levels of Texas Business Licensing

The Three Levels of Texas Business Licensing

Texas business licensing operates at three distinct levels, and most businesses must evaluate all three before opening.

Level Who Issues It Examples
State Texas state agencies (TDLR, DSHS, TABC, TCEQ, TDI, etc.) Contractor license, food manufacturer permit, alcohol permit, insurance license, cosmetology license
Local City or county government Local business permit, certificate of occupancy, sign permit, home occupation permit, fire safety inspection
Federal U.S. federal agencies (FDA, ATF, FCC, USDA, etc.) Food facility registration, firearms dealer license (FFL), broadcast license, meat processing certification
Texas Licensing Agencies

All Three Levels Are Independent

Obtaining a state license does not satisfy local permit requirements, and vice versa. A business that holds every required state license may still face enforcement action from a city or county if it has not obtained required local approvals โ€” and may face federal action if federally regulated activities are involved.

Key Texas State Licensing Agencies

Texas licensing is distributed across many agencies, each governing a distinct set of industries and professions. The table below identifies the most commonly relevant agencies for small and medium-sized businesses.

Agency Abbreviation Primary Areas Regulated
Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation TDLR Contractors (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, boilers), cosmetology, barbers, towing, vehicle storage, auctioneers, driver education, massage therapy, podiatry, and many others (40+ license types)
Texas Department of State Health Services DSHS Food manufacturing and processing, food warehouses, retail food establishments (in some jurisdictions), health care facilities, tattoo and piercing studios, tanning facilities, food handlers
Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission TABC Manufacture, distribution, and retail sale of beer, wine, and distilled spirits; mixed beverage permits; private club registrations
Texas Commission on Environmental Quality TCEQ Air quality permits, water quality permits, waste disposal permits, stormwater authorizations, underground storage tanks
Texas Real Estate Commission TREC Real estate brokers and sales agents, home inspectors, easement or right-of-way agents
Texas Department of Insurance TDI Insurance agents and adjusters, insurance companies, health maintenance organizations, workers' compensation
Texas Department of Agriculture TDA Pesticide applicators, nursery dealers, seed distributors, egg dealers, weights and measures, certain food processors
Texas Medical Board TMB Physicians (MDs and DOs), physician assistants, acupuncturists, surgical assistants
Texas State Board of Pharmacy TSBP Pharmacists, pharmacies, pharmacy technicians
Texas Department of Public Safety DPS Private security companies, security officers, private investigators, alarm system companies, school bus operators
Texas Lottery Commission TLC Lottery retailers, charitable bingo
Texas Secretary of State SOS Notaries public, process servers (registration), certain filings for regulated entities
TDLR Is the Broadest Single Licensing Agency  The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation is the primary state licensing authority for more than 40 different license and permit types. If your business involves a trade, personal service, or regulated activity not clearly covered by another agency, TDLR is typically the first place to check. Visit tdlr.texas.gov for the full list of regulated industries.

Industry-Specific Licensing Guide

The sections below provide an overview of licensing requirements for common Texas business categories. These summaries are educational in nature โ€” requirements vary based on location, scope of operations, and the specific activities conducted. Always verify current requirements directly with the relevant state agency before commencing operations.

๐Ÿฝ๏ธ

Food and Beverage Businesses

Texas food businesses are subject to overlapping state and local oversight, and the applicable agencies depend on the type of food operation, how food is processed or sold, and the business's location.

  • Retail food establishments (restaurants, cafes, food trucks, delis): Permitting is generally handled by the local health authority โ€” typically the city or county health department โ€” under Chapter 437 of the Texas Health and Safety Code. In areas without a local health authority, DSHS may have jurisdiction.
  • Food manufacturers and processors (packaged goods, bakeries distributing wholesale, canneries): Generally permitted by DSHS under Chapter 431 of the Texas Health and Safety Code (Texas Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act).
  • Food warehouses and distributors: May require a DSHS Food Warehouse License depending on the products stored and handled.
  • Cottage food operations: Texas allows certain home-based food businesses under the Texas Cottage Food Law (Texas Health and Safety Code ยง 437.0193) without a permit, subject to specific limitations on product types, annual revenue, and sales methods. These limits are subject to legislative change โ€” verify current provisions before relying on the exemption.
  • Mobile food vendors (food trucks): Typically require both a state food handler certification and a local permit from each city or county in which the truck operates. Many Texas cities require a separate permit per jurisdiction.
  • Alcohol sales: Require separate TABC permits โ€” addressed in the Alcohol Beverage section below.
Primary agencies: Local health authority (city/county), Texas DSHS (dshs.texas.gov), TABC (tabc.texas.gov) for alcohol

๐Ÿ”จ

Construction, Trades, and Contractors

Texas regulates several construction trades at the state level through TDLR, while general contracting is primarily regulated at the local level. Licensing requirements in construction are among the most commonly misunderstood in Texas.

  • General contractors: Texas does not license general contractors at the state level. However, many Texas cities โ€” including Houston, Austin, Dallas, San Antonio, and Fort Worth โ€” require local contractor registration or licensing. Always check with the relevant city's permitting office.
  • Electricians: State licensing through TDLR. License types include master electrician, journeyman electrician, and residential wireman. Electrical contractors (businesses) must also hold a separate TDLR electrical contractor license.
  • Plumbers: Licensed through the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners (TSBPE). License types include master plumber, journeyman plumber, and plumber's apprentice. Plumbing companies must hold a licensed master plumber as the qualifying party.
  • HVAC contractors: Licensed through TDLR. Air conditioning and refrigeration contractors must hold an HVAC contractor license; technicians must hold an HVAC technician license. EPA Section 608 certification is also required for handling refrigerants.
  • Boiler operators: Regulated by TDLR. Businesses that install, operate, or repair boilers may require a TDLR boiler license or certificate depending on the scope of work.
  • Roofing contractors: Not licensed at the state level, but must register with TDLR as a roofing contractor (separate from licensing). Several Texas municipalities impose additional local requirements.
  • Irrigators and landscape irrigators: Licensed by TDLR. Irrigation contractors who design or install irrigation systems must hold a TDLR irrigator license.
Primary agencies: TDLR (tdlr.texas.gov), Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners (tsbpe.texas.gov), local city permitting office

๐Ÿฅ

Healthcare, Medical, and Wellness

Healthcare businesses in Texas operate under some of the most extensive and overlapping licensing requirements of any industry. Both the individual practitioners and the facilities in which they practice are typically subject to separate licensing obligations.

  • Physicians (MDs/DOs): Licensed by the Texas Medical Board (TMB). Individual physician licenses are required before any medical practice may begin.
  • Dentists: Licensed by the Texas State Board of Dental Examiners (TSBDE).
  • Nurses (RNs and LVNs): Licensed by the Texas Board of Nursing (BON).
  • Pharmacies and pharmacists: Licensed by the Texas State Board of Pharmacy (TSBP).
  • Physical therapists: Licensed by the Texas PT and OT Board.
  • Mental health professionals: Licensed Social Workers (LCSW), Licensed Professional Counselors (LPC), and Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists (LMFT) are licensed through DSHS or the Texas State Board of Examiners of Professional Counselors, depending on credential type.
  • Healthcare facilities (outpatient clinics, surgical centers, home health agencies, hospices, assisted living facilities): Subject to facility licensing by DSHS, Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC), or both โ€” depending on the type of facility and the populations served.
  • Massage therapy establishments: Therapists licensed through TDLR; massage establishments may require a separate local permit in many Texas cities.
  • Tattoo and body piercing studios: Permitted by DSHS under Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 146. Individual practitioners must complete DSHS-approved bloodborne pathogen and sterilization training.
Primary agencies: Texas Medical Board (tmb.state.tx.us), DSHS (dshs.texas.gov), HHSC (hhs.texas.gov), TSBP, TSBDE, BON, TDLR โ€” varies by profession

๐Ÿ 

Real Estate and Property Services

Real estate activities in Texas are regulated by the Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC) and, for certain transaction types, by other agencies.

  • Real estate brokers and sales agents: Must hold a TREC license. A sales agent must be sponsored by a licensed broker; a broker may operate independently. License requirements include education hours, background checks, and passing a state examination.
  • Real estate inspectors (home inspectors): Licensed by TREC. License types include real estate inspector and professional inspector. Inspectors must meet TREC's Standards of Practice.
  • Property managers: If performing acts that require a real estate license (such as leasing or listing property on behalf of others), a TREC broker license is generally required.
  • Mortgage loan originators: Licensed through the Texas Department of Savings and Mortgage Lending (SML) under the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing (SAFE) Act.
  • Appraisers: Licensed or certified through the Texas Appraiser Licensing and Certification Board (TALCB).
  • Short-term rental properties: Subject to local city or county short-term rental ordinances and may require a local permit. Hotel Occupancy Tax registration with the Texas Comptroller is typically required. Requirements vary significantly by city โ€” Austin, San Antonio, and Houston each have distinct short-term rental frameworks.
Primary agencies: TREC (trec.texas.gov), SML (sml.texas.gov), TALCB (talcb.texas.gov), Texas Comptroller (for hotel occupancy tax)

๐Ÿšš

Transportation, Logistics, and Vehicles

Transportation businesses in Texas are subject to state, local, and federal licensing requirements that vary based on vehicle type, cargo, and whether operations cross state lines.

  • Trucking and freight carriers (intrastate): Must register with the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles (TxDMV) for an intrastate motor carrier permit. Vehicles over certain weight thresholds require oversize/overweight permits for specific loads.
  • Trucking and freight carriers (interstate): Subject to federal regulation by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). Requires a USDOT number and, for for-hire carriers, an MC (Motor Carrier) number.
  • Taxicab, limousine, and for-hire vehicles: Regulated at the local level by the city or county transportation authority where service is provided. Rideshare companies (TNCs) operating in Texas are regulated under Texas Transportation Code Chapter 2402.
  • Towing companies: Regulated by TDLR. Towing companies must hold a TDLR towing company license; tow truck operators must be individually licensed.
  • Automobile dealers: Licensed by the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles (TxDMV). Dealer types include franchised dealers, independent dealers, and wholesale dealers โ€” each with distinct license requirements.
  • Auto repair shops: Vehicle repair shops performing certain types of work are regulated by TDLR (automotive technicians) and may require a state inspection license from TxDPS to perform state vehicle inspections.
Primary agencies: TxDMV (txdmv.gov), TDLR (tdlr.texas.gov), TxDPS, FMCSA (fmcsa.dot.gov) for interstate carriers

๐Ÿ’ผ

Financial Services and Money Services

Financial services businesses in Texas are regulated by both state and federal authorities, depending on the type of financial activity conducted.

  • Money transmission and currency exchange (money services businesses): Regulated by the Texas Department of Banking (TDB) under the Texas Money Services Act. Businesses that transmit money, sell payment instruments, or exchange currency must obtain a Money Services License from TDB.
  • Investment advisers and broker-dealers: Investment advisers managing less than $100 million in assets are generally regulated by the Texas State Securities Board (TSSB). Those above that threshold are subject to SEC regulation. Broker-dealers are regulated by FINRA and the TSSB.
  • Insurance agents and adjusters: Licensed by the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI). Each line of insurance (life, health, property, casualty, etc.) requires a separate license. Adjusters handling claims must also hold a TDI license.
  • Mortgage originators: Licensed through the Texas Department of Savings and Mortgage Lending (SML) under the SAFE Act. Licensing requires NMLS registration, pre-licensing education, and examination.
  • Pawnshops: Regulated by the Office of Consumer Credit Commissioner (OCCC) under the Texas Pawnshop Act.
  • Credit access businesses (payday and auto title lenders): Regulated by OCCC and required to register under Texas Finance Code Chapter 393.
Primary agencies: Texas Department of Banking (dob.texas.gov), TDI (tdi.texas.gov), TSSB (ssb.texas.gov), SML (sml.texas.gov), OCCC (occc.texas.gov)

๐ŸŽ“

Child Care, Education, and Youth Services

Businesses serving children in Texas are subject to particularly rigorous licensing requirements designed to protect the health, safety, and welfare of minors.

  • Child care centers and day care facilities: Licensed by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) Child Care Licensing division. Requirements include minimum staff-to-child ratios, background checks for all staff, physical facility standards, health and safety training, and annual inspections. Operating without an HHSC license when one is required is a criminal offense under Texas Human Resources Code ยง 42.075.
  • Family home child care (in-home day care): May require registration or listing with HHSC depending on the number of children cared for. In-home care for fewer than four unrelated children may fall under an exemption โ€” verify current thresholds with HHSC.
  • After-school programs and youth camps: Overnight youth camps are permitted by DSHS. Day camps and after-school programs may or may not require state licensing depending on scope and operator type โ€” verify with DSHS and HHSC.
  • Private schools and tutoring centers: Private schools in Texas are not state-licensed but may be subject to local zoning requirements and must comply with applicable HHSC requirements if child care is provided as part of the school program. Tutoring centers operating independently of child care are generally not licensed at the state level.
  • Driver education schools: Licensed by TDLR. Parent-taught driver education programs must use a TDLR-approved curriculum.
Primary agencies: HHSC Child Care Licensing (hhs.texas.gov/childcare), DSHS (dshs.texas.gov), TDLR (tdlr.texas.gov)
Professional and Occupational Licenses

Professional and Occupational Licenses

Texas regulates a wide range of professions through occupational licensing laws. In most cases, both the individual practitioner and the business entity through which they practice must hold appropriate credentials. Common examples include:

Profession Licensing Body Governing Law
Attorney (lawyer) State Bar of Texas Texas Government Code ยง 82
CPA (Certified Public Accountant) Texas State Board of Public Accountancy (TSBPA) Texas Occupations Code ยง 901
Engineer (PE) Texas Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors (TBPELS) Texas Occupations Code ยง 1001
Architect Texas Board of Architectural Examiners (TBAE) Texas Occupations Code ยง 1051
Cosmetologist TDLR Texas Occupations Code ยง 1603
Barber TDLR Texas Occupations Code ยง 1601
Auctioneer TDLR Texas Occupations Code ยง 1802
Private investigator DPS Texas Occupations Code ยง 1702
Security officer / guard DPS Texas Occupations Code ยง 1702
Landscape architect TBAE Texas Occupations Code ยง 1052
Funeral director / embalmer Texas Funeral Service Commission Texas Occupations Code ยง 651
Veterinarian Texas Board of Veterinary Medical Examiners Texas Occupations Code ยง 801
Optometrist Texas Optometry Board Texas Occupations Code ยง 351
Speech-language pathologist TDLR Texas Occupations Code ยง 401
โš ๏ธ Practicing a Licensed Profession Without a License Is a Criminal Offense in TexasThe unauthorized practice of most licensed professions in Texas โ€” including law, medicine, engineering, and architecture โ€” carries criminal penalties under the Texas Occupations Code in addition to civil liability. Business owners should confirm that all staff performing regulated activities hold current, valid licenses before operations begin.
Professional Entities May Require a Special FormationCertain licensed professionals in Texas โ€” including attorneys, physicians, engineers, architects, and CPAs โ€” must form a specific type of legal entity to practice through a business structure. A Professional Limited Liability Company (PLLC) or Professional Corporation (PC) may be required, and all equity owners typically must hold the same professional license. Consult a Texas attorney familiar with the applicable licensing board's entity requirements before forming the business.

Health Department Permits and Food Service Licensing

Texas food businesses must navigate a permitting structure that distributes responsibility between state and local health authorities depending on the type of food operation and where it is located.

Retail Food Establishment Permits (Restaurants, Cafes, Food Trucks)

In Texas cities and counties with a local health authority, retail food establishment permits are issued and inspected by the local health department โ€” not the state. This means a restaurant in Austin obtains its food permit from Austin Public Health; a restaurant in Dallas obtains one from the Dallas County Health and Human Services department, and so on. Permit fees, inspection schedules, and specific requirements vary by jurisdiction.

In areas without a local health authority, or for food operations that cross jurisdictional lines (such as certain mobile food vendors), DSHS may have primary permitting jurisdiction.

Food Handler CertificationTexas requires that each food establishment have at least one certified food manager on staff who has passed a DSHS-accredited food manager certification examination. All food handlers (employees who work with unpackaged food) must complete a Texas-approved food handler training course within 60 days of hire under Texas Health and Safety Code ยง 438.046.

Food Manufacturing and Processing Permits (DSHS)

Businesses that manufacture, process, or package food for wholesale distribution โ€” rather than direct retail sale โ€” are generally permitted by DSHS at the state level, not the local health department. This category includes wholesale bakeries, food co-packers, bottled water plants, dietary supplement manufacturers, and similar operations. DSHS conducts inspections and may impose Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) requirements consistent with FDA standards.

The Cottage Food Exemption

Texas allows certain low-risk homemade food products to be sold directly to consumers without a permit under the Cottage Food Law (Texas Health and Safety Code ยง 437.0193). Qualifying products generally include baked goods, candy, jams, jellies, and similar non-potentially-hazardous foods. Important limitations apply โ€” including restrictions on annual gross revenue, sales methods, and product labeling requirements. These limits are subject to legislative modification; always verify current provisions at dshs.texas.gov before relying on this exemption.

Alcohol Beverage Licensing โ€” TABC

The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (TABC) administers one of the most complex licensing frameworks in the state. Alcohol licensing in Texas is layered โ€” the type of permit required depends on what you sell, how you sell it, who you sell it to, and where your business is located.

Texas law divides the alcohol beverage industry into three tiers โ€” manufacturing, distribution, and retail โ€” and generally prohibits cross-tier ownership. The most common permit types for small and medium-sized businesses include:

Permit / License Type For Allows
Mixed Beverage Permit (MB) Restaurants, bars, event venues Sale of beer, wine, and distilled spirits for on-premises consumption
Wine and Beer Retailer's Permit (BG) Restaurants with beer/wine only Sale of wine and beer for on-premises consumption with food service
Beer Retailer's Off-Premise License (BF) Convenience stores, grocery stores Sale of beer for off-premises consumption
Package Store Permit (P) Liquor stores Sale of liquor, wine, and malt liquor for off-premises consumption
Brewer's Permit Craft breweries Manufacture and distribution of malt beverages; taproom sales with additional permits
Winery Permit Wineries Manufacture and sale of wine; tasting room sales with applicable permits
Distiller's and Rectifier's Permit Distilleries Manufacture of distilled spirits; on-site sales with additional authorizations
Private Club Registration (N) Member-only clubs Alcohol service to members and guests in a private club setting
โš ๏ธ Local Dry Laws and Wet/Dry StatusNot all Texas counties and cities permit the sale of alcohol. Texas has a complex patchwork of "wet" and "dry" designations at the county, precinct, and municipality level under the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code. A TABC permit cannot authorize alcohol sales in a jurisdiction that has not voted to permit it. Before applying for any TABC permit, verify the wet/dry status of the specific location at tabc.texas.gov. Selling alcohol in a dry area โ€” even with a valid TABC permit issued for another location โ€” is a serious violation.

The TABC application process requires background checks, premises inspections, public notice requirements, and in some cases a local governing body approval. Processing times vary by permit type and location; allow significant lead time before a planned opening. All TABC permits must be renewed annually or biennially depending on permit type.

Contractor and Construction Licensing in Texas

As noted above, Texas does not license general contractors at the state level โ€” but that does not mean contractors can operate without credentials. Several important points apply:

State-Licensed Trades Require Individual and Business Licenses

For trades regulated by TDLR and the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners, both the individual performing the work and the business entity offering those services may need to be separately licensed. For example:

  • An electrician must hold a personal TDLR electrician license and the business hiring electricians must hold a TDLR electrical contractor license.
  • A plumbing business must employ a licensed master plumber as the qualifying party, and the business itself must hold a plumbing contractor registration or license.
  • An HVAC business must hold a TDLR HVAC contractor license in addition to employing properly licensed technicians.

Building Permits Are Separate From Contractor Licenses

A contractor license or registration authorizes a person or business to offer services. It does not substitute for a building permit, which is a project-specific approval issued by the local jurisdiction for each specific construction project. Most structural, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC work in Texas requires a building permit from the applicable city or county permitting office before work begins. Performing permitted work without pulling the required building permit is a violation of local law and can result in fines, stop-work orders, and mandatory demolition of non-compliant work.

Who Pulls the Permit?In Texas, the responsibility for obtaining a building permit typically rests with the licensed contractor performing the work โ€” not the property owner (though property owners performing their own work on their own residence may pull certain permits themselves). Homeowners should confirm that any contractor they hire obtains the required permits before work begins.

Local Permits: Cities, Counties, and Zoning

Even when a Texas business has all required state licenses, it must also satisfy local permitting requirements. These vary significantly from city to city and county to county, but the most commonly applicable local permits and approvals include the following.

Certificate of Occupancy (CO)

A Certificate of Occupancy is a document issued by a city's building or development services department confirming that a physical premises complies with applicable building codes and is approved for a specific type of use. Most Texas cities require a CO before a business can occupy a commercial space. A CO is typically issued after a building inspection and is use-specific โ€” if you change the type of business operating from a location, a new CO may be required.

Local Business Permit or Registration

While Texas has no statewide general business license, some Texas cities require businesses to register with or obtain a permit from the city before operating. Examples include Houston's general business license for certain regulated business types, and various city-specific permit requirements for home-based businesses, peddlers, solicitors, and itinerant merchants. Check directly with the city clerk or development services office in each jurisdiction where your business operates.

Zoning and Land Use Approvals

Zoning laws govern what types of business activities are permitted in specific geographic areas within a city or county. Before signing a commercial lease or beginning construction, verify that the intended use is permitted under the applicable zoning designation for that address. Relevant considerations include:

  • Use classification: Does the zoning district permit the type of business you plan to operate (retail, office, light industrial, food service, etc.)?
  • Conditional use permits (CUPs): Some business types are permitted in a zone only with a conditional use permit โ€” a discretionary approval that typically requires a public hearing before a zoning board or city council.
  • Home occupation permits: Operating a business from a residential property โ€” including home offices with client visits โ€” may require a home occupation permit and is subject to restrictions on signage, employees, vehicle traffic, and operating hours in most Texas cities with zoning.
  • Variance: If a proposed use does not conform to current zoning, the business owner may apply for a variance โ€” a discretionary approval that is more difficult to obtain than a conditional use permit and is not guaranteed.
โš ๏ธ Houston Has No Zoning OrdinanceHouston is the largest U.S. city without traditional Euclidean zoning. However, Houston is not unregulated โ€” it has deed restrictions, development regulations, setback requirements, and specific ordinances for certain business types. Do not assume that the absence of a traditional zoning ordinance means no land-use restrictions apply to a Houston business location.

Sign Permits

Most Texas cities regulate business signage through local sign ordinances that govern sign size, placement, illumination, and proximity to roadways. A sign permit is typically required before installing any exterior business signage. Violations can result in fines and mandatory sign removal.

Fire Safety and Health Inspections

Many Texas cities require a fire safety inspection before issuing a Certificate of Occupancy or a food service permit. The local fire marshal's office may also conduct periodic inspections of operating businesses โ€” particularly those in food service, assembly occupancies, or high-hazard industries. Compliance with local fire codes, including adequate fire suppression systems, exit signage, and occupancy load compliance, is required before opening.

Federal Licenses and Permits

Certain Texas business activities are subject to federal licensing requirements that are independent of โ€” and in addition to โ€” state and local requirements. Federal licensing is required when a business activity is regulated by a federal agency. Common examples include:

Federal Business Licensing and Registration Requirements
Business Activity Federal Agency Requirement
Interstate trucking and freight FMCSA (DOT) USDOT Number; MC Number for for-hire carriers
Firearms dealer, manufacturer, or importer ATF (DOJ) Federal Firearms License (FFL)
Food facility (packaging, processing, storage) FDA (HHS) FDA Food Facility Registration under the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA)
Meat and poultry processing USDA/FSIS USDA inspection grant and establishment number
Alcohol manufacturing (distilleries, wineries, breweries) TTB (Treasury) Brewer's Notice or Distilled Spirits Plant permit from the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau
Radio and television broadcasting FCC FCC broadcast license
Aviation (aircraft operations, charter) FAA (DOT) Air Carrier Certificate or Operating Certificate; individual pilot certificates
Investment adviser (over $100M AUM) SEC SEC registration as investment adviser
Pesticide manufacturing EPA Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) registration
Commercial fishing (federal waters) NOAA/NMFS Federal fishing permit

How to Find Out Which Permits Your Texas Business Needs

Given the complexity of the Texas licensing landscape, identifying all applicable requirements takes deliberate effort. The following resources and steps are commonly useful for this purpose.

Step 1: Use the Texas Business Permits Office

The Texas Business Permits Office, accessible through gov.texas.gov/business, provides a permit search tool that allows users to search for state-level permit requirements by business type and industry. While not exhaustive โ€” it does not cover local requirements โ€” it is a useful starting point for identifying applicable state agency permits.

Step 2: Contact the Texas Secretary of State

The Texas Secretary of State's office (sos.state.tx.us) maintains a list of state licensing agencies and can direct business owners to the appropriate regulatory body for their industry. The SOS also administers the Texas Business Resource Center.

Step 3: Contact the Relevant State Agency Directly

Once you identify the likely licensing agency for your industry โ€” for example, TDLR for a contractor, DSHS for a food manufacturer, TABC for an alcohol retailer โ€” contact that agency directly to confirm current requirements, fees, application procedures, and timelines. Agency websites frequently maintain pre-application checklists and FAQs specific to each license type.

Step 4: Contact Your Local City or County

For local permits โ€” Certificate of Occupancy, local business permits, zoning clearances, sign permits, and fire safety inspections โ€” contact the city's development services or planning department, and the city clerk's office, for the city or county where your business will operate. Many Texas cities have dedicated small business portals that consolidate local permitting information.

Step 5: Review Federal Requirements for Your Industry

The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) maintains a federal license and permit guide at sba.gov/business-guide/launch-your-business/apply-licenses-and-permits that identifies federal licensing requirements by industry category. For regulated industries (food, transportation, firearms, financial services, broadcasting), review the applicable federal agency's website directly.

Key Texas Licensing Resources
  • Texas Business Permits Office: gov.texas.gov/business
  • Texas TDLR (trades, professions, personal services): tdlr.texas.gov
  • Texas DSHS (food, health facilities, tattoo): dshs.texas.gov
  • Texas TABC (alcohol beverages): tabc.texas.gov
  • Texas TCEQ (environmental permits): tceq.texas.gov
  • Texas TREC (real estate): trec.texas.gov
  • Texas DPS (security, investigators): dps.texas.gov
  • Texas Secretary of State: sos.state.tx.us
  • U.S. SBA Federal Permits Guide: sba.gov
  • Texas HHSC Child Care Licensing: hhs.texas.gov/childcare

Pre-Opening Compliance Checklist

The checklist below provides a general framework for evaluating licensing and permit compliance before a Texas business begins operations. It is not exhaustive and does not substitute for professional advice or direct agency verification. Check each item that may apply to your specific business:

  • Confirmed entity formation is complete with the Texas Secretary of State (LLC, corporation, etc.)
  • Confirmed DBA / Assumed Name Certificate filed if operating under a trade name (see Texas DBA Guide)
  • Obtained federal EIN from the IRS
  • Registered with Texas Comptroller for applicable taxes (sales tax permit, franchise tax)
  • Identified all state agency licensing requirements for the specific industry and activities
  • Applied for and received all required state agency licenses and permits before commencing regulated activities
  • Confirmed individual practitioners or employees hold required professional or occupational licenses
  • Confirmed entity type is appropriate for the profession (PLLC or PC if required)
  • Contacted local city or county for Certificate of Occupancy requirements
  • Verified zoning classification permits the intended business use at the specific address
  • Applied for local business permit or registration if required by the city or county
  • Obtained building permits for any construction, renovation, or tenant improvement work
  • Passed required fire safety or health inspections before opening
  • Verified TABC permit status and local wet/dry status if selling or serving alcohol
  • Identified and addressed any applicable federal licensing requirements
  • Registered with Texas Workforce Commission if employing workers
  • Confirmed insurance and bonding requirements are met (many licensed trades require proof of insurance for licensure)
  • Set calendar reminders for license renewal dates to avoid lapses

Consequences of Operating Without Required Licenses

Operating a Texas business without required licenses or permits is not a minor technical issue. Depending on the type of license, the governing agency, and the duration and nature of the violation, the consequences can be significant:

Administrative Penalties

Most Texas licensing agencies have statutory authority to impose civil administrative penalties for unlicensed activity. TDLR, for example, may assess administrative penalties of up to $5,000 per day per violation for operating without a required license. TABC may impose fines and revoke permits. Local governments may issue cease-and-desist orders, impose daily fines, and deny future permit applications based on prior violations.

Criminal Liability

For certain regulated professions and activities, operating without a license is a criminal offense under Texas law. The unauthorized practice of law, medicine, engineering, or architecture โ€” as well as operating certain food establishments or child care facilities without a license โ€” may constitute a misdemeanor or felony depending on the circumstances and any prior violations. Criminal penalties vary by profession and governing statute.

Contract Unenforceability

In some industries, Texas courts have held that contracts entered into by unlicensed parties may be unenforceable. An unlicensed contractor, for example, may face significant difficulty pursuing payment claims in court. This can have severe financial consequences for businesses that have performed substantial work or services without the required credentials.

Insurance and Bonding Issues

Many commercial insurance policies and surety bonds contain conditions requiring the insured or principal to maintain required licenses. Operating without a required license may void coverage, leaving the business exposed to uninsured liability claims.

Reputational and Regulatory Consequences

License violations are often a matter of public record. Agency enforcement actions, license revocations, and criminal convictions can appear in agency databases that are accessible to the public, potential clients, and business partners. Some violations result in permanent disqualification from licensure or from operating in a regulated industry.

The cost of obtaining required licenses is almost always far less than the cost of operating without them. Build compliance into your pre-opening timeline โ€” not your post-enforcement response.


Frequently Asked Questions

Does Texas require a general business license?

No. Texas does not issue a single statewide general business license. What Texas has instead is a broad network of industry-specific, profession-specific, and activity-specific licensing requirements administered by dozens of state agencies and local governments. Whether a license is required depends on what your business does, where it operates, and what activities it conducts โ€” not simply that it exists as a legal entity.

What licenses does a Texas LLC need?

The LLC structure itself does not require a license. What requires licensing are the activities the LLC conducts. A Texas LLC operating a restaurant needs health permits; one operating as an electrical contractor needs TDLR licenses; one selling alcohol needs TABC permits. The starting point is always identifying the specific activities of the business and working through the applicable state, local, and federal requirements for those activities.

How do I find what permits my Texas business needs?

Start with the Texas Business Permits Office at gov.texas.gov/business, which provides a searchable database of state-level permit requirements by industry. Then contact the relevant state agency directly for your specific industry (TDLR, DSHS, TABC, TREC, etc.). For local requirements, contact the city or county clerk and the development services or planning department in each jurisdiction where you operate. For federal requirements, consult the SBA's federal permit guide at sba.gov or the relevant federal agency directly.

Is a Texas Sales Tax Permit the same as a business license?

No. A Texas Sales Tax Permit, issued by the Texas Comptroller, is a tax registration that authorizes a business to collect and remit Texas sales tax. It is not a business license and does not authorize the business to conduct any regulated activity. Most businesses need both a sales tax permit (if they make taxable sales) and one or more industry-specific licenses or local permits to operate lawfully.

Do I need a license to work from home in Texas?

Working from a home office in Texas is generally not subject to a state license requirement based solely on the home-based nature of the business. However, local zoning ordinances in many Texas cities regulate "home occupations" โ€” business activities conducted from residences โ€” and may require a home occupation permit, impose restrictions on signage, client visits, deliveries, and employees, and prohibit certain business types entirely in residential zones. Additionally, if the home-based business conducts a regulated activity (food preparation, child care, personal services), state licensing requirements apply regardless of whether the business is home-based.

How long does it take to get a business license in Texas?

Processing times vary widely by license type and agency. Some permits โ€” such as a Texas Sales Tax Permit from the Comptroller โ€” can be obtained online within days. Others โ€” such as a TABC mixed beverage permit, a TCEQ environmental permit, or a healthcare facility license โ€” may take weeks to several months due to background checks, inspections, public notice requirements, and application backlogs. Plan licensing timelines into your business launch schedule well in advance of your planned opening date.

Do I need a license renewal reminder system?

Yes โ€” maintaining an active license renewal tracking system is an important part of ongoing compliance. Most Texas state licenses must be renewed annually or biennially. Some agencies send renewal notices; others do not. A lapsed license can result in the same penalties as an unlicensed operation โ€” including fines, stop-work orders, and in some cases criminal exposure. Build renewal dates into your business calendar and designate a specific person responsible for tracking license status.

What happens if I operate without a required Texas license?

Consequences depend on the type of license, the agency, and the nature of the violation, but may include administrative fines (in some cases up to $5,000 per day per violation), cease-and-desist orders, criminal misdemeanor or felony charges for certain professions, unenforceability of contracts entered into while unlicensed, voided insurance coverage, and permanent or long-term disqualification from future licensure. Early voluntary compliance is almost always preferable to enforcement action.


โš ๏ธ REMINDER: EDUCATIONAL INFORMATION ONLY โ€” NOT LEGAL ADVICE   This article provides general educational information about Texas business licensing and permit requirements and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. Licensing laws, agency requirements, fees, and procedures change frequently. The information in this article may not reflect the most current requirements and may not apply to every business situation. This content is intended for U.S. businesses operating specifically in Texas and may not apply in other jurisdictions. Always verify current requirements directly with the applicable Texas state agency, your city or county government, and any applicable federal agency. Consult a qualified Texas attorney or other licensed professional for guidance tailored to your specific situation. This material may be considered attorney advertising in some jurisdictions.

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