Texas State Agencies Governing Professional Services Authority
Texas operates one of the most expansive regulatory frameworks in the United States, with more than 200 state agencies, boards, and commissions holding jurisdiction over licensed and regulated industries. This page identifies the principal state agencies governing authority industries in Texas, explains how their regulatory mechanisms function, and maps common scenarios in which businesses and professionals encounter agency oversight. Understanding which body holds jurisdiction — and where jurisdictional boundaries fall — is foundational to operating in any Texas licensed authority industry.
Definition and scope
"Authority industries" in the Texas context refers to sectors where state government has established formal licensing, certification, permitting, or regulatory oversight as a condition of lawful operation. These are not self-regulating markets — they are industries where the Texas Legislature has delegated enforcement power to specific agencies under enabling statutes codified in the Texas Occupations Code, Texas Health and Safety Code, Texas Finance Code, or related titles.
The agencies governing these industries fall into two broad structural categories:
- Executive branch agencies — full state agencies with appointed commissioners or executive directors, such as the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR), the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI), and the Texas Department of Banking.
- Independent licensing boards — quasi-independent bodies with governing boards composed largely of licensed practitioners, such as the Texas Medical Board, the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy, and the State Bar of Texas.
TDLR alone oversees more than 40 distinct license types (Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, License Types), ranging from electricians and air conditioning contractors to cosmetologists and mold assessors.
Scope coverage: This page covers state-level regulatory agencies operating under Texas statutes. It does not address federal agencies (such as the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, or the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission) that may impose parallel obligations on Texas businesses. Municipal licensing requirements and county-level permits fall outside this scope. Industries regulated exclusively at the federal level — such as interstate trucking under Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration authority — are not covered here. For a broader view of the regulatory environment, see Texas Professional Services Authority Regulatory Landscape.
How it works
State agency authority over Texas industries flows from a three-stage structure: legislative authorization, agency rulemaking, and enforcement action.
Stage 1 — Legislative authorization. The Texas Legislature enacts a statute creating or affirming an agency's jurisdiction over a defined industry or occupation. The statute sets penalty ceilings, license eligibility criteria, and the agency's enforcement tools. For example, the Texas Finance Code Chapter 157 governs mortgage banker licensing under the authority of the Department of Savings and Mortgage Lending.
Stage 2 — Agency rulemaking. Agencies publish proposed rules in the Texas Register and adopt final rules under the Texas Administrative Procedure Act (Texas Government Code, Chapter 2001). These rules define application procedures, continuing education requirements, fee schedules, and conduct standards that carry the force of law.
Stage 3 — Enforcement. Agencies investigate complaints, conduct inspections, hold administrative hearings, and impose sanctions ranging from formal reprimands to license revocation and administrative penalties. TDLR, for instance, is authorized to assess administrative penalties up to $5,000 per violation per day for certain violations (Texas Occupations Code §51.353).
The contrast between TDLR and independent licensing boards is significant in practice. TDLR is a consolidation agency — it absorbed more than a dozen formerly independent boards after a Sunset Advisory Commission review process — and its staff makes enforcement decisions through an internal process. Independent boards like the Texas Medical Board use board members (predominantly licensed physicians) as decision-makers in contested cases, which introduces peer-review dynamics that a generalist agency does not replicate.
For details on how credentialing intersects with agency oversight, the Texas Professional Services Authority Credentialing resource provides sector-specific breakdowns.
Common scenarios
Three recurring scenarios define how businesses and professionals engage with Texas state agencies:
- Initial licensure. An applicant meets statutory eligibility requirements, submits an application with supporting documents and fees to the relevant agency, passes any required examination, and receives a license before beginning work. A contractor applying for an electrical contractor license does so through TDLR; a physician applies through the Texas Medical Board.
- Renewal and continuing education. Most licenses carry expiration periods of one to two years. Renewal requires proof of continuing education hours and payment of renewal fees. Failure to renew before the expiration date typically results in a lapsed license, which may trigger reinstatement requirements or, in some agencies, a new application process.
- Complaint investigation and disciplinary action. A consumer or competitor files a complaint with the agency. The agency reviews, investigates, and — if violations are substantiated — proceeds through an administrative enforcement process. Outcomes range from agreed orders and probationary terms to license suspension or revocation.
The Texas Professional Services Authority Compliance section covers how businesses manage ongoing regulatory obligations across these scenarios.
Decision boundaries
Determining which agency holds primary jurisdiction requires answering four questions in order:
- Is the occupation or industry specifically named in a Texas statute? If yes, the enabling statute identifies the responsible agency.
- Has the Legislature assigned the function to TDLR through consolidation? TDLR's jurisdiction has expanded through Sunset-driven transfers; its website maintains a current license-type index.
- Does a separate independent board exist with statutory authority over this profession? Professions such as law, medicine, engineering, and public accountancy retain independent boards.
- Does federal preemption apply? Where federal law occupies the regulatory field, state agency jurisdiction may be limited or displaced entirely.
When an occupation spans two agency jurisdictions — for example, a licensed engineer who also holds a contractor license — both agencies may assert concurrent authority over different aspects of practice. Conflicts between agency rules are resolved by the relevant statutes or, when ambiguous, through the Texas Attorney General opinion process.
For a comprehensive view of how these agency structures intersect with specific industry sectors across the state, see Texas Professional Services Authority Sectors and the Professional Services Authority Texas State Agencies reference index.
References
- Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation — License Types
- Texas Medical Board
- Texas Department of Insurance
- Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
- Texas Department of Banking
- Texas Department of Savings and Mortgage Lending
- Texas State Board of Public Accountancy
- State Bar of Texas
- Texas Sunset Advisory Commission
- Texas Government Code, Chapter 2001 — Administrative Procedure Act
- Texas Occupations Code §51.353 — Administrative Penalties
- Texas Register — Secretary of State