
Step-by-Step Guide to Registering a Business Name in Texas
Registering a business name in Texas costs $25 for an assumed name (Form 503) or $300 to form an LLC (Form 205). Where you file depends on your structure.

The Texas franchise tax is an annual privilege tax on LLCs, corporations, limited partnerships, and most other legal entities formed or doing business in Texas, and a business owes $0 of it when its annualized total revenue is $2,650,000 or less (the no-tax-due threshold for 2026 and 2027 reports). The tax is calculated on a "taxable margin" derived from revenue, not on profit, so a company that broke even can still owe. Sole proprietorships and general partnerships owned entirely by individuals are outside the tax completely.
Key takeaways:
This guide explains the concepts: what the tax is, who owes it, and how the calculation works. For the practical side (which forms to file, deadlines, Webfile steps, and what to do if you missed May 15) see the companion guide: Texas Franchise Tax Report Forms: Filing Requirements, Deadlines & How to Submit.
Texas has no corporate income tax and no personal income tax. Instead, the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts collects a franchise tax: a fee businesses pay for the privilege of operating in Texas.
Unlike a traditional income tax, franchise tax is based on your business's total revenue and taxable margin, not just profits.
This distinction matters because even businesses with zero net profit might still owe franchise tax if their total revenue exceeds the state's threshold.
Most registered legal entities do. If you formed an LLC, corporation, or limited partnership in Texas, or your out-of-state entity does business in Texas, you must file a franchise tax report every year; whether you also pay depends on whether your annualized total revenue exceeds $2,650,000. The Comptroller's filing requirements page has the complete entity list.
The following business entities must file and potentially pay Texas franchise tax:
The following are exempt from Texas franchise tax:
Important: Your federal tax treatment doesn't determine your Texas franchise tax obligation. Even if your LLC is disregarded for federal tax purposes, it's still a separate legal entity for Texas franchise tax.
Texas franchise tax calculation involves three key steps:
Total revenue includes:
Exclusions from revenue:
If your accounting period covers less than 12 months, Texas compares your annualized total revenue against the threshold, not the raw figure (see the annualization example under Common Mistakes below).
Texas gives you four options to calculate your taxable margin. You can choose the method that results in the lowest tax liability:
Important: Not all businesses qualify to use COGS. You must sell real or tangible personal property in the ordinary course of business.
Once your taxable margin is determined, it's taxed at one of two rates:
If your annualized total revenue is $2,650,000 or less on a 2026 or 2027 report, you owe no franchise tax. You must still file a Public Information Report (Form 05-102) or Ownership Information Report (Form 05-167) through Webfile. The threshold was $2,470,000 for 2024 and 2025 reports and adjusts for inflation every two years. The old No Tax Due Report (Form 05-163) was discontinued starting with 2024 reports; under-threshold entities file only the PIR or OIR.
Example 1: Service Business (2026 report)
Option 1: $5,000,000 × 70% = $3,500,000
Option 2: Not applicable (no COGS)
Option 3: $5,000,000 - $2,500,000 = $2,500,000 ← Lowest
Option 4: $5,000,000 - $1,000,000 = $4,000,000
Best margin: $2,500,000
Tax due: $2,500,000 × 0.0075 = $18,750
Example 2: Retail Business (2026 report)
Option 1: $8,000,000 × 70% = $5,600,000
Option 2: $8,000,000 - $5,500,000 = $2,500,000 ← Lowest
Option 3: $8,000,000 - $3,000,000 = $5,000,000
Option 4: $8,000,000 - $1,000,000 = $7,000,000
Best margin: $2,500,000
Tax due: $2,500,000 × 0.00375 = $9,375
Example 3: Small Business (Under Threshold)
Result: No tax due ($2,200,000 is below the $2,650,000 threshold), but the business must still file a Public Information Report or Ownership Information Report.
Webfile and the franchise tax forms ask: "Does the entity have zero Texas gross receipts?" Answer yes only if the business collected no revenue at all from Texas sources during the accounting period: no sales to Texas customers, no services performed in Texas, no Texas rental income. A Texas-based business with any revenue answers no, even when that revenue is far below the no-tax-due threshold. An entity that truly has zero Texas gross receipts (typically an out-of-state entity registered in Texas) still files an EZ Computation or Long Form report showing zero on the Texas gross receipts line, plus its PIR or OIR (Comptroller guidance).
The franchise tax report is due May 15 every year, moving to the next business day when the 15th falls on a weekend or holiday. The 2026 report was due May 15, 2026; extension filers have until November 16, 2026; and the 2027 report is due Monday, May 17, 2027. Everything is filed through the Comptroller's Webfile system: the tax report, the PIR or OIR, extension requests (Form 05-164), and payments. If you don't have your 6-digit Webfile number, call the Comptroller at 800-442-3453 to retrieve it.
Filing late costs a $50 penalty per report, plus 5% of any unpaid tax (10% once payment is more than 30 days late). Interest starts 61 days after the due date at prime plus 1%, which is 7.75% for 2026 (Comptroller interest rates).
Which report you file depends on revenue: at or below $2,650,000, only the PIR (Form 05-102) or OIR (Form 05-167); between the threshold and $20 million, either the EZ Computation (Form 05-169) or the Long Form (Forms 05-158-A and 05-158-B); above $20 million, the Long Form only. Form-by-form instructions, payment options, extension mechanics, and missed-deadline recovery are covered in the companion guide: Texas Franchise Tax Report Forms: Filing Requirements, Deadlines & How to Submit.
No. Texas does not require quarterly estimated payments for franchise tax; the full amount is due once a year with the May 15 report. The only prepayment scenario is an extension: for the extension to be valid, you must pay at least 90% of the tax that will be due with the current report, or 100% of the tax reported on last year's report, by the original May 15 due date.
Mistake: Assuming that if you owe no tax, you don't need to file anything.
Reality: Even if your revenue is below $2,650,000, you must still file a Public Information Report or Ownership Information Report.
Consequence: $50 late filing penalty + potential forfeiture
Mistake: Using the current calendar year instead of the correct accounting period.
Correct approach: Your 2026 report (due May 15, 2026) is based on your last federal accounting period that ended in 2025. On the report, the accounting year begin date is the day after your previous federal period ended (or your formation date, for a first report), and the end date is that last federal period end.
Example: If your fiscal year ends September 30, your 2026 franchise tax report covers October 1, 2024 through September 30, 2025.
Mistake: Reporting actual revenue for a short period without annualizing.
When to annualize: If your accounting period is less than 12 months.
Formula: (Total Revenue ÷ Days in Period) × 365
Example:
Annualized total revenue of $2,703,704 exceeds the $2,650,000 threshold, so this business files a tax report even though its actual revenue was $800,000. Annualizing determines threshold eligibility only; you still report the actual $800,000 as total revenue.
Mistake: Including expenses that don't qualify as COGS.
What's NOT included in COGS:
What IS included:
Mistake: Deducting full compensation for high earners.
Reality: Compensation is capped at $480,000 per person per 12-month period on 2026 and 2027 reports ($450,000 applied to 2024 and 2025 reports).
Example: If you pay an executive $600,000, you can only deduct $480,000.
Mistake: Claiming the 0.375% wholesaler/retailer rate without qualifying.
Requirements to qualify:
Mistake: Discarding supporting documents after filing.
Best practice: Keep all franchise tax records for at least 4 years, including:
Mistake: Filing separately when you should file as a combined group.
When combined reporting is required:
Consequence: Incorrect tax calculation and potential penalties
Mistake: Paying by check when required to pay electronically.
EFT requirement: If you paid $10,000+ in franchise tax during the previous state fiscal year (Sept 1 - Aug 31), you must pay electronically the following calendar year.
Penalty: Additional 5% penalty for not following EFT requirements
Yes. Your filing obligation begins the day your entity is formed or begins doing business in Texas. Your first annual report is due May 15 of the year following formation.
Example: An LLC formed in August 2026 files its first annual report by May 17, 2027 (May 15, 2027 falls on a Saturday).
You still must file. Report zero revenue and file the required Public Information Report or Ownership Information Report.
Yes. File an amended report with:
If requesting a refund, the claim must comply with Texas Tax Code Section 111.104.
Yes, if you're "doing business" in Texas. This includes:
There is no minimum tax. If your calculated tax is less than $1,000, you owe $0 (but must still file reports).
Exception: Tiered partnership elections—both upper and lower tier entities owe any calculated amount, even if under $1,000.
Yes. File an amended report with a cover letter explaining the overpayment. The statute of limitations for refund claims is generally 4 years from the due date of the report.
A Texas entity that terminates, converts, or merges files a final report; an out-of-state entity files within 60 days of ceasing to have nexus in Texas. To officially terminate a Texas entity, you must:
What most states call a certificate of good standing, the Texas Comptroller issues as a certificate of account status. Visit the Franchise Account Status website to:
You have the right to:
Contact the Comptroller's office immediately if you receive an assessment you believe is incorrect.
Single-Member LLCs:
Multi-Member LLCs:
General Partnerships (all natural persons):
Limited Partnerships and LLPs:
C Corporations:
S Corporations:
Doctors, Lawyers, Accountants, Consultants:
Benefits:
Requirements:
COGS Considerations:
Section 179 Deduction:
Rental Property Owners:
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs):
Software Sales:
Special Exclusions:
Healthcare Institutions:
✅ Texas Franchise Tax — Due May 15 annually
✅ Sales Tax — If selling taxable goods/services
✅ Federal Tax Returns
✅ Public Information Report
✅ Business Licenses and Permits
✅ Property Tax (if applicable)
✅ Federal:
✅ Texas:
No Tax Due Threshold: $2,650,000 for 2026 and 2027 reports, up from $2,470,000 for 2024 and 2025 reports. The threshold adjusts for inflation every two years.
Compensation Deduction Limit: $480,000 per person, up from $450,000.
Tax Rates: Unchanged
Forms: Form 05-163 (No Tax Due Report) remains eliminated; entities below the threshold file only the PIR or OIR. The current-year instructions booklet is Form 05-915, 2026 Texas Franchise Tax Report Information and Instructions (PDF).
Veteran-Owned Businesses: A qualifying new veteran-owned business pays no franchise tax and files no PIR or OIR during its first five years. To qualify, the entity must be formed in Texas on or after January 1, 2022 (or during the earlier 2016-2019 window), be 100% owned by honorably discharged veterans, and submit a Letter of Verification from the Texas Veterans Commission with Form 05-904. Details: Comptroller veteran-business page.
Combined Groups: A combined group at or below the threshold files no tax report, Affiliate Schedule, or Common Owner Information Report, but each member organized in Texas or with Texas nexus still files its own PIR or OIR.
Missed the May 15, 2026 deadline? The recovery steps (penalties, interest, and Form 05-211 forfeiture notices) are in the companion filing guide.
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Webfile Number Retrieval:
The Texas franchise tax comes down to two questions. First, is your annualized total revenue above $2,650,000? If not, you owe nothing and only file the PIR or OIR. Second, if you are above it, which margin method (70% of revenue, COGS, compensation, or the flat $1 million) produces the lowest taxable margin?
Even at $0 tax, the annual report filing is what keeps your right to do business intact. Skipping it is the most common way Texas businesses drift into forfeiture, where the entity loses access to Texas courts and owners can become personally liable for entity debts. File every year, keep records for 4 years, and check your account status if you're ever unsure.
Choosing between the COGS, compensation, and 70% methods only works if your books can produce those totals. Jupid, an AI accountant for small businesses, connects to your business bank account and categorizes every transaction automatically with 95.9% accuracy, so revenue, cost of goods, and payroll totals are ready when the May 15 report comes around. Forward receipts through WhatsApp or iMessage as they happen, and ask bookkeeping questions in chat instead of digging through spreadsheets in the second week of May.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general information about Texas franchise tax and should not be considered legal or tax advice. Tax laws change frequently, and every business situation is unique. Consult with a qualified tax professional or attorney for advice specific to your circumstances.
Last Updated: July 11, 2026
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts – Franchise Tax (rates, thresholds, deduction limits): comptroller.texas.gov/taxes/franchise/
Texas Comptroller – Franchise Tax Filing Requirements: comptroller.texas.gov/taxes/franchise/filing-requirements.php
Texas Comptroller – 2026 Texas Franchise Tax Report Information and Instructions (Form 05-915): comptroller.texas.gov/forms/05-915.pdf
Texas Comptroller – No Tax Due Reporting for Report Year 2024 and Later: comptroller.texas.gov/taxes/franchise/ntd-rpt-updates-2024.php
Texas Comptroller – Interest Owed and Earned: comptroller.texas.gov/taxes/file-pay/interest.php
Texas Comptroller – Penalties for Past Due Taxes: comptroller.texas.gov/taxes/file-pay/penalties.php
Texas Comptroller – New Veteran-Owned Businesses and Texas Franchise Tax: comptroller.texas.gov/taxes/franchise/veteran-business.php
Texas Tax Code Chapter 171 – Franchise Tax: statutes.capitol.texas.gov
Texas Secretary of State – Business Organizations: sos.state.tx.us/corp/

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Registering a business name in Texas costs $25 for an assumed name (Form 503) or $300 to form an LLC (Form 205). Where you file depends on your structure.

Texas franchise tax reports are due May 15. The 2026 no-tax-due threshold is $2.65M. Forms 05-102, 05-169, and 05-158, plus how to file via Webfile.

LLC vs corporation explained: taxes, liability, fundraising, and state costs in Texas and California. A founder's guide to choosing the right structure.
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