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Home Legal Updates

New Law On Background Checks In Texas: What Changes in 2025

Joe Davies by Joe Davies
March 8, 2026
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New Law On Background Checks In Texas
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People have been hearing about a new Texas law regarding background checks and are asking, “But what does that even mean?”

A friend of mine, a small business owner with about twenty employees, texted me about this new law, “Do I have to change my application form again? Texas is doing ban-the-box now?” I’m sure most of you are thinking, “Texas? Ban-the-box? When?”

I became incredibly interested in this, I read summaries and legal overviews to try and rephrase everything in a way the average person would understand. This is what I put together to explain the relevant parts, the changes starting in 2025, and the things employers and applicants need to consider.

Table of Contents

  • Executive Summary: Key Takeaways
  • First, What Counts As A Texas Background Check?
  • What Is The New Law on Background Checks in Texas?
  • Why Texas Is Doing This
  • What Still Shows Up On Background Checks In Texas?
  • The 7-year Reporting Limit: Important, But Often Misunderstood
  • How the Death Star law (2023) Fits In
  • What This Means For Employers
  • What This Means For Applicants And Employees
  • Best Practices For Compliance: Simple, Usable Checklist
  • How State Rules Interact With Federal Law
  • A Personal Note

Executive Summary: Key Takeaways

  • Texas is implementing a statewide ban-the-box-style rule effective September 1, 2025, limiting when many employers can ask about criminal history during hiring. This is the headline new law on background checks in Texas that people are searching for.
  • Who it applies to:
  • All public employers in Texas
  • Private employers with 15+ employees
  • Main change: Employers covered by the law must delay asking about criminal history until after an interview or a conditional job offer (as described in recent legislative overviews).
  • Important exception: Jobs where a background check is required by law are generally excluded from these timing restrictions.
  • Local rules are limited: Texas’s 2023 Death Star law (a nickname you’ll see in news coverage) restricts cities and counties from creating their own stricter private-employer rules, so the state framework matters more now.
  • Separate but related: Background checks are still governed by federal rules (especially the Fair Credit Reporting Act, or FCRA) plus anti-discrimination principles under Title VII. The 2025 change mainly affects timing and process, not whether checks exist.

First, What Counts As A Texas Background Check?

A Texas background check usually means an employer (or landlord, licensing board, etc.) is verifying some mix of:

  • Criminal history search
  • Employment verification
  • Education verification
  • SSN trace
  • Professional license verification
  • Sex offender registry search
  • Pre-employment drug test
  • Sometimes: motor vehicle records (MVR) for driving roles

For a Texas background check for employment, most employers focus on criminal history plus identity and work history basics. Higher-risk roles (management, finance, healthcare, caregiving, driving) tend to involve deeper screening.

And yes, individuals can also run a kind of “self-check” to see what might appear, which can be incredibly useful if you’re job hunting and don’t want surprises.

What Is The New Law on Background Checks in Texas?

Most of the circulated legislative overviews indicate that the most important change for 2025 is a statewide process rule for hiring that is similar to ban-the-box.

Basic Principle: Postpone Inquiries Regarding Criminal History

Covered employers are generally required to postpone inquiries regarding an applicant’s criminal history until some time after the hiring process begins, typically after an interview or after a conditional offer.

The concept is straightforward: direct people to focus on capabilities and culture fits, rather than being preemptively eliminated because they marked a box.

Who Is Covered?

  • Public employers: covered
  • Private employers with 15 or more employees: covered

If you are a small shop with, for example, 5–10 employees, you may not be covered by the 15 or more employee threshold, but you are still subject to federal requirements if you use a consumer reporting agency.

What Jobs Are Excluded?

The primary exception is jobs for which a criminal history background check is mandated by law. These include some healthcare, childcare, law enforcement, and security-sensitive positions, as well as regulatory positions.

The law is not saying “don’t do background checks.” The law is saying “don’t do background checks first,” unless you are required to by law.

Why Texas Is Doing This

This part is less legal and more human.

I’ve known people who did not apply for certain jobs because they thought they would be rejected, sometimes they were, but sometimes they weren’t, but the fear of rejection is what caused the most damage.

Policies like these are to help people gain a footing in the job application process and to show that they have the opportunity to explain themselves and give details about their past.

The law helps employers to be consistent and to manage their risk. A rushed “nope” on an old record can lead to claims of unfairness or discrimination, especially if decisions aren’t applied uniformly.

What Still Shows Up On Background Checks In Texas?

Here’s where expectations get real. Even with timing changes, background checks can still reveal a lot, depending on what the employer requests and what’s legally reportable.

Criminal History

A criminal history report commonly includes:

  • Offense date
  • Type of offense
  • Severity (misdemeanor vs felony)
  • Disposition (if available)
  • Disposition date (if available)
  • Sentence info (if available)
  • Pending cases may appear depending on the search and record source

Employers typically use this to assess whether a record is job-related and whether it raises workplace safety concerns.

Employment Verification

Often shows:

  • Employer name and contact info
  • Dates of employment
  • Job title

This is where employers spot gaps or inconsistencies. (And yes, plenty of honest people have gaps, caregiving, layoffs, illness, so it’s not automatically a red flag.)

Education Verification

Can confirm:

  • School attended
  • Dates
  • Degree/certificate earned

SSN Trace

Shows whether the SSN is valid and can surface:

  • Names/aliases tied to the SSN
  • Address history
  • State and date of issuance
  • DOB associated with the SSN

It’s not a “gotcha” tool, more like a map that helps screeners look in the right counties/states.

License Verification

For licensed roles, it can show:

  • License type and status
  • Issued/expiration dates
  • Disciplinary actions/sanctions

Sex Offender Registry Search

Can show identifying information and registration address details.

Drug Testing and MVR checks

Drug tests are typically a “snapshot in time.” MVR checks list license status, violations, suspensions, and related data.

The 7-year Reporting Limit: Important, But Often Misunderstood

You’ll see people say “Texas has a 7-year limit.” The reality is more nuanced.

Consumer reporting agencies (CRAs) are typically constrained by federal FCRA rules that often limit reporting of certain negative information older than seven years, especially for jobs under a certain compensation threshold (commonly referenced as $75,000 in FCRA discussions).

Two important notes:

  • This isn’t a blanket rule for everything. Some records (and some contexts) can still be reportable beyond seven years depending on category, jurisdiction, and the type of check being done.
  • Direct courthouse searches vs CRA reports can differ. An employer using a CRA is bound by FCRA processes; an employer pulling public records themselves may not follow the same reporting framework, but they still must comply with other laws (and should be extremely careful about accuracy and fairness).

If you’re an applicant, this is why two employers can see different things depending on how they run checks.

How the Death Star law (2023) Fits In

Texas’s 2023 law, often nicknamed the Death Star bill, is relevant because it limits how cities and counties can impose their own employment regulations on private employers.

In normal-person terms: if you’re a private employer operating in multiple Texas cities, you’re less likely to face a patchwork of local ban-the-box rules. The state-level approach becomes the main rulebook.

That said, public employers and certain local policies can still matter in specific contexts, so it’s not “nothing local ever matters,” but it does shift the center of gravity.

What This Means For Employers

If you’re responsible for Texas pre-employment background checks, the 2025 change is mostly about process design.

1. Update The Job Application And Early Screening Steps

If your application currently asks: “Have you ever been convicted…?” right up front, you may need to remove it (or move it later) if you’re covered by the 15+ rule or you’re a public employer.

A practical approach:

  • Keep early-stage forms focused on qualifications.
  • Introduce criminal-history questions only after the interview/conditional offer stage (unless legally required earlier for the role).

2. Tighten Your FCRA Compliance

If you use a background check provider (a CRA), you must:

  • Provide clear written disclosure (in a standalone document)
  • Obtain written authorization/consent
  • Follow pre-adverse action and adverse action steps if you might not hire based on the report:
  • Pre-adverse action notice + copy of report + summary of rights
  • Time for the candidate to dispute/clarify
  • Final adverse action notice if you decide “no”

This isn’t optional, and it’s one of the most common areas where employers get sloppy because they’re moving fast.

3. Avoid Blanket “No One With A Record” Policies

Aside from being blunt (and often unfair), blanket bans can create legal exposure. Best practice is to evaluate records individually, considering:

  • Nature of the offense
  • Time elapsed
  • Relevance to the job duties

Think of it like this: a driving-related conviction matters a lot more for a delivery driver than for a back-office role with no driving.

4. Train Whoever Actually Does Hiring

In many small businesses, the “HR department” is… the owner. Or the office manager who also orders toner and runs payroll.

If that’s you, you’ll want a simple internal checklist so decisions stay consistent and documented.

5. Handle Data Like It Matters

Overviews of the new standards mention explicit permission and secure handling of candidate data. Even where the law isn’t crystal-clear in summaries, the direction is obvious: don’t treat sensitive reports like casual paperwork. Limit access, store securely, and keep retention policies.

What This Means For Applicants And Employees

If you’re applying for jobs and worried about your criminal background Texas record showing up, here’s the practical shift:

You may get further in the process before the record is discussed

That’s huge psychologically, and sometimes materially, because you can demonstrate your skills before the toughest conversation happens.

You still should be prepared for the background check

The check may still come. The timing just changes.

A good strategy:

  • Be ready to discuss context briefly and calmly if it becomes relevant.
  • If something is inaccurate, you can dispute it (especially when a CRA is involved under FCRA rules).

Example That Comes Up A Lot

Imagine two candidates for a warehouse supervisor role:

  • Candidate A: great experience, one non-violent conviction from years ago
  • Candidate B: less experience, clean record

Under an early “check the box” system, Candidate A might never get an interview. Under the new timing approach, Candidate A has a chance to show they’re the stronger hire, then the employer can evaluate whether the record actually matters for the job.

Best Practices For Compliance: Simple, Usable Checklist

If you take nothing else from this, take this:

  • Map your hiring workflow (application → screening → interview → conditional offer → background check → final decision).
  • Move criminal-history questions to the legally appropriate stage for covered roles/employers.
  • Use consistent screening packages by role type (entry-level vs management vs caregiving vs driving).
  • Follow FCRA disclosure/consent rules every time you use a CRA.
  • Use individualized assessment instead of blanket disqualification.
  • Document adverse action steps carefully if you deny employment due to a report.
  • Train hiring managers so nobody freelances the process.

How State Rules Interact With Federal Law

Texas’s new background check law doesn’t change the federal underpinnings of most employer background checks:

  • FCRA governs the report details (background checks done through CRAs), consumer consent, disclosures, and adverse action.
  • Title VII limits discrimination against people because of a criminal record and pushes employers toward job-related, consistent decision-making.

Texas can change the timing and structure of your hiring questions, but Texas doesn’t eliminate federal mandates.

A Personal Note

What surprised me about the Texas change was the number of employers that seem oblivious to the fact that they already have process problems.

My friend with the 20-person company? He wasn’t being discriminatory. He just downloaded some form a few years ago, added a criminal history box, and left it. No discrimination. Just inertia. It’s what so many businesses do to get themselves in trouble with the law: not with bad intent. Just old habits.

Texas is essentially saying, “After the 2025 changes, we’re going to tap some employers on the shoulders and tell them to deliberate. It’s time for an update to your process.”

Joe Davies

Joe Davies

Hey, I’m Joe Davies, writer at AccordingLaw.com. I love breaking down legal topics into content that’s easy to understand. From new laws to practical legal advice, I’m here to keep you informed and up to date with what matters most in the legal world.

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