Accepting new clients for 2026 tax season Richmond, TX · Serving Houston
Home/ Resources/ Houston Business
May 6, 2026 · 4 min read · Houston Business

Texas Franchise Tax Explained: What Houston Business Owners Need to Know

Texas may not have a state income tax, but it does impose a Franchise Tax (also called the margin tax) on most businesses operating in the state. Understanding how the Texas Franchise Tax works, who owes it, and how to minimize your liability is essential for every Houston business owner. Whetzel CPA helps Texas businesses navigate Franchise Tax filing requirements and identify strategies to reduce their obligation.

Who Owes the Texas Franchise Tax?

The Texas Franchise Tax applies to corporations, LLCs, partnerships, professional associations, business trusts, and most other entities organized or doing business in Texas. Sole proprietorships and general partnerships owned entirely by natural persons are exempt. If you formed an LLC, S-Corp, or C-Corp in Texas, you are subject to the Franchise Tax regardless of whether you earn a profit.

The No-Tax-Due Threshold

For the 2024 report year, entities with total revenue of $2.47 million or less owe no Franchise Tax but must still file a No Tax Due Information Report. This threshold is adjusted periodically by the Texas Comptroller. Even if you owe nothing, failing to file the report can result in penalties and the forfeiture of your entity’s right to do business in Texas.

How the Tax Is Calculated

The Franchise Tax is based on your taxable margin, which is calculated using one of four methods: total revenue minus cost of goods sold, total revenue minus compensation, total revenue times 70%, or total revenue minus $1 million. You choose the method that results in the lowest taxable margin. The tax rate is 0.375% for qualifying wholesalers and retailers and 0.75% for all other entities. An EZ Computation rate of 0.331% is available for entities with revenue up to $20 million.

Filing Deadlines and Extensions

The Texas Franchise Tax report is due May 15 each year, covering the prior calendar year’s activity. An automatic extension to November 15 is available by filing a request and paying at least 90% of the tax due (or 100% of the prior year’s tax) by the original May 15 deadline. New entities must file a final report covering the period from formation through the end of the first calendar year.

Common Filing Mistakes

The most frequent Franchise Tax mistakes we see among Houston businesses include failing to file the No Tax Due report when revenue is under the threshold, using the wrong revenue calculation method, not properly accounting for cost of goods sold deductions, missing the May 15 deadline without requesting an extension, and not updating the Comptroller when ownership or address changes occur.

Strategies to Minimize Your Franchise Tax

While the Franchise Tax cannot be avoided entirely for businesses above the threshold, strategic planning can reduce your liability. Maximizing cost of goods sold deductions, optimizing compensation deductions, timing revenue recognition, and evaluating whether the EZ Computation method produces a lower result are all approaches we use at Whetzel CPA to minimize our clients’ Franchise Tax bills.

Entity Forfeiture and Reinstatement

If you fail to file your Franchise Tax reports, the Texas Comptroller can forfeit your entity’s right to transact business in the state. Forfeiture means you lose liability protection, cannot enter into contracts, and cannot sue or defend lawsuits in Texas courts. Reinstatement requires filing all delinquent reports, paying all taxes and penalties owed, and filing a reinstatement application. Avoiding this situation is far easier and cheaper than resolving it.

Let Whetzel CPA Handle Your Franchise Tax

We prepare and file Texas Franchise Tax reports for Houston businesses of all sizes. Whether you are a startup below the no-tax-due threshold or an established company looking to minimize your margin tax, we ensure accurate filing and timely compliance. Call (832) 983-7080 or contact us online to discuss your Franchise Tax situation.

Related services

Texas franchise tax is one piece of business compliance.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Texas franchise tax?

The Texas franchise tax is an annual tax imposed on most entities formed or doing business in Texas — including LLCs, S-Corps, partnerships, and corporations. It’s based on each entity’s annualized revenue and is administered by the Texas Comptroller. The deadline to file is May 15 each year for the prior calendar year.

Who has to pay Texas franchise tax?

Any entity formed in Texas or doing business in Texas owes a franchise tax filing each year. This includes LLCs, partnerships, S-Corps, professional associations, and most corporations. Even entities that owe zero tax (revenue under the $2.47M threshold for 2026) must still file a No Tax Due Report. Sole proprietors and general partnerships are usually exempt.

What happens if you miss the Texas franchise tax deadline?

Missing the May 15 deadline triggers a 5% late-filing penalty if filed within 30 days, or 10% if later. There’s also a $50 minimum penalty even for No Tax Due Reports. After approximately 120 days of non-filing, the Texas Comptroller can suspend your entity’s right to transact business — a much more serious issue that requires reinstatement paperwork.

How much is the Texas franchise tax for small business?

Most small Texas businesses (revenue under $2.47M annualized in 2026) owe ZERO franchise tax — but must still file a No Tax Due Report. Above that threshold, the tax is generally 0.375% for retail/wholesale businesses or 0.75% for everything else, calculated on margin (revenue minus deductions). Many small businesses use the EZ Computation method which simplifies the calculation.

How do I file my Texas franchise tax report?

File online through the Texas Comptroller’s Webfile system at comptroller.texas.gov/taxes/franchise/. You’ll need your Webfile number from prior filings. Most entities file three documents together: the franchise tax report (No Tax Due, EZ Computation, or Long Form depending on revenue), a Public Information Report, and any required information report. Filing takes 30-60 minutes for most small Houston businesses.

← Previous
When Should You Hire a CPA? 8 Signs It Is Time to Get Professional Help
Next →
What Is a Fractional CFO and Does Your Houston Business Need One?

Question about this topic?

Schedule a free 30-minute consultation. We'll read your situation, scope the work, and quote a flat fee — all before you hang up.

Phone(832) 983-7080
Emailtim@whetzelco.com
HoursMon–Fri · 8:30–6:00 CT
Book a 30-min call