Texas Immigration Laws in 2026: What Just Changed?

Most people don’t realize how strict Texas immigration laws actually are. And honestly? These laws changed big time at the start of 2026.

Stay with me here—this matters whether you’re an immigrant, an employer, or someone trying to understand what’s happening in your community.

Let me break down what’s legally required in Texas. Some of this might surprise you.

What Exactly Are Immigration Laws?

What Exactly Are Immigration Laws?

Think of immigration laws as the rules that decide who can live and work in the United States. They cover everything from who gets driver’s licenses to who employers can hire.

These laws exist for a reason. They’re supposed to control immigration and keep track of who’s in the country legally. In Texas, these rules can be pretty strict. You’re gonna love this one—or hate it, depending on your perspective.

The Big 2026 Change: New Enforcement Law

Here’s what just happened. On January 1, 2026, a major new law took effect. It’s called Senate Bill 8, and it’s serious stuff.

What does it require? The law requires Texas county sheriffs who operate jails to work directly with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. This is the federal agency that deals with immigration violations.

Under the law, sheriff’s offices must enter agreements with ICE. These are called 287(g) agreements (the number comes from federal law). The agreement lets trained deputies identify immigrants in the country illegally and help with federal immigration enforcement.

Okay, pause. Read this carefully. The law applies to almost all Texas counties that run jails. That’s the majority of the state. It doesn’t apply only to big cities—it’s statewide.

The state is even providing money to help counties pay for this. Counties get grants between $80,000 and $140,000, depending on their size. But critics say the money won’t fully cover the costs.

Who This Affects Most

Who This Affects Most

You might be wondering: How does this actually change my life?

If you’re undocumented and get arrested for any reason—even a traffic ticket—your immigration status could be checked. Law enforcement could detain you longer while waiting for ICE to pick you up. This is pretty different from how things worked before.

If you’re a law-abiding immigrant with legal status, this probably affects you less. But the fear factor is real for many people.

Driver’s Licenses and ID Cards in Texas

Let’s talk about something people ask about constantly: Can you get a driver’s license in Texas?

The answer depends on one thing: Can you prove you’re legally in the United States?

Who can get a driver’s license:

People who are U.S. citizens can obviously get one. Lawful permanent residents (green card holders) can too. Refugees and asylees are eligible. Even some asylum seekers with work permits can apply.

But here’s the important part: You need documents proving your lawful presence. This typically means a valid passport, a green card, a work visa, or an employment authorization document.

Who cannot:

Undocumented immigrants cannot get a standard driver’s license in Texas. Unlike California, New York, or Illinois, Texas doesn’t offer special licenses for people without legal status.

What happens if you apply? The Texas Department of Public Safety will check your immigration status electronically. If you can’t prove lawful presence, you won’t get a license. Not sure what counts as proof? Your options include passports, visas, green cards, or work permits.

Pretty straightforward, right?

One exception exists: DACA recipients (people approved for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) can get driver’s licenses. These are often called “Dreamers.”

Employment and Work Rules

Employment and Work Rules

Here’s where it gets interesting. Employers in Texas have specific rules to follow.

The I-9 Form

Every employer in Texas must have new hires complete an I-9 form. This is the federal employment eligibility verification form. The employer has three days to verify the information.

Employees get to choose which documents to show. Options include a passport, green card, work permit, or even a combination like a driver’s license plus social security card. The employer can’t demand specific documents or just ask certain-looking people for extra paperwork.

E-Verify

Many employers use E-Verify, a federal database that checks work eligibility. Here’s the thing though: Federal law doesn’t require most private employers to use it. But state agencies and government contractors almost always do.

Public contractors in Texas are required to use E-Verify. If they don’t, they can lose contracts or get banned from future bids.

Know your rights. Even undocumented workers have legal protections. Employers can’t pay you less, refuse bathroom breaks, or ignore safety laws just because of immigration status. You have the same basic labor rights as any worker.

What About Work Permits?

Wait, it gets better. Not everyone can work in the U.S., but some people can get work permits even if they’re not permanent residents.

A work permit is officially called an Employment Authorization Document or EAD. It’s a card that looks like an ID, and it lets you work legally for a specific period.

Who can apply:

Refugees and asylees can get work permits. Some people with pending asylum cases can too. DACA recipients get work authorization. There are also temporary protected status recipients, people waiting for certain visa types, and others in specific situations.

What it does:

With a valid work permit, you can apply for a social security number. That opens up a lot of doors. You can get a driver’s license. Renting an apartment becomes easier. Banks will work with you. You get the same wage protections as anyone else.

Important: You need a work permit from USCIS first. You can’t just apply for a social security number without it.

Undocumented Workers: What’s Legal and What’s Not

Okay, this is important. Let me be direct.

If you’re undocumented, you can’t legally work in the United States. Your employer is breaking the law if they knowingly hire you. Period. That’s federal law, not Texas-specific.

But here’s the part most people get wrong: You still have rights.

Labor laws apply to everyone. This includes the Fair Labor Standards Act (minimum wage and overtime), occupational safety rules, family medical leave rights, and more. Your immigration status doesn’t matter for these protections.

Employers can’t discriminate against you based on national origin. They can’t single you out for extra verification just because you “look foreign.” They can’t pay you less than they’d pay someone with citizenship. They can’t ignore workplace injuries or refuse to provide safety equipment.

What you can do:

If your employer violates labor laws, you can file a complaint. You can contact the Department of Labor. You can even sue for unpaid wages. Your immigration status is legally irrelevant.

What you should know:

Many employers ask undocumented workers to provide false documents for the I-9. This is illegal for the employer, but it also puts you at risk. Using false documents is fraud and can hurt your immigration case later. This one’s probably the most important rule to remember.

Sanctuary Cities: Texas Banned Them

Here’s something that might surprise you: Texas doesn’t have sanctuary cities.

Sanctuary cities are places where local police limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. They don’t call ICE on people. They try to protect undocumented immigrants from federal enforcement.

Texas passed a law in 2017 that banned sanctuary cities. Now, with the new 2026 law, it goes even further. Local law enforcement must cooperate with ICE, not avoid it.

This means if you’re undocumented and you interact with police for any reason—traffic stop, report a crime, get arrested—your immigration status is likely to be checked. Local cops can’t shield you anymore.

Penalties and Consequences

What actually happens if you break immigration laws? Let’s talk specifics.

For being in the country illegally:

This is a federal issue, not Texas-specific. You could face deportation. You could be banned from returning to the U.S. for several years. If you have a criminal record, penalties get worse.

For employers:

Employers who knowingly hire undocumented workers face serious consequences. Federal penalties range from $375 to $16,000 per illegal worker. That’s just the federal level. Criminal charges are also possible for repeated violations.

Texas adds extra penalties for contractors working on state projects. They can lose contracts. They can get banned from bidding on future work.

For document fraud:

If you provide false documents—fake green cards, fake work permits, fake social security cards—that’s fraud. You could face criminal charges. This can seriously damage any future immigration cases.

Occupational Licenses: Extra Requirements

Here’s something specific to Texas. If you want an occupational license in Texas (think electrician, contractor, teacher, nurse), you need to prove lawful presence.

This applies to professional licenses issued by the state. You can’t get licensed in certain fields if you’re undocumented. Different agencies have different rules, but the general rule is consistent: You need legal status.

Special Circumstances: Asylum and DACA

Asylum seekers:

If you’ve applied for asylum and have a pending case, you might qualify for a work permit. If you have that work permit, you can get a driver’s license. The work permit is what matters legally.

DACA recipients:

If you have DACA approval, you have work authorization. You can get a driver’s license. You can apply for a social security number. You basically have the same access as permanent residents for these purposes. This changed everything for hundreds of thousands of young people.

The important thing: DACA is temporary. It requires renewal every two years. Keep track of your renewal date. If it expires, your work authorization and driver’s license status change.

How to Verify Employment Eligibility: A Step-by-Step Guide

If you’re an employer, here’s what you actually need to do:

Step 1: Get the I-9 form

Download it from USCIS or get it from your HR system. It’s free and straightforward.

Step 2: Have the employee complete Section 1

The employee fills this out on their first day of work. They provide basic information and declare under penalty of perjury that they’re authorized to work.

Step 3: You verify in Section 2

Within three days, review the employee’s documents. You’re looking for one document with a photo and work authorization, or two documents (one with a photo, one proving work eligibility).

Let them choose which documents to show. You can’t demand specific documents. Don’t ask only certain employees for extra verification.

Step 4: Keep the form

Store the completed I-9 for at least three years. Keep it separate from personnel files.

Step 5: Consider E-Verify (if required)

If you’re a federal contractor or work on state projects, submit to E-Verify. It takes minutes. You get instant verification or a notice to resolve.

Honestly, this is the part most people miss. Many employers mess up the I-9 process without realizing it. Common mistakes include asking for too many documents, requesting specific types of documents, or only verifying certain employees. All of these are violations.

Important Legal Rights Immigrants Have

You’re not alone, this confuses a lot of people. Here’s what you actually have the right to do:

File workplace complaints: You can report wage theft, unsafe conditions, harassment, or discrimination. The Department of Labor protects you even if you’re undocumented.

Report crimes: You can call police. They should help. Immigration status doesn’t matter for crime reporting. Victims and witnesses are protected.

Access school: If you’re a child, you have the right to free public education. Immigration status doesn’t affect K-12 enrollment.

Access emergency medical care: Emergency rooms must treat you regardless of status.

Get legal help: You can hire an attorney. Lawyers keep client information confidential (with narrow exceptions).

Don’t assume you have no rights. You probably have more than you think.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I get a Texas ID card instead of a driver’s license?

Yes, if you have lawful presence, you can apply for a state ID card. You don’t have to drive. It serves the same purpose for proving identity. Follow the same process as a driver’s license.

What if I’m a refugee or asylee—what’s my status?

Refugees and asylees have permission to work immediately. You can get driver’s licenses, work permits, and eventually apply for permanent residency. You’re not undocumented—you have legal status.

If I’m undocumented and get arrested for a traffic violation, what happens?

Under the new law, the sheriff’s office will likely check your immigration status. ICE could be contacted. You could face detention while ICE decides whether to take you into custody. You could face deportation proceedings. This is serious.

Can my employer require me to show specific documents for the I-9?

No. You choose which documents to show from the permitted list. Employers can’t demand a green card specifically or any particular document. They also can’t ask only certain-looking employees for extra verification.

Do I need a work permit to work in Texas?

If you’re undocumented, yes, you need authorization. Without it, both you and your employer are breaking federal law. If you have lawful presence, you’re automatically authorized. Some visa holders need to apply separately.

What to Do If You Need Help

For employment questions:

Contact Texas Law Help (texaslawhelp.org) or call the Department of Labor. Both offer free or low-cost assistance.

For immigration legal help:

Find a reputable immigration attorney. Check that they have physical offices, aren’t threatening to report you, and aren’t asking you to sign blank forms. Be careful—immigration fraud is common.

For reporting workplace violations:

Contact the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division. You can report anonymously. They investigate wage theft and safety violations regardless of immigration status.

For crime victims or witnesses:

Call police. Ask to speak with a supervisor if you’re concerned about immigration issues. Many police departments have protocols to protect immigrant victims.

Final Thoughts

Okay, here’s the bottom line. Texas immigration laws are strict, and they got stricter in 2026. If you’re undocumented, you need to understand the risks, especially with the new law requiring local law enforcement to cooperate with ICE.

But you also have real rights. Employment laws protect you. You can report crimes. You can sue for unpaid wages. Don’t assume you have zero protections.

If you have work authorization or legal status, get a driver’s license. It makes everything easier. If you’re trying to navigate these rules as an employer, use I-9 forms correctly and consider E-Verify if you work with the government.

Most importantly, get good legal advice if you need it. Immigration law is complicated, and the rules just changed. Consult with an attorney or legal aid organization before making major decisions.

Stay informed, stay safe, and when in doubt, ask a lawyer.

References

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *