Beekeeping Laws & Regulations in Texas (2026)
Texas is one of the more relaxed states for beekeepers: there's no mandatory state registration, but the law does require your hives to be identifiable, and local cities and HOAs can add their own rules.
Do you have to register?
No. The Texas Apiary Inspection Service (TAIS), which runs through Texas A&M, confirms that the state does not require beekeepers to register. Registration is voluntary (around $35/year) and some beekeepers do it anyway because it can support an agricultural-valuation property tax claim and exempts them from structural pest-control licensing when doing bee removals.
Hive identification is required
Even without registration, Texas law (Agriculture Code Chapter 131) requires that hives kept away from your primary residence be identifiable โ marked with your name in one-inch letters on each end of the hive body, branded with a TAIS-registered brand, or accompanied by a weatherproof apiary sign with your contact details.
Equipment, disease and moving bees
- Hives must have movable frames so they can be inspected.
- You're legally required to report reportable diseases or pests to TAIS.
- Bringing bees in from another state requires a health certificate plus a $200 interstate permit.
Local rules still apply
Cities may require permits or setbacks for hives in residential zones, and HOAs in Texas have broad authority to restrict or prohibit beekeeping even where the city allows it. Always check your city ordinance and your deed/HOA restrictions first.
Log it once, in the apiary
HiveDash turns every inspection into a record you can actually use โ eggs, brood, stores, mite counts, all in one tap.
Open HiveDashInformation compiled from official state sources and current as of June 2026. Regulations change โ verify with the official links above. HiveDash is a record-keeping tool, not a legal or compliance service.