Texas is an at-will, employer-friendly state — and its approach to paid time off reflects that completely. There is no Texas law requiring employers to offer PTO, no mandate to pay it out when you leave, and no prohibition on use-it-or-lose-it policies. What you get, and what happens to it, comes down almost entirely to your employer's written policy.
That's the blunt reality. But it doesn't mean you're without any protection. The Texas Payday Law creates one critical rule: whatever an employer promises in writing, they must honor. That single rule is where most Texas PTO disputes begin and end.
Texas PTO Law — Quick Reference
The Core Rule: Your Policy Is Your Contract
Unlike California — where accrued vacation is treated as earned wages by statute — Texas classifies PTO as a fringe benefit under the Texas Payday Law (Texas Labor Code Chapter 61). The distinction matters enormously. Fringe benefits are only enforceable if the employer agreed to provide them in writing.
The Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) has consistently held that an employer is not required to pay out accrued vacation at termination unless their written policy or employment agreement says so. But if that policy does promise payout, the TWC will enforce it as vigorously as any wage claim.
The practical implication: before you rely on anything PTO-related — rollover rules, payout at exit, caps — find it in your employee handbook or offer letter. If it's not written down, you may have no legal recourse.
PTO Payout at Termination: The Biggest Misconception
Many Texas employees assume they'll receive a payout for unused vacation when they leave a job. That assumption is often wrong. Texas has no law requiring this — it depends entirely on whether your employer's written policy promises it.
There are three common policy structures Texas employers use:
| Policy Type | What Happens at Termination | Enforced By TWC? |
|---|---|---|
| Explicit payout promised | Employer must pay accrued balance | Yes |
| Explicit forfeiture stated | Balance forfeited — employee has no claim | Yes (enforces forfeiture) |
| Policy silent on termination | TWC decides based on overall policy context | Case-by-case |
The third scenario — a silent policy — is where disputes happen. If your handbook describes PTO accrual but doesn't address what happens when employment ends, the TWC will look at the overall policy context. Vague policies tend to be resolved against whichever party wrote them (usually the employer), but outcomes are inconsistent. Employers should never leave this ambiguous.
Use-It-or-Lose-It Policies: Perfectly Legal in Texas
Texas employers can — and commonly do — run use-it-or-lose-it PTO policies. There is no state law preventing an employer from forfeiting your unused vacation at year-end, on your work anniversary, or at any other date specified in their policy.
The only requirement is that the policy be clearly communicated. Employers are expected to notify employees of PTO policies at hire and when policies change, though Texas doesn't have the strict written-notice requirements found in states like New York or California.
Common Texas Use-It-or-Lose-It Structures
- Hard year-end reset: All unused PTO zeroes out on December 31 or the employee's work anniversary. Common at smaller employers.
- Rollover cap: A set number of hours (often 40–80) carries over, and anything above the cap is forfeited. Common at mid-size companies.
- Use-it-or-lose-it with a grace period: Some employers allow a 30–90 day window in the new year to use prior-year PTO before it's forfeited.
- No rollover, no payout: The strictest version — PTO resets and departing employees receive nothing for unused balances.
The time to push back on a use-it-or-lose-it policy is before you accept a job — during offer negotiation — not after. Once you've agreed to a handbook, the policy governs.
📊 Texas vs. California: A Stark Contrast
The difference between Texas and California PTO law is almost total. In California, earned vacation is wages — employers cannot forfeit it, and payout at termination is mandatory. In Texas, the same vacation is a fringe benefit — forfeiture is legal, payout is optional, and your rights depend on your employer's written policy. If you've recently moved from California to Texas (or vice versa), don't assume the rules are similar.
Final Paycheck Timing
When employment ends in Texas, the final paycheck timing rules under the Texas Payday Law are specific:
- Discharged (fired or laid off): Final pay is due within 6 calendar days of separation
- Resigned: Final pay is due on the next regular payday following the last day of work
If your employer owes vacation payout under their policy, that amount must be included in the final paycheck on the same schedule. A late final paycheck — with or without PTO included — can result in administrative penalties through the TWC. Employers who willfully withhold wages can face a penalty of up to 6% of the unpaid amount per month, plus the unpaid wages themselves.
Sick Leave in Texas: A Complicated History
Texas has no statewide paid sick leave law. This is a more contentious issue than it might appear, because several Texas cities attempted to create local mandates — and were blocked.
The City Ordinance Saga
Between 2018 and 2019, Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas each passed paid sick leave ordinances requiring employers to provide accrued paid sick time. All three were challenged and ultimately struck down by Texas courts. The ruling in Texas Association of Business v. City of San Antonio (Tex. App. 2021) was the decisive precedent: the Texas Minimum Wage Act preempts local wage ordinances, and mandatory paid sick leave constitutes a wage mandate under that reasoning.
As of April 2026, there is no city in Texas with an enforceable paid sick leave ordinance. Texas employees are not entitled to any paid sick leave unless their employer voluntarily provides it.
What Many Texas Employers Do in Practice
Despite no legal requirement, many Texas employers do offer paid sick leave — either as a separate bank or folded into a combined PTO policy. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics data, roughly 73% of private-sector workers in Texas have access to paid sick leave through their employer. It's a market-driven benefit, not a legal one.
How Texas Employers Typically Structure PTO
Without state mandates, Texas PTO policies vary considerably by company size and industry. Here's what's most common in the Texas market:
| Policy Element | Common Texas Approach | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| PTO structure | Combined PTO bank (vacation + sick) | Separate banks still common at larger firms |
| Accrual method | Per-pay-period accrual | Some employers front-load annually |
| Typical amount (entry-level) | 10–15 days/year | Tech and finance often start higher |
| Typical amount (5+ years) | 15–20 days/year | Tenure-based increases common |
| Year-end policy | Mixed: use-it-or-lose-it or rollover cap | 40–80 hour cap is most common rollover |
| Payout at termination | Split — roughly half pay out, half don't | Tech tends to pay out; retail often doesn't |
| Waiting period | 60–90 days before PTO can be used | Some start accruing day one but can't use until 90 days |
Texas PTO and the At-Will Employment Context
Texas is an at-will employment state, which compounds the employer-friendly PTO environment. An employer can terminate your employment at any time, for any reason (with limited exceptions), and the same flexibility applies to PTO policy changes.
Employers can modify PTO policies prospectively — meaning they can announce a new policy and apply it going forward. They generally cannot retroactively eliminate PTO that has already accrued under a policy that promised it, but this is a nuanced area. If a policy change is made with clear notice and doesn't deprive you of already-accrued hours under the old rules, it's typically enforceable.
For Employers: Building a Legally Sound Texas PTO Policy
Texas's lack of mandates gives employers flexibility — but it also means every employer is writing their own rules, and vague rules create disputes. The most common employer mistakes in Texas:
- Silent termination policy: The handbook describes accrual but doesn't state what happens when employment ends. Employees often assume payout; employers assume forfeiture. Put it in writing either way.
- Inconsistent enforcement: Applying the policy differently for different employees (or different circumstances) without a documented business reason creates discrimination and retaliation exposure.
- Late final paychecks: The 6-day rule for fired employees catches many employers off guard. Build a process that triggers immediate payroll action when someone is terminated.
- Verbal promises that contradict the handbook: If a manager promises an employee their PTO will be paid out and the handbook says otherwise, you have a conflict. Written policy governs — but the verbal promise may still create liability.
- Not updating employees when policies change: Changing a rollover policy mid-year without notice is legally permissible in Texas, but practically damaging to employee relations and can create claims if employees relied on the old policy.
Automate Texas PTO Tracking
HR software like Gusto handles accrual, balance tracking, and policy enforcement automatically — so your written policy and your actual records always match.
See Top HR Software for Texas Employers →Filing a PTO Wage Claim in Texas
If your employer promised PTO payout in their written policy and denied it, you can file a wage claim with the Texas Workforce Commission. Here's how the process works:
- File online at twc.texas.gov within 180 days of the date the wages were due
- You'll need: Your employer's name and address, the dates of employment, the amount owed, and a copy of the policy that promised payout
- TWC investigates by contacting your former employer and reviewing the written policy
- If the TWC rules in your favor, your employer must pay the wages owed plus a penalty of up to 6% of the unpaid amount per month
- If the TWC denies the claim, you can appeal or pursue a civil lawsuit — but for amounts under $10,000, small claims court is often the more practical option
Frequently Asked Questions
Does my Texas employer have to pay out my unused vacation when I quit?
Only if their written policy says so. Texas law does not require PTO payout at termination — it's classified as a fringe benefit, not wages. If your employee handbook or offer letter explicitly promises payout, that commitment is enforceable through the Texas Workforce Commission. If the policy is silent, the outcome is less predictable. Check your handbook before you resign.
Is use-it-or-lose-it legal in Texas?
Yes. Texas employers can legally forfeit unused vacation at year-end, on a work anniversary, or under any conditions they specify — as long as the policy is clearly communicated in advance. There is no Texas law protecting accrued vacation from forfeiture the way California's Labor Code does. Your only protection is a written policy that says otherwise.
Does Texas have paid sick leave?
No. Texas has no statewide paid sick leave law. Austin, Dallas, and San Antonio all attempted to create local sick leave mandates between 2018 and 2019, but those ordinances were struck down by Texas courts as preempted by the Texas Minimum Wage Act. Sick leave in Texas is entirely at employer discretion. Many employers provide it voluntarily, but there's no legal entitlement.
My employer fired me and didn't pay out my PTO. What can I do?
First, check whether your written policy promised payout. If it did, you have a wage claim. File with the Texas Workforce Commission at twc.texas.gov within 180 days of when the wages were due. Bring a copy of the policy language that promised payout. If your policy explicitly says PTO is forfeited at termination, the TWC will enforce that forfeiture. If the policy is silent, the outcome is less certain but worth pursuing.
Can my Texas employer change the PTO policy mid-year?
Yes, with notice. Texas employers can modify PTO policies going forward. The key constraint is that they typically cannot retroactively eliminate PTO that employees have already accrued under the old policy. For example, if the old policy allowed 40-hour rollover and the employer eliminates rollover entirely, employees should generally be able to use (or receive credit for) hours already accrued under the old rules. Policy changes must be communicated to employees before taking effect.
How does Texas PTO law compare to neighboring states?
Texas is more employer-friendly than most of its neighbors on PTO. Louisiana and Oklahoma similarly have no PTO mandates and no required payout. New Mexico has no statewide PTO law but does have a paid sick leave requirement (enacted 2022). Arkansas has no PTO mandates. Of the major states Texas businesses often compare to, California sits at the opposite extreme — mandatory payout, no use-it-or-lose-it, PTO treated as wages.
Are part-time Texas employees entitled to PTO?
Only if the employer's policy extends to part-time workers. Texas has no law requiring part-time employees to receive PTO. Many Texas employers offer prorated PTO to part-time employees, but it's a business decision. Check whether your employer's handbook specifies eligibility criteria — some policies are limited to full-time or regular employees above a certain hours threshold.