Property tax certificates remain a statutory cornerstone of Texas real estate closings—but in practice, they are only one piece of a much larger risk landscape. Title companies increasingly face operational and timing challenges tied not to what appears on the certificate, but what happens around it: delayed tax roll releases, mismatched county workflows, and proration pitfalls that complicate escrow calculations.
These issues aren’t about incorrect certificates—they stem from the structural realities of how Texas manages property taxes across 254 counties, each with different cycles, systems, and levels of modernization.
Below are key concerns title companies must navigate in 2026 that are not addressed directly by tax certificates themselves.
While tax certificates reflect delinquency as of a specific date, they do not reveal whether current‑year tax bills have even been released yet. In Texas, tax assessors should release their rolls by October 1, but actual release dates vary widely. Many counties issue bills throughout October, November, or even December.
Why this matters:
If a bill is not yet released, a tax certificate cannot confirm current‑year taxes—and your policy may only guarantee prior‑year taxes. This creates risk in closings after October 1 but before certification is complete.
Example scenario:
A refinance closes October 15. Last year’s taxes are confirmed paid, but current‑year bills are not yet issued. A certificate will appear “clean,” yet you still cannot guarantee the actual tax amount the borrower will owe once bills are released.
Though tax certificates show delinquent status, they do not dictate how tax prorations are calculated at closing. When bills are unavailable, prorations often rely on prior‑year taxes or values pulled from appraisal districts.
Texas transactions frequently require multiple methodologies depending on closing date:
Why this matters:
Even if a certificate shows “no delinquency,” escrow officers may still need to negotiate or adjust prorations manually—especially on tight closing deadlines.
Texas property tax law reforms in 2026 introduced historic increases in homestead exemptions—but these reforms do not alter appraised value, and appraisal rolls remain the responsibility of local CADs.
Title company implications:
This disconnect between delinquency data and valuation data is not addressed in certificates and continues to create post‑closing surprises.
Even when counties meet their statutory obligations, certification delays ripple into the closing workflow. If a roll is not certified on time, current‑year taxes cannot be guaranteed—even if the certificate is accurate.
This is especially challenging for:
When certification lags, buyers can receive unexpectedly high first‑year tax bills—problems not visible in a certificate snapshot.
Some Texas properties are taxed by multiple jurisdictions—school districts, counties, cities, ESDs, MUDs, and others. While many collectors produce combined bills, other taxing units issue bills separately.
Tax certificates only reflect delinquency, not:
Because the Texas system allows each entity its own authority and timeline, title companies must account for these structural differences during escrow—even if the certificate indicates “all clear.”
Tax certificates are legally authoritative—but they aren’t operationally complete. Title companies must navigate county variations, bill‑release timing, valuation updates, multi‑entity cycles, and proration challenges that certificates don’t cover.
These issues aren’t flaws—they’re realities of Texas’s decentralized property tax administration.
COCRS specializes in tracking the moving parts around Texas property tax certificates—not just the certificate data itself. If your team wants to reduce risk, speed up closings, and eliminate manual follow‑up with county offices, COCRS can help.
👉 Reach out to COCRS today to streamline your tax‑related workflows and protect your transactions from Texas’s ever‑shifting tax landscape.
Let’s make your next closing smoother.