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Texas Pension Systems ​

Texas has 93+ public retirement systems β€” 7 statewide and 86+ local β€” making it one of the most fragmented pension landscapes in the country. These systems collectively cover approximately 2.9 million members (about 1.4 million active) and hold combined assets exceeding $306 billion.

Unlike California, where nearly all public employers feed into CalPERS or CalSTRS with standardized formulas, Texas is a patchwork. The two largest statewide systems β€” TRS and ERS β€” use traditional defined benefit formulas, but TMRS (cities) and TCDRS (counties) use cash balance plans, and ERS itself shifted new hires to cash balance starting September 1, 2022. On top of that, 86+ local pension systems operate independently β€” many of them for individual city police and fire departments β€” with their own boards, formulas, and investment portfolios.

The result: there is no single "Texas pension formula" the way CalPERS 2% @ 62 is the standard in California. Every employer tier, system, and sometimes individual city operates differently.


The Seven Statewide Systems ​

1. Teacher Retirement System of Texas (TRS) ​

The largest public retirement system in Texas and one of the largest in the nation.

  • Members: ~1 million active employees, ~490,000 retirees and beneficiaries
  • Assets: ~$210 billion (as of 2024)
  • Coverage: Public school teachers and employees (K–12), community college and some university employees, regional education service center employees, charter school employees who elect TRS
  • Governing law: Texas Government Code, Title 8, Subtitle C (Β§821–825)
  • Board: 9-member Board of Trustees (3 active member-elected, 1 retiree-elected, 5 appointed by the Governor)
  • Established: 1937
  • Social Security: Most TRS members do not participate in Social Security. Over 90% of Texas public school employees are outside Social Security, making WEP/GPO repeal especially significant.

TRS is a traditional defined benefit plan. Unlike ERS, TRS has not transitioned new hires to a cash balance model. The benefit formula uses a fixed 2.3% multiplier (no age-based scaling like CalPERS).

2. Employees Retirement System of Texas (ERS) ​

Covers state agency employees, elected officials, law enforcement officers, custodial officers, and judges.

  • Members: ~137,000+ active state employees
  • Assets: ~$33 billion
  • Coverage: State agency employees, law enforcement and custodial officers (TDCJ, DPS), elected state officials, judges
  • Governing law: Texas Government Code, Title 8, Subtitle B (Β§811–820)
  • Board: 6-member Board of Trustees (3 appointed by Governor, 1 elected by active employees, 1 elected by retirees, 1 ex officio)
  • Established: 1947

ERS now operates two parallel benefit structures:

GroupHire DatePlan TypeEmployee Contribution
Groups 1, 2, 3Before 9/1/2022Traditional defined benefit9.5% of salary
Group 4On or after 9/1/2022Cash balance (defined benefit)6.0% of salary

SB 321 (87th Legislature, 2021) created Group 4 and authorized $510 million in annual legacy payments through 2054 to address the system's $14.7 billion unfunded liability.

3. Texas Municipal Retirement System (TMRS) ​

Covers city employees across 900+ participating Texas cities.

TMRS is fundamentally different from CalPERS. Each participating city selects its own benefit structure within TMRS's framework β€” choosing its own employee contribution rate (5%, 6%, or 7%), employer matching ratio (1:1, 1.5:1, or 2:1), and vesting requirements. There is no single TMRS formula; the benefit depends entirely on which city employs you.

California Comparison

In California, if you work for the City of Sacramento or the City of Fresno, you're in CalPERS with the same PEPRA 2% @ 62 formula. In Texas, the City of Houston and the City of Austin have completely different TMRS benefit structures β€” different contribution rates, different matching ratios, different vesting periods.

4. Texas County & District Retirement System (TCDRS) ​

Covers county and special district employees across 800+ participating employers.

  • Members: ~370,000+ active and retired
  • Assets: ~$45 billion
  • Coverage: Employees of participating Texas counties, appraisal districts, hospital districts, utility districts, councils of government, and other special districts
  • Plan type: Cash balance
  • Governing law: Texas Government Code, Title 8, Subtitle F (Β§841–845)
  • Board: Board of Trustees (appointed by Governor)
  • Established: 1967

Like TMRS, TCDRS allows each participating employer to customize its benefit package β€” choosing employee contribution rates (4–7%), employer matching rates, and optional features like partial lump-sum distributions. A county employee in Harris County (Houston) has a different benefit structure than one in Travis County (Austin).

California Comparison

In California, county employees are in either CalPERS (38 counties) or a 1937 Act CERL system (20 counties). Either way, the formula is a traditional DB plan with a fixed age factor. Texas counties use cash balance through TCDRS, where the benefit depends on accumulated contributions + employer match + interest credits β€” not years Γ— factor Γ— salary.

5–7. Smaller Statewide Systems ​

SystemCoverageNotes
JRS β€” Judicial Retirement System of TexasState judges (Plan 1 for judges elected/appointed before 9/1/1985; Plan 2 for after)Separate from ERS judicial provisions
TESRS β€” Texas Emergency Services Retirement SystemVolunteer firefighters and EMS in participating departmentsCovers ~200+ departments
LECOS β€” Law Enforcement and Custodial Officer Supplemental Retirement FundSupplemental fund for LEOs and custodial officers who also participate in ERSEmployer-funded supplement; administered by ERS

The 86+ Local Pension Systems ​

This is where Texas diverges most dramatically from California. While California has a handful of independent city systems (LACERS, SFERS, SDCERS), Texas has 86+ locally administered pension funds, mostly covering police and firefighters in individual cities. Each has its own board, actuary, investment portfolio, and benefit formula.

Major Local Systems ​

SystemCity/EntityCoverageNotable Issues
HMEPS β€” Houston Municipal Employees Pension SystemHoustonCivilian city employeesPart of 2017 pension reform (SB 2190)
HFRRF β€” Houston Firefighters' Relief & Retirement FundHoustonHFD firefightersPart of 2017 reform
HPOPS β€” Houston Police Officers' Pension SystemHoustonHPD officersPart of 2017 reform
DPFPS β€” Dallas Police & Fire Pension SystemDallasDPD and DFRNear-insolvency crisis in 2016–2017; FBI/Texas Ranger investigation into investment mismanagement
DERF β€” Dallas Employees' Retirement FundDallasCivilian city employees
SAFPPF β€” San Antonio Fire & Police Pension FundSan AntonioSAPD and SAFDReformed in 2017 (SB 2); shifted new hires to cash balance
CoA ERS β€” City of Austin Employees' Retirement SystemAustinCivilian city employees
APFRS β€” Austin Police Retirement SystemAustinAPD officers
AFRS β€” Austin Fire Fighters Relief & Retirement FundAustinAFD firefighters
FWERS β€” Fort Worth Employees' Retirement FundFort WorthCity employees
EPCFPPF β€” El Paso City Employees' Pension FundEl PasoCivilian and fire/police

The Dallas Police & Fire Pension Crisis ​

The Dallas system deserves special attention because it illustrates the risks of fragmented local pension governance β€” and is likely what people mean when they call Texas pensions a "slush fund."

In 1993, the Texas Legislature authorized the Dallas Police & Fire Pension System to promise members guaranteed 8.5% annual interest on their individual accounts. The system's managers then made aggressive real estate investments that were overvalued and, in some cases, potentially fraudulent. When the real estate market collapsed, the fund's actual returns fell far short of the 8.5% guarantee.

By 2016, the fund was on the brink of insolvency. Moody's rated Dallas's pension shortfall as the second-worst in the country relative to city revenues. Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings called in the FBI and Texas Rangers to investigate mishandling of the fund. Officers began making panicked withdrawals β€” over $500 million in a few months β€” accelerating the death spiral.

The Legislature intervened with HB 3158 in 2017, cutting benefits for active members, eliminating the 8.5% guarantee, and restructuring governance. The crisis had national implications and became a cautionary tale about local pension mismanagement.

California Comparison

This kind of crisis is structurally impossible in California's CalPERS model. CalPERS is professionally managed at scale with a 13-member Board of Administration, independent actuaries, and the California Constitution's fiduciary duty requirements. Individual cities don't make their own investment decisions. The tradeoff is that California cities can't customize benefits the way Texas cities can β€” but they also can't blow up their pension fund through reckless local investments.


Understanding Cash Balance Plans β€” A California Translation ​

If you're coming from CalPERS or CalSTRS, the concept of a "cash balance plan" may be unfamiliar. Here's how it maps:

Traditional DB (What California Uses) ​

Years of Service Γ— Age Factor Γ— Final Compensation = Annual Pension

You know exactly what your pension will be before you retire. The formula is deterministic β€” 30 years Γ— 2% @ 62 Γ— $100,000 = $60,000/year. The employer and the pension fund bear all investment risk.

Cash Balance (What TMRS, TCDRS, and ERS Group 4 Use) ​

Your Account Balance (contributions + interest credits + employer match) β†’ Converted to Lifetime Annuity at Retirement

Your employer and you contribute to a notional account. The account earns a guaranteed interest rate (e.g., 4% for ERS Group 4) plus possible gain-sharing when fund returns exceed the guarantee. At retirement, your accumulated balance plus the employer match is converted into a lifetime annuity.

Key Differences ​

FeatureTraditional DB (CalPERS)Cash Balance (TMRS/TCDRS/ERS Group 4)
Formula basisYears Γ— factor Γ— salaryAccumulated account balance
PredictabilityHighly predictable decades outDepends on accumulation + interest credits
Investment riskEntirely on employer/fundPartially shared (gain-sharing varies)
PortabilityLow β€” refund of contributions onlyHigher β€” account balance is transferable
Vesting5 years (CalPERS PEPRA)5 years (ERS Group 4); varies by TMRS/TCDRS city
Still a pension?Yes β€” lifetime annuityYes β€” lifetime annuity (not a 401(k))
Benefit at separationDeferred pension or refundCan roll account balance to IRA/401(k) or take deferred annuity

Critical Distinction

A cash balance plan is not a 401(k). ERS, TMRS, and TCDRS all provide guaranteed lifetime annuity payments β€” you cannot outlive your benefit. The difference from a traditional DB is how the benefit amount is determined: accumulated balance vs. formula. But once you retire, the monthly check works the same way.


How Texas Differs from California β€” The Structural Comparison ​

FeatureCaliforniaTexas
Number of pension systems80+93+
Dominant plan typeTraditional DBMix of DB (TRS) and cash balance (ERS Group 4, TMRS, TCDRS)
Teacher systemCalSTRS (~975K members), traditional DBTRS (~1M members), traditional DB
State employee systemCalPERS, traditional DB (PEPRA 2% @ 62)ERS, DB for pre-2022 / cash balance for post-2022
City employeesCalPERS (standardized formula)TMRS (each city picks its own structure)
County employeesCalPERS (38 counties) or 1937 Act (20 counties), all DBTCDRS (cash balance, each county picks its structure)
Local police/fireCalPERS Safety (2.7% @ 57 PEPRA) or independent city systems86+ independent local pension funds
Social SecurityMixed: CalSTRS members excluded, most CalPERS members includedMixed: most TRS members excluded, ~47% of all TX public employees participate
Constitutional protectionArticle XVI Β§17 β€” plenary board authority; "California Rule" case lawArticle XVI Β§67 β€” vested benefits cannot be reduced; constitutional opt-out for local by referendum
Reform approachPEPRA (2013): same DB structure, adjusted formula inputsSB 321 (2022): shifted new state employees to entirely different plan type (cash balance)
Pension formula settingCalPERS contract menu (employer chooses); PEPRA mandatory for new hiresTRS/ERS set by Legislature; TMRS/TCDRS customized by each participating employer
COLACalPERS: compounding 2% with COLA bank; CalSTRS: simple 2%TRS: ad hoc (no automatic COLA); ERS: ad hoc for Groups 1–3, gain-sharing for Group 4
ReciprocityFormal system connecting CalPERS, CalSTRS, UCRP, 1937 Act, and independent city systemsProportionate Retirement Program (PRP) β€” connects TRS, ERS, TMRS, TCDRS, and JRS

Labor Relations β€” No Collective Bargaining for Most Public Employees ​

This is one of the most fundamental structural differences between Texas and California (or New York). Texas bans collective bargaining for the vast majority of public employees.

Texas Government Code Β§617.002 states that an official of the state or a political subdivision may not enter into a collective bargaining contract with a labor organization regarding wages, hours, or conditions of employment of public employees. Texas is also a right-to-work state (Texas Labor Code Β§101), meaning no employee can be required to join a union or pay dues as a condition of employment.

The One Exception: Police and Firefighters ​

Texas Local Government Code Chapter 174 (the Fire and Police Employee Relations Act) allows police officers and firefighters in cities that adopt the statute to collectively bargain over wages, hours, and conditions of employment. Cities must affirmatively opt in to this framework β€” it is not automatic. Major cities including Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Austin, Fort Worth, and El Paso have adopted Chapter 174, giving their police and fire unions legally binding contracts.

What This Means for Benefits ​

FeatureCaliforniaNew YorkTexas
State employee bargainingYes β€” Dills Act, 21 BUs, 12 unionsYes β€” Taylor Law, 14 BUs, 10 unionsNo β€” Β§617.002 prohibits it
Local employee bargainingYes β€” MMBAYes β€” Taylor LawNo (except police/fire under Ch. 174)
Teacher bargainingYes β€” EERAYes β€” Taylor LawNo β€” professional associations only
Pension formula negotiationIndirectly β€” unions influence CalPERS contract amendmentsNo β€” RSSL Β§470 prohibits itNo β€” set by Legislature
Salary negotiationYes β€” through MOUsYes β€” through CBAsNo (except police/fire) β€” Legislature sets pay
Right to strikeNo (but rarely enforced)No β€” Taylor Law "two-for-one" penaltyNo β€” Government Code Β§617.003

Unions That Exist (But Can't Bargain) ​

Texas public employee unions exist and are active, but their role is fundamentally different β€” they lobby the Legislature rather than negotiate contracts with employers:

OrganizationCoverageRole
TSEU/CWA Local 6186 β€” Texas State Employees UnionState agency and university employeesAdvocacy and lobbying only; no bargaining rights
Texas AFT β€” Texas American Federation of TeachersPublic school employeesLargest union in Texas AFL-CIO; no bargaining rights for teachers
TSTA/NEA β€” Texas State Teachers AssociationTeachersProfessional association and advocacy
ATPE β€” Association of Texas Professional EducatorsTeachersProfessional association (not a union)
TCTA β€” Texas Classroom Teachers AssociationTeachersProfessional association (not a union)
CLEAT β€” Combined Law Enforcement Associations of TexasLaw enforcementBargaining for police under Ch. 174 where adopted
TPFFA β€” Texas Professional Firefighters AssociationFirefightersBargaining for fire under Ch. 174 where adopted

Texas AFT notes that people frequently claim "there are no unions in Texas" β€” this is false. Unions exist, and workers have the right to join them. What workers lack is the legal framework to force employers to negotiate. The distinction matters: in California, SEIU Local 1000 can negotiate salary increases and benefit changes directly with CalHR. In Texas, TSEU can only lobby the Legislature to appropriate funding for pay raises.

California Comparison

In California, your salary, benefits, working conditions, and many retirement-adjacent provisions (EPMC, supplemental retirement plans, retiree health vesting) are negotiated through MOUs between your union and your employer. In Texas, all of these are determined by the Legislature (for state employees) or by the city/county governing body (for local employees) β€” with no legal obligation to consult with employee organizations. This means Texas public employees have significantly less leverage over their total compensation, and benefits like pension formulas, health insurance, and pay raises are entirely subject to political will rather than contractual obligation.


Social Security and Texas Public Employees ​

Social Security coverage in Texas is more complex than in California. According to NASRA, only about 47% of state and local government employees in Texas participate in Social Security β€” compared to roughly 83% nationally.

Who is typically excluded:

  • Public school teachers (TRS members) β€” over 90% do not participate in Social Security
  • Many police and firefighters in local pension systems
  • Some state employees in certain agencies

Who typically participates:

  • State employees in ERS (Social Security is coordinated with ERS benefits)
  • Many city employees in TMRS
  • Many county employees in TCDRS

WEP/GPO Impact on Texas ​

Texas teachers were among the most affected workers in the country under the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO). A teacher who worked 20 years in a Texas public school (not covered by Social Security) and also had 15 years of private-sector Social Security credits would have seen their Social Security benefit reduced β€” sometimes by hundreds of dollars per month.

The Social Security Fairness Act (P.L. 118-273), signed January 5, 2025, permanently repealed both WEP and GPO. Texas TRS retirees with private-sector Social Security credits now receive their full, unreduced Social Security benefit in addition to their TRS pension.


Cost-of-Living Adjustments (COLA) ​

This is the single biggest weakness of Texas pensions compared to California. Texas has no automatic COLA for any major pension system. Every benefit increase for retirees requires either legislative appropriation (TRS, ERS) or an affirmative employer decision (TMRS, TCDRS).

TRS β€” No automatic COLA. Retirees depend on the Legislature to appropriate funds for benefit increases, and such increases have been rare. The Legislature has occasionally authorized one-time supplemental payments (a "13th check") rather than permanent increases. A teacher who retired in 2005 at $3,000/month is still receiving approximately $3,000/month in 2026 β€” while cumulative inflation has eroded purchasing power by roughly 45%.

ERS Groups 1–3 β€” No automatic COLA. Same dependence on legislative appropriation as TRS. The Legislature authorized a one-time payment of up to $2,000 for eligible retirees in January 2026 (HB 886), but this is not a permanent adjustment.

ERS Group 4 β€” Partial protection through gain-sharing. When ERS investment returns exceed the 4% guarantee, the additional interest credits increase the account balance (and therefore the eventual annuity). After retirement, Group 4 annuities can receive annual increases if fund performance supports it β€” but this is not guaranteed.

TMRS / TCDRS β€” Optional, employer-elected. Individual cities (TMRS) and counties (TCDRS) may choose to grant annuity increases to their retirees. Not all do. Whether you receive any COLA depends on which employer you worked for and whether that employer's governing body decides to fund it.

COLA Comparison at a Glance ​

SystemCOLAAutomatic?$50K pension after 20 years
CalPERSCompounding 2%Yes~$74,300
CalSTRSSimple 2% of originalYes~$70,000
NY COLA50% of CPI (1–3%) on first $18KYes~$60,800
Texas TRSAd hoc (legislative)No~$50,000 (frozen)
Texas ERSAd hoc (legislative)No~$50,000 (frozen)

Over a 20-year retirement, a CalPERS retiree's pension grows by nearly 50% through automatic compounding. A Texas TRS retiree's pension stays flat. That's a $24,300/year gap on a $50,000 base pension by year 20.

For detailed COLA formulas, compounding calculations, and gain-sharing mechanics, see Texas Pension Formulas β€” COLA.


Retiree Health Insurance ​

Retiree health insurance is one of the most valuable benefits of public employment β€” and one of the least understood. Like California's CalPERS Health Program and New York's NYSHIP, Texas offers retiree health coverage through two major programs. However, Texas retiree health benefits come with a critical caveat that California and New York programs do not: they are not guaranteed and can be changed or eliminated by the Legislature at any time.

ERS Group Benefits Program (GBP) β€” State Employees ​

The Texas Employees Group Benefits Program (GBP), administered by ERS, provides health coverage to state agency and higher education retirees and their dependents.

Eligibility:

  • Must have at least 10 years of service credit with a GBP-participating state agency or higher education institution
  • Must meet retirement eligibility (Rule of 80, age 60/65 with 5+ years)
  • Must retire directly from state employment

State Premium Contribution (Tiered System):

The state's contribution toward retiree premiums depends on length of service:

Service CreditState Pays (Full-Time Retiree)
10–14 years, 11 months50% of premium
15–19 years, 11 months75% of premium
20+ years100% of premium
5+ years of GBP participation on 9/1/2014100% (grandfathered)

Part-time retirees receive half these rates. Dependent coverage is 25–50% depending on the same service tiers.

Plans Available:

  • HealthSelect of Texas β€” statewide PPO administered by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas (the default plan)
  • Consumer Directed HealthSelect β€” high-deductible PPO with Health Savings Account (HSA)
  • HealthSelect Medicare Advantage β€” for Medicare-eligible retirees (65+), administered by UnitedHealthcare
  • HealthSelect Secondary β€” for Medicare-eligible retirees who choose to keep HealthSelect as secondary coverage

Dental and vision plans are also available but are entirely member-funded (no state contribution).

TRS-Care β€” Teacher Retirees ​

TRS-Care provides health coverage to TRS retirees and their dependents. It has been chronically underfunded and was substantially restructured in 2017 (SB 1812).

Eligibility:

  • Must have at least 10 years of TRS service credit AND meet retirement eligibility (Rule of 80 or age 65 with 5 years)
  • OR have 30+ years of service credit (regardless of age at retirement)
  • Cannot use combined PRP service for TRS-Care eligibility
  • Cannot be eligible for ERS, UT System, or Texas A&M System health benefits

Plans:

  • TRS-Care Standard β€” for non-Medicare-eligible retirees (under 65)
  • TRS-Care Medicare Advantage β€” for Medicare-eligible retirees (65+)
  • Optional dental and vision coverage available

Critical Difference from California

ERS explicitly warns: "Health and other insurance benefits for employees and retirees are subject to change based on available state funding. The Texas Legislature determines the level of funding for such benefits and has no continuing obligation to provide those benefits beyond each fiscal year."

This is fundamentally different from California's CalPERS Health, where retiree health coverage is governed by PEMHCA statute and employer resolutions that create ongoing legal obligations. In Texas, retiree health is a legislative appropriation β€” not a contractual right. The Legislature can reduce or eliminate retiree health benefits at any time. TRS-Care has already been restructured multiple times, with premiums increased and benefits reduced. This uncertainty is a meaningful risk factor when comparing Texas public employment to California.

Retiree Health Comparison β€” Texas vs California ​

FeatureCalifornia (CalPERS Health / PEMHCA)Texas (GBP / TRS-Care)
Legal basisStatute + employer resolution (ongoing obligation)Legislative appropriation (no continuing obligation)
Can Legislature eliminate it?Difficult β€” PEMHCA creates contractual frameworkYes β€” explicitly stated in law
Minimum employer contributionPEMHCA minimum ($157/month in 2025)None guaranteed beyond current fiscal year
Full premium paid by employerVaries by agency/vesting schedule20+ years for ERS; varies for TRS-Care
Medicare coordinationAutomatic transition to CalPERS Medicare plansHealthSelect MA (ERS) or TRS-Care MA
Chronic funding issuesRelatively stableTRS-Care has been repeatedly restructured

Texas Retiree Health vs Private Sector ​

Despite the uncertainty around Texas's retiree health programs, they still represent an enormous advantage over private-sector employment. The comparison is stark:

Texas Public (GBP / TRS-Care)Typical Private Employer
Coverage in retirementContinues at group rates (subject to legislative funding)Ends at separation (COBRA for 18 months, then you're on your own)
Employer contribution50–100% of premium depending on serviceStops completely
Plan selectionHealthSelect PPO/HDHP, Medicare AdvantageNo employer plan after separation
Medicare coordinationSeamless transition to HealthSelect MA or TRS-Care MANo employer plan to coordinate with
DependentsCovered (partial state contribution)Coverage ends
Cost in retirement$0–$600+/month depending on plan, tier, and dependents$800–$2,000+/month on ACA marketplace (age 55–64)

The Healthcare Gap β€” Why This Matters ​

If you retire before age 65 without employer health coverage, you face the "healthcare gap" β€” buying individual insurance on the ACA marketplace at full cost. For a 60-year-old couple in Texas, marketplace premiums can easily exceed $1,500–$2,000/month for decent coverage. That's $18,000–$24,000/year out of pocket β€” money that comes directly out of your pension check.

If you retire with GBP or TRS-Care coverage, you stay in a group plan with a state contribution. Even at the 50% tier (10–14 years of service), you're paying hundreds per month less than marketplace rates. At the 100% tier (20+ years), the state pays your full premium.

This makes the retiree health benefit one of the most valuable β€” and most underappreciated β€” components of Texas public employment. A 20-year state employee retiring at 57 with full GBP coverage could save $150,000–$200,000 in healthcare costs between retirement and Medicare eligibility at 65, compared to buying insurance on the open market.

The catch, again: this benefit is not contractually guaranteed in Texas the way CalPERS Health is in California. The Legislature funds it biennially and can change it at any time. But it has existed since 1986, and eliminating it entirely would be politically explosive β€” over 200,000 retirees depend on it.


Texas State Income Tax Advantage ​

Texas is one of nine U.S. states with no state income tax β€” on any income, including pension income, Social Security, wages, investment earnings, and retirement account distributions. This is one of the most significant financial advantages of retiring as a Texas public employee.

What This Means for Retirees ​

A TRS retiree receiving $50,000/year in pension income keeps every dollar at the state level. A CalSTRS retiree in California receiving the same pension pays California state income tax (rates range from 1% to 13.3%), which could cost $2,000–$4,000+ annually depending on total income and filing status.

StateState Income Tax on Pension IncomeImpact on $50,000 Pension
Texas$0$0 state tax
California1–13.3% (progressive)~$2,000–$4,000+ state tax
New YorkExempt (pension income excluded)$0 state tax

New York exempts public pension income from state tax but taxes other income at 4–10.9%. Texas taxes nothing. California taxes everything.

The Total Compensation Calculation ​

The no-income-tax advantage partially offsets Texas's weaker pension formulas and lack of automatic COLA. When comparing a Texas government job to a California one, it's important to consider the full picture: a slightly lower pension with no COLA but no state income tax in retirement may compare differently depending on your personal financial situation, where you plan to retire, and how long your retirement lasts.

However, the income tax advantage is not unique to public employees β€” every Texan benefits. The comparative advantage of public employment (pension, retiree health, job security) over private employment still holds regardless of tax policy.


Supplemental Retirement Plans ​

Like California and New York, Texas offers supplemental savings plans beyond the core pension. These are especially important for ERS Group 4 members, whose cash balance pension alone may not provide adequate replacement income.

Texa$aver β€” 401(k) and 457(b) ​

The Texa$aver Program, administered by ERS, offers voluntary supplemental retirement savings to state employees through two plans:

PlanTypeContribution Limit (2026)Employer Match
Texa$aver 401(k)Defined contribution$23,500 (under 50); $31,000 (50+)None β€” entirely employee-funded
Texa$aver 457(b)Deferred compensation$23,500 (under 50); $31,000 (50+)None

Employees can contribute to both plans simultaneously, effectively doubling their tax-advantaged savings. Both plans offer Roth (after-tax) options.

California Comparison

CalPERS agencies commonly offer 457(b) deferred compensation plans, and some offer 401(a) employer-match plans negotiated through MOUs. The key difference: in California, unions sometimes negotiate employer contributions to supplemental plans as part of the MOU. In Texas, with no collective bargaining, supplemental plans are entirely employee-funded β€” there is no mechanism to negotiate employer matches.

TRS 403(b) β€” School Employees ​

Public school employees who participate in TRS can contribute to voluntary 403(b) tax-sheltered annuity plans offered through their school districts. Each district selects its own 403(b) vendors. There is no TRS or state match β€” contributions are entirely employee-funded.

TMRS and TCDRS Supplemental Options ​

TMRS and TCDRS do not administer their own supplemental plans. City and county employees may have access to 457(b) or other plans offered by their individual employer.


The "Slush Fund" Criticism β€” What People Mean ​

Texas pensions face criticism from multiple political directions:

1. Local fund mismanagement. The Dallas Police & Fire Pension crisis (see above) is the most dramatic example β€” reckless investments, guaranteed returns the fund couldn't sustain, and potential fraud. Houston's three pension funds also had a combined $10 billion shortfall before 2017 reforms.

2. ESG political fights. In 2021, the Legislature passed SB 13, prohibiting state funds from investing in companies that "boycott" oil and gas. TRS subsequently divested from 10 financial firms the state comptroller identified as boycotting energy companies. Critics argue this forces pension funds to make investment decisions based on politics rather than fiduciary duty β€” effectively using teacher retirement savings as a tool of energy policy.

3. Rainy Day Fund crossover. The Texas Economic Stabilization Fund ("Rainy Day Fund") has been tapped for pension-related purposes β€” particularly to supplement TRS. The Texas Public Policy Foundation has criticized this as using the emergency reserve as a "slush fund" to cover foreseeable pension shortfalls rather than genuine emergencies.

4. Structural underfunding. Austin, Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio collectively faced $22.6 billion in pension shortfalls (as of 2016 Moody's data). The state's total unfunded pension liabilities have exceeded $60 billion. Unlike California, where employer contribution rates automatically adjust based on actuarial valuations, many Texas systems have historically relied on the Legislature or city councils to appropriate funding β€” creating political incentives to underfund.

5. The shift away from defined benefit. Unions and employee groups argue that SB 321's cash balance shift for new ERS hires weakens retirement security and makes it harder to recruit and retain state workers β€” especially at agencies like TDCJ (Texas Department of Criminal Justice) that already suffer from chronic understaffing.


Major Public Employers in Texas ​

State Government ​

Texas has 188 state entities employing over 341,000 full-time equivalent workers. The workforce splits between state agencies and higher education institutions.

Largest state employers:

EmployerEmployees (approx.)Pension System
Texas A&M University System26,000+TRS
UT MD Anderson Cancer Center22,000+TRS
University of Texas at Austin21,000+TRS
Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ)36,000+ERS
Texas Health and Human Services Commission50,000+ERS
Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT)12,000+ERS
Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS)9,000+ERS + LECOS

Local Government ​

Texas has 254 counties (the most of any state), over 1,200 incorporated cities, and 1,031 independent school districts.

Largest school districts:

DistrictStudentsEmployees (approx.)Pension System
Houston ISD189,000+27,000+TRS
Dallas ISD139,000+20,000+TRS
Cypress-Fairbanks ISD111,000+15,000+TRS
Northside ISD (San Antonio)101,000+14,000+TRS
Fort Worth ISD75,000+10,000+TRS
Austin ISD74,000+10,000+TRS

Major cities and transit:

EmployerPension System
City of HoustonHMEPS, HFRRF, HPOPS (local systems)
City of DallasDERF, DPFPS (local systems)
City of San AntonioTMRS + SAFPPF (fire/police)
City of AustinCoA ERS, APFRS, AFRS (local systems)
City of Fort WorthFWERS (local system)
Harris CountyTCDRS
Dallas CountyTCDRS
DART (Dallas Area Rapid Transit)DART Employees' Retirement Plan
METRO (Houston Metro)Metropolitan Transit Authority Pension Plan
Capital Metro (Austin)TMRS

Special Districts ​

Texas has a uniquely vast special district ecosystem. Over 1,200 active special districts operate in the state, including:

  • Municipal Utility Districts (MUDs) β€” over 950 statewide; most contract services rather than employing staff directly
  • Emergency Services Districts (ESDs) β€” fire/EMS protection in unincorporated areas; some participate in TESRS or TCDRS
  • River Authorities β€” large water management entities (Brazos River Authority, Lower Colorado River Authority, San Antonio River Authority); many participate in TCDRS
  • Hospital Districts β€” public hospital systems; many participate in TCDRS
  • Flood Control Districts β€” Harris County Flood Control District is one of the largest

California Comparison

California has about 3,400 special districts, but most contract with CalPERS for retirement benefits. Texas special districts are more likely to participate in TCDRS or operate independently. The pension coverage is less standardized.


Proportionate Retirement Program (PRP) ​

Texas's equivalent of California's reciprocity system is the Proportionate Retirement Program (PRP). It allows members to combine service credit across participating systems to meet vesting and eligibility requirements β€” but each system calculates and pays its own benefit independently.

PRP Participating Systems ​

  • Teacher Retirement System of Texas (TRS)
  • Employees Retirement System of Texas (ERS)
  • Texas Municipal Retirement System (TMRS)
  • Texas County & District Retirement System (TCDRS)
  • Judicial Retirement System of Texas (JRS)
  • City of Austin ERS
  • El Paso City Employees' Pension Fund

Key Differences from California Reciprocity ​

FeatureCalifornia ReciprocityTexas PRP
Salary linkingHighest final comp used across all systemsEach system uses its own final average salary
Timing requirementMust join new system within 180 daysNo specific timing requirement
Same-day retirementRequired β€” must retire from all systems on same dateNot required
ScopeService credit can satisfy vesting at any reciprocal systemService credit combined for vesting/eligibility only

PRP is weaker than California reciprocity in a critical way: your highest salary doesn't carry over. If you work 20 years for a school district at $60,000/year (TRS) and then 10 years as a state employee at $90,000/year (ERS), TRS calculates your pension using the $60,000 salary, not the $90,000. In California's reciprocal system, both pensions would use the $90,000.



How We Got Here β€” Texas's Pension Reform Timeline ​

The Enhancement Era and the Seeds of Crisis (1993–2007) ​

Like California's SB 400 era, Texas experienced a period of pension enhancements driven by strong market returns and political pressure. The most consequential decision came in 1993, when the Legislature authorized the Dallas Police & Fire Pension System to guarantee members 8.5% annual interest on their individual accounts β€” a rate that would prove catastrophically unsustainable.

During the same period, local pension boards across Texas's 86+ independent systems made increasingly aggressive investment decisions. The Dallas fund poured money into speculative real estate, Hawaiian resorts, and luxury developments. Houston's three pension funds accumulated generous benefit promises that outpaced funding. The assumed rates of return across Texas systems ranged from 8% to 9% β€” numbers that looked plausible in the 1990s bull market but would prove dangerously optimistic.

The Great Recession and the Four-City Crisis (2008–2016) ​

The 2008 financial crisis exposed the fragility of Texas's fragmented pension landscape. While California's centralized CalPERS system lost roughly 25% of its value (devastating but manageable at scale), Texas's local systems β€” smaller, less diversified, and often less professionally managed β€” suffered disproportionately.

By 2016, the damage was undeniable. Moody's issued a report ranking the U.S. cities with the worst pension shortfalls relative to revenues. Four of the top fifteen were in Texas: Dallas (#2), Houston (#4), Austin (#14), and San Antonio (#22). The four cities collectively faced $22.6 billion in unfunded pension liabilities.

Dallas was the worst. The Police & Fire Pension System's risky real estate investments had imploded, and the 8.5% guaranteed return was draining the fund. When officers learned the fund was headed for insolvency, they began making panicked lump-sum withdrawals β€” over $500 million in a matter of months β€” accelerating the death spiral. Mayor Mike Rawlings called in the FBI and Texas Rangers to investigate potential fraud by the fund's previous managers.

The 2017 Reform Session β€” The Legislature Steps In ​

The 85th Legislature (2017) became the most consequential session for Texas pensions in decades, passing three major reform bills:

SB 12 / HB 9 β€” TRS Funding Reform: Increased state contributions to TRS, improved the system's funded ratio trajectory, and authorized a one-time supplemental payment ("13th check") to retirees. This was funded partly through the Rainy Day Fund β€” the use that drew "slush fund" criticism.

SB 2190 β€” Houston Pension Reform: Restructured all three Houston pension funds (HMEPS, HFRRF, HPOPS). Cut benefits for active members, raised employee contributions, capped pensionable pay, and authorized a $1 billion pension obligation bond. Mayor Sylvester Turner called it the most significant pension reform in Houston's history.

HB 3158 β€” Dallas Police & Fire Pension Reform: Eliminated the 8.5% guaranteed return, cut benefits for active members, restructured governance, and put the fund on a path to solvency. The reforms were bitterly contested β€” police and fire unions opposed many provisions, and Dallas City Council members fought over the balance of power on the pension board.

SB 321 and the Cash Balance Shift (2021) ​

The 87th Legislature passed SB 321, the most structural change to state employee pensions since ERS was created. The bill had two parts: (1) authorized $510 million in annual legacy payments through 2054 to address ERS's $14.7 billion unfunded liability, and (2) moved all new state employees hired after September 1, 2022 into a cash balance plan (Group 4) instead of the traditional defined benefit plan.

The cash balance shift was controversial. Employee unions argued it weakened retirement security and would worsen already-critical staffing shortages at agencies like TDCJ. Proponents said it provided a competitive benefit for a modern workforce while eliminating the funding risks that created the unfunded liability in the first place. The bill passed largely along party lines.

The ESG Investment Fight (2021–Present) ​

Also in 2021, the Legislature passed SB 13, prohibiting state pension funds from investing in companies that "boycott" oil and gas. TRS divested from 10 financial firms identified by the state comptroller, including BlackRock and other major asset managers. The law injected partisan politics directly into pension fund investment decisions β€” a development with no parallel in California or New York. Critics argue this forces fiduciaries to prioritize energy policy over returns; supporters say it protects Texas's dominant industry from activist investors using Texans' own retirement savings against them.

Where Things Stand (2026) ​

Texas's pension landscape remains fragmented and politically contested. TRS is on a better funding trajectory thanks to 2017 reforms but still lacks an automatic COLA. ERS Group 4 is only a few years old β€” too early to evaluate outcomes. The 86+ local systems range from well-managed (TCDRS is widely considered a model plan) to struggling. And the fundamental tension between Texas's anti-government political culture and the reality that 2.1 million Texans work in the public sector shows no signs of resolution.


AuthorityWhat It Does
TX Constitution, Article XVI, Β§67Directs the Legislature to establish TRS and ERS; requires boards of trustees with prudent-person investment standard; prohibits reduction of accrued benefits for vested members
SB 321 (87th Legislature, 2021)Created ERS Group 4 cash balance plan; authorized $510M/year legacy payments through 2054
SB 12/HB 9 (85th Legislature, 2017)TRS funding reform β€” increased state contributions, improved funded ratio trajectory
SB 2190 (85th Legislature, 2017)Houston pension reform β€” restructured HMEPS, HFRRF, HPOPS; authorized $1B pension obligation bond
HB 3158 (85th Legislature, 2017)Dallas Police & Fire pension reform β€” eliminated 8.5% guaranteed returns, restructured governance
SB 13 (87th Legislature, 2021)Prohibited state pension funds from investing in companies that "boycott" oil and gas
TX Government Code, Title 8Comprehensive pension code β€” Subtitles B (ERS), C (TRS), F (TCDRS), G (TMRS), and others
Texas Pension Review Board (PRB)State oversight board mandated to review actuarial soundness and compliance of all 93+ systems

Constitutional Pension Protection β€” California vs. Texas ​

Both states have constitutional pension protection, but with important differences:

California: Article XVI, Β§17 grants pension boards plenary authority and imposes a fiduciary duty where benefits to members take precedence. The "California Rule" (case law) holds that pension benefits constitute contractual obligations that generally cannot be reduced for service already earned.

Texas: Article XVI, Β§67 states that accrued benefits of vested members cannot be reduced or impaired. However, the Texas Constitution includes an opt-out provision allowing local governments to modify pension protections by voter referendum β€” a mechanism that doesn't exist in California.


Pension Formulas ​

Full Formula Reference

For complete TRS, ERS (Groups 1–4), TMRS, and TCDRS formula explanations, contribution rates, COLA provisions, and worked example calculations, see the dedicated Texas Pension Formulas page.


Key Pension Terms Glossary ​

TermDefinition
TRSTeacher Retirement System of Texas β€” covers public education employees
ERSEmployees Retirement System of Texas β€” covers state agency employees
TMRSTexas Municipal Retirement System β€” cash balance plan for city employees
TCDRSTexas County & District Retirement System β€” cash balance plan for county/district employees
Group 4ERS members hired on or after 9/1/2022 who participate in the cash balance plan
Cash Balance PlanA hybrid defined benefit plan where the benefit is based on accumulated contributions + interest credits + employer match, converted to a lifetime annuity
Gain ShareAdditional interest credit awarded when fund returns exceed the guaranteed minimum (ERS Group 4: up to 3% above the 4% guarantee)
State MatchThe employer's matching contribution added at retirement (ERS Group 4: 150% of account balance; LEO/custodial with 20+ years: 300%)
Proportionate Retirement Program (PRP)Texas's system for combining service across TRS, ERS, TMRS, TCDRS, and JRS for vesting eligibility
Pension Review Board (PRB)State oversight body that monitors actuarial soundness of all Texas public pension systems
Ad Hoc COLAA cost-of-living adjustment that requires specific legislative appropriation β€” not automatic
VestingERS Group 4: 5 years; TRS: 5 years; TMRS/TCDRS: varies by employer (5, 8, or 10 years)
Final Average Salary (FAS)TRS: highest 5 consecutive years; ERS Groups 1–3: highest 36 or 48 months (varies by group)
SB 3212021 law creating ERS Group 4 cash balance plan and authorizing legacy payments
LECOSLaw Enforcement and Custodial Officer Supplemental Retirement Fund
TESRSTexas Emergency Services Retirement System β€” covers volunteer firefighters

Useful Resources ​

Official System Websites ​

Research and Transparency ​

Key Legislation ​

Media Coverage ​


Last updated: April 2026. This guide is for informational purposes only. Pension laws are complex and subject to change. For individual benefit questions, contact your retirement system directly.

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