Faulkner HR Solutions Logo Faulkner HR Solutions
Return to HR FAQ Library

Do Texas employers have to give notice before layoffs?

Most Texas small employers have no legal notice obligation before a layoff, which makes the real risks the ones nobody warns them about: selection, timing, and paperwork.

Last updated: July 03, 2026

Direct Answer

Usually not. Texas has no state layoff notice law, and the federal WARN Act applies only to employers with 100 or more full-time employees conducting a plant closing or mass layoff as defined by the statute, which then requires 60 days advance written notice. Smaller Texas employers generally may lay off without advance notice, but final pay deadlines, benefits notices, and discrimination-safe selection still apply.

Who WARN Actually Covers

The federal WARN Act reaches employers with 100 or more full-time employees, and triggers on defined events: a plant closing affecting 50 or more employees at a site, or a mass layoff affecting either 500 employees or at least 50 employees comprising a third of the site's workforce. When it applies, covered employers owe 60 days written notice to employees, the state, and local government, with back pay exposure for every day of shortfall.

Below those thresholds, no Texas or federal statute requires advance layoff notice for private employers. That freedom is narrower than it looks, because everything surrounding the layoff remains regulated: final wages within six days for involuntary separations, COBRA or state continuation notices for group health plans, and truthful unemployment claim responses to the Texas Workforce Commission.

Where Small-Employer Layoffs Actually Go Wrong

Selection is the lawsuit. A reduction in force conducted without written, job-related selection criteria invites the claim that age, protected activity, or a recent complaint drove the list. Before names are final, the list should be tested: who is over 40, who recently complained, took leave, or reported an injury, and can each selection be explained by documented criteria?

Severance in exchange for a release requires real drafting, and releases of age claims for workers 40 and over carry specific federal requirements, including consideration periods, that render sloppy releases void. If you are paying for peace, make sure the document actually purchases it.

Reduction-in-Force Risks to Watch

Layoff claims are hindsight-driven, so the protection is built before the announcement. Watch for these.

  • No written selection criteria behind the layoff list
  • Disparate impact on employees over 40 never analyzed
  • Recent complainants, leave takers, or injured workers on the list without documented justification
  • Final paychecks scheduled for the next payroll run instead of the six-day deadline
  • Releases signed without the required elements for age claim waivers

What to Review Before You Act

Write the business rationale and the selection criteria before touching names, then run the list against protected categories and recent protected activity. Adjustments made at this stage are planning; adjustments made after a demand letter are evidence.

Build the separation-day packet in advance: final pay calculation, benefits continuation notices, and a factual script for the meetings.

When to Get HR Help

Get a layoff review before announcing, even for a five-person reduction, because the selection analysis and paperwork are where the exposure lives.

If you are near 100 employees or cutting across multiple sites, get WARN coverage analyzed specifically. The counting rules are technical and the penalty for guessing wrong is 60 days of back pay per employee.

Get a Straight Answer for Your Situation

General rules only go so far. If this question is live in your organization right now, talk it through with a senior HR consultant before you act. One conversation now costs less than one claim later.

Contact Us

Written and reviewed by Dr. Thomas W. Faulkner, DBA, MBA, MSML, SPHR, LSSBB, principal consultant at Faulkner HR Solutions, a Texas HR consulting firm based in San Antonio serving small businesses, nonprofits, municipalities, and public sector employers.

This page provides general HR information for employers and is not legal advice. For legal interpretation or representation, consult qualified employment counsel.