What HR records should a Texas employer review before an I-9 audit?
Preparing for an I-9 audit can overwhelm busy Texas employers balancing compliance and daily operations. Knowing exactly which HR records to review is essential to avoid costly mistakes and maintain operational control.
Last updated: May 31, 2026
Direct Answer
Before an I-9 audit, Texas employers should thoroughly review all Form I-9 documents for current and separated employees, including completed forms, supporting documentation, and any correction records. This review helps ensure accuracy and compliance, addressing common pitfalls that can lead to penalties or operational disruptions.
What This Means for Employers
Form I-9 compliance is more than a checklist; it’s the backbone of lawful employment eligibility verification. Employers must maintain accurate and complete I-9 records for every employee hired after November 6, 1986. Reviewing these documents before an audit is critical because inaccuracies or missing information can trigger serious compliance issues, audits, and penalties. In practice, this means cross-checking forms for completeness, timely completion, and document validity, not just filing them away.
For Texas employers, this review requires operational discipline amid daily demands. Form I-9s should match payroll and personnel records to confirm all employees are legally authorized to work. It’s important to verify that any corrections or reverifications are properly documented and that records for terminated employees are retained for the required period. This process is often messy in real workplaces but is a practical necessity to maintain defensibility under government scrutiny.
What Employers Usually Miss
What I see employers miss most often is assuming that because the form is on file, it’s compliant. Missing signatures, incomplete fields, and unverified document expiration dates are common gaps. Another frequent oversight is failing to review I-9s for separated employees, which are still subject to retention requirements. These gaps usually stem from understaffed HR teams or managers treating I-9 as a bureaucratic hurdle rather than an operational priority.
Employers also tend to overlook the importance of consistent correction protocols and reverification deadlines. If changes aren’t tracked properly or reverifications for expiring work authorization documents are missed, the risk of noncompliance spikes. The risk is not usually the rule itself; it is the inconsistent process around it that ultimately leads to audit failures, employee grievances, or potential fines.
Common Risk Triggers in I-9 Records
Identifying typical risk factors within I-9 records helps employers focus their review and avoid costly compliance gaps during audits.
- Incomplete or unsigned Forms I-9
- Expired or invalid supporting documents
- Missing reverification for temporary work authorizations
- Failure to retain I-9s for terminated employees
- Inconsistent or undocumented corrections
What to Review Before You Act
Begin your review by ensuring every employee has a fully completed Form I-9 with original signatures and dates. Cross-reference these forms against payroll and personnel files to confirm completeness and consistency. Check that supporting documents are valid, unexpired, and match the employee’s information. Don’t overlook separated employees’ I-9s; these must be retained for at least three years after hire or one year after termination, whichever is later.
Next, verify any corrections or reverifications align with federal timelines and are properly documented. Look for patterns that suggest process breakdowns, such as repeated missing fields or late reverifications. This review is a practical opportunity to train managers or HR staff on common pitfalls and to update your process to reflect how work actually gets done—not just what’s on paper.
When to Get HR Help
Engage HR professionals when your internal review reveals frequent errors, unclear documentation, or inconsistent practices. Expert guidance helps develop usable frameworks that make compliance manageable, especially when HR capacity is limited or managers are stretched thin. Early intervention can prevent audit failures and reduce stress around government inspections.
If you’re facing pressure from managers or payroll staff worried about exposure, or if there’s employee tension around documentation requests, a strategic HR partner can balance compliance demands with operational realities. They provide practical solutions that hold up under scrutiny while respecting your team’s capacity and workplace culture.
Ensure Your I-9 Compliance Today
Don’t wait for an audit to reveal gaps in your I-9 process. Connect with Faulkner HR Solutions for strategy-backed, practical guidance tailored to Texas employers. We help you build reliable systems that reduce risk and support your operational realities.
Get HR SupportThis page provides general HR information for employers and is not legal advice. For legal interpretation or representation, consult qualified employment counsel.