Federal and state funding for Houston manufacturers, Austin tech startups, Permian Basin energy companies, and rural Texas businesses. Updated May 2026.
Texas businesses can access all federal programs on the same terms as any other state. The four most relevant for TX founders in 2026 are the federal R&D tax credit, SBIR competitive grants, the IRA Section 45X manufacturing credit, and the SBA 7(a) loan guarantee. None of these require you to be a Texas company specifically, but Texas's size and industry mix make them particularly relevant here.
The federal research credit equals 20% of qualified research expenses (QRE) above your historical base, or 14% via the simpler Alternative Simplified Credit (ASC). Pre-revenue and early-stage companies can apply up to $500,000 per year directly against payroll taxes instead of income tax, making this accessible before a company turns profitable. Texas startups with engineers on payroll doing software, hardware, or biotech R&D routinely qualify.
Claimed on IRS Form 6765. QRE includes wages for research employees, supplies consumed in research, and 65% of contract research payments. Market research, social science, and post-commercial-production work are excluded.
NSF's SBIR backs deep-tech founders with up to $305,000 to prove technical feasibility. Zero equity, zero cost-sharing required. Covers virtually every hard-science and engineering domain: AI, semiconductors, energy, materials, agtech, biotech, environmental technology. A mandatory 3,500-character Project Pitch screens applicants before a full proposal is invited. Overall acceptance rate is roughly 12%.
Texas companies in the Austin tech corridor, Houston energy-tech cluster, and Lubbock/Amarillo agtech space have competed successfully. The program is paused for new Project Pitch submissions as of early 2026; NSF expects to resume in the coming weeks.
NIH SBIR is the primary path for Texas biotech, digital health, and medical device companies. Phase I awards run up to $323,090 for a 6-month feasibility study. 27 NIH institutes and centers each fund their own topic areas: NCI for cancer diagnostics, NIMH for mental health technology, NIBIB for devices and imaging. Texas's life sciences hubs in Houston (Texas Medical Center -- the world's largest medical complex) and San Antonio make NIH SBIR highly relevant regionally.
The SBA's primary loan guarantee program backs up to $5M across virtually any business purpose: real estate, equipment, working capital, acquisitions, and debt refinancing. The SBA guarantees 75-85% of the principal, allowing Texas banks and credit unions to lend to businesses that would not qualify for conventional credit. The average 7(a) loan was approximately $479,685 in FY2023. This is a loan you repay with interest -- it is not a grant.
Texas has a dense network of SBA-approved lenders in Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Austin, and Fort Worth. Use the SBA Lender Match tool (lendermatch.sba.gov) to find local lenders. Preferred Lender Program (PLP) banks can approve without SBA review, cutting timelines to 2-4 weeks.
| Program | Type | Amount | Key Gate |
|---|---|---|---|
| IRC Section 41 R&D Credit | Credit | Up to $500K payroll offset/yr | Qualifying research + Form 6765 |
| SBIR Phase I (NSF) | Grant | Up to $305,000 | Tech feasibility + US small biz |
| SBIR Phase I (NIH) | Grant | Up to $323,090 | Biomedical R&D + US small biz |
| SBA 7(a) Loan | Loan | Up to $5,000,000 | Credit history + collateral |
Texas has two major state-level business funding programs relevant to small and mid-size businesses: the Texas Skills Development Fund (a true grant for workforce training) and the Texas R&D Tax Credit under new Subchapter T (a franchise tax credit for qualified research). Texas has no state income tax, so all state tax credits apply to the franchise tax.
The Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) pays for customized employee training at no cost to the employer, through a community college or TEEX partnership model. Most projects land between $50,000 and $300,000. Target cost runs $1,800-$2,000 per employee trained. Eligible expenses include tuition, curriculum development, instructor fees, and training materials -- not employee wages during training.
Applications are accepted year-round with no fixed deadlines. Critically, your business is NOT the direct applicant. A community college or TEEX submits the application on your behalf after co-designing the curriculum with you. Contact TWC at Skills@twc.texas.gov to start.
The Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts administers this credit for qualified research expenses conducted within Texas. Claimed on Form 05-182 (replaced old Form 05-178). If your business qualifies for the refundable portion, also file Form 05-183. Texas franchise tax returns are due May 15 each year.
Eligible expenses mirror the federal IRC Section 41 definition (as of the Texas frozen reference date of December 31, 2011): wages for research employees, supplies consumed in research, and 65% of contract research conducted in Texas. Research conducted outside Texas does not count. Social science, arts, and market research are excluded.
| Feature | Old Subchapter M (pre-2026) | New Subchapter T (2026+) |
|---|---|---|
| Credit vs. exemption election | You could elect sales-use tax exemption (§151.3182) instead of the credit | No election -- Subchapter T only. Sales-use exemption fully repealed. |
| Federal Form 6765 required? | No federal prerequisite | Yes -- mandatory. Must have filed Form 6765 for each year claimed. |
| Refundable credit? | No refundable option | Partially refundable for veteran-owned startups, low-tax, or under No Tax Due Threshold businesses |
| Tax applies to | Franchise tax (no state income tax) | Franchise tax (no state income tax) |
The best Texas state program for a manufacturing or tech company with R&D spending is the new Subchapter T credit, because it directly offsets the franchise tax liability your profitable Texas operation already owes -- with no competitive application, no pitch, and no committee review. If you also claim the federal Section 41 credit (which you should), Subchapter T stacks on top for a combined state-plus-federal tax benefit on the same underlying research spend.
Texas is one of the top manufacturing states in the country, with major concentrations along the Gulf Coast in Harris County and the I-35 Corridor from San Antonio to Dallas-Fort Worth. Two programs are particularly relevant to Texas manufacturers in 2026.
Section 45X pays federal per-unit production tax credits to US manufacturers of eligible clean energy components. For Texas manufacturers, the most relevant categories are: solar modules ($0.07 per watt), battery cells ($35 per kWh), battery modules ($10 per kWh), wind turbine nacelles ($0.05 per watt), and applicable critical minerals (10% of production costs). The credit is active through 2032 for most components, with a phase-down to 0% after 2032.
No prevailing wage requirements. For-profit manufacturers can elect direct pay (receive cash from the IRS) for the first 5 tax years of claiming the credit. All taxpayers can transfer (sell) the credit to third-party buyers under IRC Section 6418. Wind energy components -- blades, nacelles, towers -- expire entirely after December 31, 2027 with no phase-down.
| Component | Credit Rate | Expires | TX Industry Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solar modules | $0.07/watt | Phase to 0% after 2032 | High (Gulf Coast, West TX) |
| Battery cells | $35/kWh | Phase to 0% after 2032 | Growing (DFW, Austin corridor) |
| Wind nacelles | $0.05/watt | Expires Dec 31, 2027 | Relevant (Panhandle, West TX) |
| Critical minerals | 10% of production costs | Phase to 0% after 2033 | Emerging (mining/refining) |
You are in one of the strongest positions of any Texas business type for stacking multiple programs. Start with the Texas Skills Development Fund through TWC: if you are expanding a production line, adding equipment, or adopting new processes, the SDF can fund the customized training for your workforce at zero cost to you. Most manufacturing employers in Houston, Fort Worth, San Antonio, and El Paso have a nearby community college or technical college that can be your SDF partner.
Layer on the federal Section 41 R&D credit if your team is doing any technical problem-solving that qualifies under the four-part test: wages paid to engineers and technicians working on process improvement, new product development, or materials research typically qualify. Then file that Form 6765 federally first, which also unlocks the new Texas Subchapter T credit on the same underlying spend.
If you manufacture solar modules, battery components, or wind parts, the IRA Section 45X credit is the most significant financial opportunity available and should be your first priority for tax planning. A Texas manufacturer producing 50 megawatts of solar panels annually earns $3.5M in Section 45X credits against federal tax liability. Combined state and federal incentives for qualifying TX manufacturers can materially change the economics of a production investment.
The best combination for a Texas manufacturer is TWC Skills Development Fund (training) stacked with Section 41 + Subchapter T (R&D tax credits), because all three programs reward the same underlying business activity -- hiring skilled workers and investing in technical processes -- with zero overlap or conflict.
Austin's tech ecosystem, centered along the I-35 Corridor from Round Rock through South Austin, gives you strong access to both federal SBIR grants and R&D tax credits. If your company is doing genuine technical R&D -- building software with technical uncertainty, developing hardware prototypes, or conducting applied research -- the federal Section 41 credit is typically your first financial return. Wages paid to Austin-based engineers, developers, and researchers generally qualify.
For non-dilutive capital to fund R&D itself, NSF SBIR Phase I ($305K) and NIH SBIR Phase I ($323K for biomedical/digital health) are the top paths. Austin's tech community has deep experience with SBIR applications through organizations like the Austin Technology Incubator and Capital Factory, which can connect you with advisors who have navigated the process.
The new Texas Subchapter T credit stacks on the federal Section 41 credit. Since you must file Form 6765 to claim Subchapter T, there is essentially no reason not to claim both. For early-stage Austin companies below the $2.47M No Tax Due Threshold, the partially refundable Subchapter T credit can convert to actual cash rather than just a tax offset.
The Permian Basin (Midland-Odessa region), the Gulf Coast (Houston, Corpus Christi), and the Panhandle all support large clusters of energy-adjacent businesses: oilfield services, engineering firms, environmental compliance companies, equipment manufacturers, and energy transition technology developers. Your funding landscape in 2026 is broader than it has been in years, driven primarily by IRA provisions that reward both traditional and transition-energy manufacturing.
If you are developing technology that reduces emissions, improves efficiency, or supports the energy transition, NSF SBIR and DOE SBIR are both active programs. DOE SBIR in particular covers areas directly relevant to Texas energy businesses: grid technologies, battery storage, carbon capture, and geothermal. The IRA Section 45X credit rewards actual production of clean energy components, which benefits Gulf Coast facilities investing in battery material processing or solar panel manufacturing.
For workforce expansion and technical training, the TWC Skills Development Fund is well-suited to energy sector employers. Brazosport College (Lake Jackson, Brazoria County), Lee College (Baytown, Harris County), and San Jacinto College (Pasadena, Harris County) are active SDF partners in the Gulf Coast energy corridor. Contact TWC or your regional workforce board in Beaumont or Corpus Christi to identify the right college partner.
Texas has the second largest veteran population in the US (over 1.5 million veterans). Veteran-owned businesses have several specific advantages within existing programs. Under the new Subchapter T R&D credit effective January 1, 2026, qualified new veteran-owned businesses can claim a refundable credit regardless of their franchise tax liability -- this is a specific carve-out in the new law that does not require being below the general No Tax Due Threshold.
At the federal level, SBA Veterans Business Outreach Centers (VBOCs) provide free consulting for veteran-owned businesses across Texas, with offices in San Antonio (Fort Sam Houston area), Dallas-Fort Worth, and other locations. The SBA Boots to Business program, available through military installations including Fort Hood (Killeen), Joint Base San Antonio, Fort Bliss (El Paso), and NAS Corpus Christi, provides entrepreneurship education for transitioning service members at no cost.
For capital access, veteran-owned businesses face the same SBIR competition as any other small business -- there is no preference point -- but SBA VBOC advisors can help with the application process. For working capital and equipment financing, SBA Express Loans (up to $500K with faster approval) are available through the same lender network as 7(a) loans.
The best first step for a new Texas veteran-owned business with R&D activity is to claim the Subchapter T refundable credit, because the veteran-owned carve-out means you receive an actual cash refund from the Texas Comptroller even if your franchise tax liability is zero -- unlike non-veteran businesses at the same revenue level that only receive a credit offset.
Rural Texas -- East Texas pine forests, the Rio Grande Valley, the Panhandle, the Hill Country, and the South Texas Plains -- has a distinct funding landscape. The Texas Capital Fund (TCF), operated through the Texas Department of Agriculture and administered through local communities, supports infrastructure and real estate improvements in rural Texas areas. The USDA Rural Development office, with Texas offices in Temple, Lubbock, Corpus Christi, and Beaumont, administers rural business development programs including USDA Rural Microentrepreneur Assistance Program (RMAP) loans and the Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) grants for energy improvements.
For agricultural businesses, the USDA Value-Added Producer Grant and the Specialty Crop Block Grant (administered through the Texas Department of Agriculture) provide direct funding for product development and marketing. The TWC Skills Development Fund covers agricultural processing employers -- agribusinesses in the Rio Grande Valley, the Panhandle, and Central Texas with food processing operations are eligible and increasingly active participants.
For rural connectivity and logistics businesses, USDA's Distance Learning and Telemedicine (DLT) program and the Community Connect broadband program provide infrastructure grants that can support rural business operations. Contact USDA Rural Development Texas at their Temple or Lubbock offices for a complete picture of what applies to your county.
Texas is too large to treat as a single market. Here is how the funding landscape breaks down by region.
Houston and Harris County represent the densest concentration of manufacturing, petrochemical, and energy technology businesses in the state. The Gulf Workforce Board (TWC regional partner) and Gulf Coast Workforce Solutions are active SDF intermediaries. For SBA financing, Houston has one of the largest networks of SBA-approved lenders in the country, including community development financial institutions (CDFIs) that serve underserved businesses in Wards 3, 4, and 5. The Texas Medical Center (the world's largest medical complex) in the Houston medical district makes NIH SBIR particularly relevant for life sciences and health tech companies in the area. Harris County is also one of the primary targets for IRA Section 45X investment given existing industrial infrastructure along the Ship Channel and in Baytown.
The DFW Metroplex is Texas's largest employment market and growing manufacturing hub. Frisco, McKinney, Plano, and Garland in Collin County have seen significant advanced manufacturing and tech investment. Fort Worth and Arlington (Tarrant County) remain anchors for aerospace and defense manufacturing, with suppliers to Lockheed Martin, Bell Flight, and American Airlines that regularly use TWC Skills Development Fund for workforce training. Collin County and Dallas County are active markets for SBIR-funded companies, particularly in AI, semiconductor design, and defense technology. The North Texas SBDC (Small Business Development Center) network, with offices across the Metroplex, provides free consulting for SBA programs and grant applications.
San Antonio (Bexar County) has a large military presence -- Joint Base San Antonio is the largest military installation in the world by population -- creating strong demand for veteran-owned business services. The San Antonio Economic Development Foundation and local CDFIs like Business Impact Collaborative serve small businesses across Bexar County. The I-35 Corridor connecting San Antonio to Austin (Hays, Comal, and Guadalupe Counties) has seen major manufacturing and logistics investment, particularly in electric vehicle supply chain and semiconductor-adjacent manufacturing. St. Philip's College and San Antonio College are active SDF partners through TWC for Bexar County employers.
Austin and Travis County are the center of Texas's tech startup economy. The University of Texas at Austin, Texas A&M's research offices, and Austin Community College all provide SBIR application support and act as potential SDF college partners. The Austin Technology Incubator (ATI) at UT and Capital Factory are the primary SBIR mentorship resources for Austin founders. Williamson County (Round Rock, Cedar Park, Georgetown) is home to major manufacturing operations including Dell Technologies and supporting supply chain manufacturers, all active SDF users. For R&D credits, Austin-based software and hardware companies are among the largest Texas claimants of both federal Section 41 and the new Subchapter T credits.
The Permian Basin (Midland-Odessa) is the most productive oil and gas region in the US, with supporting manufacturing, oilfield services, and energy technology companies. Odessa College and Midland College are active SDF partners for energy sector training. For energy transition technology companies in West Texas, DOE SBIR and NSF SBIR are relevant -- the region's solar irradiance is among the highest in the country, making it viable for solar technology development. The Texas Enterprise Fund has supported major energy projects in West Texas.
The Rio Grande Valley (McAllen, Brownsville, Laredo) and South Texas have distinct economic development programs through USDA Rural Development and the Texas Department of Agriculture. Laredo (Webb County) has significant cross-border trade logistics operations. The South Texas SBDC and Rio Grande Valley SBDC provide free business development support. For agricultural businesses in the Valley, the USDA Specialty Crop Block Grant (administered through the Texas Department of Agriculture) is relevant for vegetable, citrus, and sugarcane producers.
| Region | Primary Programs | Key Agency Contact |
|---|---|---|
| Houston / Gulf Coast | SDF, §45X, NIH SBIR, SBA 7(a) | Gulf Workforce Board (TWC regional) |
| Dallas-Fort Worth | SDF, SBIR (AI/defense), SBA 7(a) | North Texas SBDC |
| San Antonio | SDF, SBA veteran programs, Subchapter T | San Antonio Economic Development Foundation |
| Austin / I-35 | NSF SBIR, Section 41 + Subchapter T, SDF | Austin Technology Incubator (UT) |
| Permian Basin | DOE SBIR, SDF, Texas Enterprise Fund | Midland/Odessa College (SDF partner) |
| Rio Grande Valley | USDA Rural Dev, TXDA Specialty Crop, SDF | Rio Grande Valley SBDC |
| Type | What You Get | What You Give Up | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grant | Cash / subsidized services you keep | Time to apply + compliance requirements | SBIR Phase I, TWC Skills Dev Fund |
| Tax Credit | Reduction in tax you owe (or refund) | Must have qualifying activity + tax liability to offset | Section 41, Subchapter T, §45X |
| Loan | Upfront capital | Repayment with interest over loan term | SBA 7(a), SBA Express, SBA 504 |
| Credit | Rate | Tax Base | Refundable? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal Section 41 (ASC method) | 14% of QRE above 50% of 3-yr avg | Federal income tax | Yes -- up to $500K payroll offset for QSBs |
| Texas Subchapter T | Set in Tax Code §171.9201 (not published online) | Texas franchise tax | Partially -- veteran-owned, low-tax, under $2.47M revenue |
The best non-dilutive path for a Texas tech startup with no revenue is the federal Section 41 R&D credit via the QSB payroll-tax offset, because it converts qualifying engineer wages into up to $500,000 per year in payroll tax cash back -- no profitability required. Stack the Texas Subchapter T credit on top once you are filing Form 6765 federally anyway.
For Texas businesses that need to train a workforce quickly and cannot afford downtime costs, the TWC Skills Development Fund is the most immediately accessible and underused program in the state, because it pays 100% of customized training costs with no competitive scoring and rolling acceptance -- the main bottleneck is finding and engaging the right community college partner, not competing for limited funds.
Texas small businesses can access 14 substantive funded programs in 2026. The TWC Skills Development Fund provides up to $500K for customized employee training through a community college partner, on a rolling basis. SBIR Phase I grants offer up to $305K (NSF) or $323K (NIH) for deep-tech and biotech startups. Beyond grants, the Texas Subchapter T R&D credit (effective January 1, 2026) offsets franchise tax, and the federal Section 41 credit can return up to $500K per year against payroll taxes for qualifying early-stage companies. The SBA 7(a) loan guarantee provides up to $5M in working capital through Texas lenders -- this is a loan, not a grant.
Yes. Texas replaced its old Subchapter M credit and the related sales-use tax exemption (§151.3182) with a new Subchapter T credit effective January 1, 2026. Key new requirement: you must have filed IRS Form 6765 (the federal R&D credit form) for each year you intend to claim the Texas credit. Businesses below the $2.47M No Tax Due Threshold may qualify for a partially refundable credit. Because Texas has no state income tax, the credit offsets the franchise tax. The exact Subchapter T credit rate is in Tax Code §171.9201 and is not posted on the Comptroller's website -- consult a Texas CPA for the current rate.
The Skills Development Fund works through a business-college partnership model. Your business identifies training needs, contacts the Texas Workforce Commission (Skills@twc.texas.gov) or your regional workforce board, and gets matched with a partner community college or TEEX. The college designs the curriculum with you and submits the application to TWC on your behalf. Once approved, the college delivers training at no cost to your business. Grants run up to $500K and cover tuition, curriculum development, instructor fees, and materials -- not employee wages. Applications are accepted year-round. Most projects land between $50K and $300K at $1,800-$2,000 per employee trained.
Yes. Section 45X pays per-unit federal tax credits for US manufacturers of eligible clean energy components. Texas manufacturers earn: $0.07 per watt for solar modules, $35 per kWh for battery cells, $10 per kWh for battery modules, $0.05 per watt for wind nacelles. For-profit manufacturers can elect direct pay (cash from the IRS) for the first 5 tax years of claiming the credit. Wind components expire after December 31, 2027. Most other components phase down starting in 2030 and reach zero after 2032. No prevailing wage requirements apply.
Houston businesses in Harris County can access all statewide Texas programs: the TWC Skills Development Fund (contact the Gulf Workforce Board for SDF navigation), the Texas Subchapter T R&D credit, and any federal SBIR or Section 45X credits relevant to their industry. The Houston area is a strong market for NIH SBIR given the Texas Medical Center, and for Section 45X given the concentration of energy and manufacturing along the Gulf Coast and Baytown Ship Channel area. SBA-approved lenders in Houston include community development financial institutions serving underserved neighborhoods.
Austin tech startups have the strongest access to federal SBIR grants (NSF up to $305K for deep tech, NIH up to $323K for health tech), plus the federal Section 41 R&D credit and the Texas Subchapter T credit. Austin's startup community has mentorship resources through Austin Technology Incubator (UT) and Capital Factory that specifically support SBIR applications. For workforce training, Austin Community College is an active TWC Skills Development Fund partner for Travis and Williamson County employers. SBA Lender Match connects Austin businesses with SBA 7(a) lenders for conventional capital needs.
Texas veteran-owned businesses have specific advantages. The new Subchapter T R&D credit (effective January 1, 2026) includes a refundability carve-out for qualified new veteran-owned businesses -- they can receive a cash refund from the Texas Comptroller regardless of franchise tax liability. SBA Veterans Business Outreach Centers (VBOCs) in San Antonio and Dallas-Fort Worth provide free business consulting. SBA Boots to Business offers entrepreneurship education at Texas military installations including Fort Hood, Joint Base San Antonio, Fort Bliss, and NAS Corpus Christi.