Texas regulates allied health practice through a network of profession-specific boards and programs. The single most important point for prospective candidates: in this jurisdiction, the credential that grants legal scope of practice is issued by the responsible state body, even when the prerequisite examination is administered by a national certifying organization. The summary below lists the responsible authority for each allied health role tracked on this site, together with a link into the full licensing detail page for that role in Texas.
| Department of Health | Texas Department of Health |
|---|---|
| Medical Board | Texas Medical Board |
| Board of Pharmacy | Texas Board of Pharmacy |
| Board of Dental Examiners | Texas Board of Dental Examiners |
| Office of EMS | Texas Office of Emergency Medical Services |
| Radiation Control Program | Texas Radiation Control Program |
Allied Health Licensing Detail Pages — Texas
- Medical Assistant
- Phlebotomist
- Emergency Medical Technician
- Surgical Technologist
- Radiologic Technologist
- Respiratory Therapist
- Pharmacy Technician
- Dental Assistant
- EKG Technician
- Sterile Processing Technician
Salary & Career Guides for Texas
For each profession above, a separate state-level salary and job-outlook guide reports the modeled state median wage, 10th–90th percentile wage bands, estimated state employment, and projected annual openings. These figures are derived from the BLS May 2024 OEWS national medians, scaled by the published Texas cost-of-living factor and Census 2024 population weights — see /methodology for the full derivation.
- Medical Assistant salary & outlook
- Phlebotomist salary & outlook
- Emergency Medical Technician salary & outlook
- Surgical Technologist salary & outlook
- Radiologic Technologist salary & outlook
- Respiratory Therapist salary & outlook
- Pharmacy Technician salary & outlook
- Dental Assistant salary & outlook
- EKG Technician salary & outlook
- Sterile Processing Technician salary & outlook
Regulatory Climate
Texas follows broadly typical allied health credentialing practice. For most roles, processing of a complete application takes between four and eight weeks once all primary-source verifications have been received. Candidates who already hold a current national certification from one of the recognized bodies — AAMA, AMT, NHA, ASCP, ARRT, NBRC, PTCB, NBSTSA, or DANB, depending on the role — can in most cases use that credential as the basis for state licensure or registration.
Workforce Notes
As one of the larger allied health labor markets in the country, Texas draws a steady flow of credentialed professionals from neighboring states. The state's largest hospital systems and outpatient clinic networks tend to require national certification at hire — even where the state itself does not — and many post-acute and ambulatory employers operate their own internal continuing education programs that count toward the state's renewal hour requirements. Reciprocity questions are most common in this jurisdiction for radiologic technology, respiratory care, and pharmacy technician roles, where every state has a license but the underlying training and examination standards are well harmonized.
More on Texas
Reciprocity & Endorsement
How to convert an out-of-state allied health credential into a Texas credential, profession by profession.
Open guide →Top Employers
The largest hospital systems, academic medical centers, and outpatient employers hiring allied health workers in Texas.
Open guide →Continuing Education
Hour requirements, mandatory topics, audit handling, and approved providers for every credentialed profession in Texas.
Open guide →Reciprocity & Endorsement
If you currently hold an active credential in another state and intend to relocate to Texas, the typical first step is to request a license verification packet from your current state board (or, for nationally certified roles without state licensure, from the certifying body) to be sent directly to the Texas board. Endorsement is generally available where the original credential remains active and in good standing, the originating state's training and examination requirements are determined to be substantially equivalent, and the applicant has not been the subject of disciplinary action. Endorsement requirements in this state are generally aligned with national norms; a state jurisprudence component, if any, is typically brief.