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What's Next? Post-Session FAQ and Bill Statistics, 89th R.S.

Bill Statistics:

 

  House Bills (HBs) Senate Bills (SBs) Total
Filed 5,644 3,075 8,719
Sent to the Governor 617 566 1,183
Signed by the Governor 94 213 307
Filed without the Governor's signature 8 16 24
Vetoed by the Governor 1 1 2
  House Joint Resolutions (HJRs) Senate Joint Resolutions (SJRs) Total
Filed 208 87 295
Filed with the Secretary of State 8 10 18
  House Concurrent Resolutions (HCRs) Senate Concurrent Resolutions (SCRs) Total
Filed 168 58 226
Filed with the Secretary of State 5 9 14
Sent to the Governor 89 19 108
Signed by the Governor 52 9 61
Filed without the Governor's signature 0 0 0
Vetoed by the Governor 0 0 0

*Statistics as of June 3, 2025, at 8:30 a.m. See our bill statistics page to compare these numbers with historical statistics.

 

Post-Session FAQ:

What happens now?

The 89th Regular Session ended Monday, June 2, 2025. Bills that pass both the House and the Senate are sent to the governor to sign, veto, or allow to become law without his signature.

 

When the Legislature passes a bill, does it become a law right away?

No. Under Article 4, Section 14 of the Texas Constitution, bills passed by the Legislature must be submitted to the governor for approval. The governor can sign a bill, veto it, line-item veto an appropriation, or allow a bill to become law without his signature.

 

How much time does the governor have to act on a bill?

The deadline for the governor to act on a bill is contingent upon the point in time in which the bill is presented to the governor.


If a bill is sent to the governor during the legislative session, the governor has 10 days (excluding Sundays) to sign the bill or return the bill to the Legislature with objection. If after 10 days the bill is not returned to the Legislature by the governor with objections or he has not yet signed it, the bill becomes law as if the governor had signed it.


If the Legislature has adjourned sine die, or if the bill is presented to the governor less than 10 days (excluding Sundays) prior to final adjournment, the governor has 20 days (including Sundays) after the final day of the session to sign or veto the bill. If neither action is taken, the bill becomes law without the governor's signature (Texas Const. art. IV, § 14).


Sunday, June 22, is the 20th day following the final adjournment of the 89th Regular Session. It is the last day the governor can sign or veto bills passed during the 89th Regular Session. The LRL's vetoes database will be updated for the 89th Regular Session as we receive those documents.

 

If the governor approves a bill, when will it take effect?

 

The text of a bill may include effective date provisions requiring the bill to take effect immediately, to take effect on a specified day, or there may be no mention of an effective date. Different sections of a bill may have different effective dates.


According to Article III, Section 39 of the Texas Constitution, a bill cannot become effective until at least 90 days after the session ends unless the bill passes both chambers with a favorable vote by two-thirds of the members.


Monday, September 1, 2025, is the 91st day following final adjournment; bills that do not specify an effective date and those that did not have the two-thirds vote necessary to take effect earlier will take effect on Monday, September 1, 2025.


If a bill received the votes necessary to become effective immediately, it will take effect on the date of the last action necessary for it to become law. This could be when the governor signs it, when the governor files it with the Secretary of State without approving or vetoing it, or when the time for the governor to act expires, if the bill has not been approved or vetoed during that time.

 

What happens to bills that do not pass?

 

Bills that do not make it completely through the legislative process die with the end of the session and are not automatically refiled during the next session.

 

What about other types of legislation?

Joint resolutions that pass both chambers of the Legislature are filed with the Secretary of State, and will be on the ballot as a proposed constitutional amendment for the November 4, 2025, election.


Concurrent resolutions generally require action by the governor. Concurrent resolutions used for administrative matters in the House and Senate do not require approval from the governor.


Simple resolutions are passed by only one chamber of the Legislature, and do not require the governor's approval.

 

Sources:

 

 

Current Articles & Research Resources, May 29, 2025

In this weekly post, we feature helpful research tools and recent articles of interest to the legislative community.

  • Review tools available to avoid social media abuse. (Consumer Reports, May 21, 2025)
  • Read a recent global threat assessment. (Defense Intelligence Agency, May 11, 2025)
  • Track Texas Department of Transportation planning statewide. (Texas Department of Transportation, updated monthly)
  • See active disaster recovery grants. (General Land Office, accessed May 28, 2025)

 

Librarians review and select articles from more than 1,000 print and online sources to compile a weekly annotated list of Current Articles of interest to the legislative community. View this week's Current Articles.

 

Members of the Texas legislative community may request articles by using our online form or by calling 512-463-1252.

Bill Statistics, 133rd Day, 89th R.S.

Today is the 134th day of the 89th Regular Session. There are six days until the last day of session (Sine die).

Bill statistics comparing the 133rd day of the 89th and the 88th Regular Sessions are below. For information about what happens to a bill after it passes, please see our Legislative FAQ page.

 

Bill statistics for the period of November 12, 2024 — May 26, 2025, are below:

 

  House Bills (HBs) &
House Joint Resolutions (HJRs)
Senate Bills (SBs) &
Senate Joint Resolutions (SJRs)
Filed 5,852 3,162
Reported out of committee 1,901 1,116
Passed by chamber of origin 1,178 1,004
Referred to committee in opposite chamber 1,004 996
Reported out of committee in opposite chamber 652 819
Passed opposite chamber 455 445
Sent to the Governor 235 277
Signed by the Governor 35 130
Filed without the Governor's signature 2 5
Vetoed by the Governor 1 0

Previous bill statistics posts:

 

 

 

Current Articles & Research Resources, May 22, 2025

In this weekly post, we feature helpful research tools and recent articles of interest to the legislative community.

  • Compare parks in America’s one hundred largest cities. (Trust for Public Land, May 2025)
  • Read about the FDA plans to adopt a new COVID-19 vaccination regulatory framework. (The New England Journal of Medicine, May 20, 2025)
  • Explore Medicaid enrollment data resources. (Congressional Research Service, May 14, 2025)
  • Track the costs of living in the Minimal Quality of Life Index. (Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity, May 2025)

 

Librarians review and select articles from more than 1,000 print and online sources to compile a weekly annotated list of Current Articles of interest to the legislative community. View this week's Current Articles.

 

Members of the Texas legislative community may request articles by using our online form or by calling 512-463-1252.

Bill Statistics, May 21, 2025

Today is the 128th day of the 89th Texas Legislature. There are twelve days until sine die, the last day of session.

Bill statistics for the period of November 12, 2024 — May 20, 2025, are below.

 

 

  House Bills (HBs) &
House Joint Resolutions (HJRs)
Senate Bills (SBs) &
Senate Joint Resolutions (SJRs)
Filed 5,852 3,161
Reported out of committee 1,901 1,112
Passed by chamber of origin 1,172 994
Referred to committee in opposite chamber 916 979
Reported out of committee in opposite chamber 287 676
Passed opposite chamber 175 267
Sent to governor (bills only) 102 190
Signed by the governor (bills only) 2 90

 

Previous bill statistics:

 

 

Bill Statistics & Upcoming Deadlines, May 19, 2025

As the 89th Legislature draws to a close, a series of end-of-session deadlines begin to take effect. Below is a list of deadlines that occur next week:

 

  • Monday, May 26: Deadline for the last House Local & Consent Calendar with Senate bills (SBs) to be distributed.
  • Tuesday, May 27: Last day for the House to consider second reading Senate bills and Senate joint resolutions (SJRs) on the House Daily or Supplemental Calendar.
  • Wednesday, May 28: Last day for the House to consider local and consent Senate bills on second and third reading, and all third reading Senate bills and Senate joint resolutions on the Supplemental Calendar.
    Last day for the Senate to consider all bills and joint resolutions on second or third reading.
  • Thursday, May 29: Deadline for Senate amendments to be distributed in the House.
  • Friday, May 30: Deadline for House copies of conference committee report (CCR) on the general appropriations bill to be distributed.
    Last day for the House to act on Senate amendments.
    Deadline for Senate copies of conference committee reports on tax, general appropriations, and reapportionment bills to be printed and distributed.
  • Saturday, May 31: Deadline for House copies of conference committee reports on joint resolutions and bills other than the general appropriations bill to be distributed.
    Deadline for Senate copies of all conference committee reports on joint resolutions and bills other than tax, general appropriations, and reapportionment bills to be printed and distributed.
  • Sunday, June 1: Last day for the House to adopt conference committee reports or discharge House conferees and concur in Senate amendments.
    Last day for the Senate to concur in House amendments or adopt conference committee reports.
  • Monday, June 2: Last day of the 89th Regular Session (Sine die); only corrections may be considered in the House and the Senate.

 

House and Senate calendars are available on Texas Legislature Online.

 

 

Bill statistics for the period of November 12, 2024 — May 16, 2025, are below.

 

 

  House Bills (HBs) &
House Joint Resolutions (HJRs)
Senate Bills (SBs) &
Senate Joint Resolutions (SJRs)
Filed 5,852 3,160
Reported out of committee 1,901 1,108
Passed by chamber of origin 1,172 982
Referred to committee in opposite chamber 804 968
Reported out of committee in opposite chamber 208 607
Passed opposite chamber 92 215
Sent to governor (bills only) 55 178
Signed by the governor (bills only) 1 34

 

Previous bill statistics:

 

 

Current Articles & Research Resources, May 15, 2025

In this weekly post, we feature helpful research tools and recent articles of interest to the legislative community.

  • Track drought conditions. (U.S. Drought Monitor, accessed May 14, 2025)
  • Read about the Alien Enemy Act. (Congressional Research Service, April 2, 2025)
  • Review the Trump administration’s executive actions and most recent updates. (National Conference of State Legislatures, updated May 7, 2025)
  • Explore food price data and forecasts. (Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, updated April 25, 2025)

 

Librarians review and select articles from more than 1,000 print and online sources to compile a weekly annotated list of Current Articles of interest to the legislative community. View this week's Current Articles.

 

Members of the Texas legislative community may request articles by using our online form or by calling 512-463-1252.

Bill Statistics & Upcoming Deadlines, May 12, 2025

As the 89th Legislature draws to a close, a series of end-of-session deadlines begin to take effect. Below is a list of deadlines that occur next week:

 

  • Monday, May 19: First day the Senate can consider bills and resolutions the first day they are posted on the Senate Notice of Intent Calendar.
  • Wednesday, May 21: Deadline for the House to distribute its last House Local and Consent Calendar with local House bills (HBs).
  • Friday, May 23: Last day for the House to consider local House bills on Local and Consent Calendar on second and third reading.
  • Saturday, May 24: Last day for House committees to report Senate bills (SBs) and Senate joint resolutions (SJRs).
  • Sunday, May 25: Deadline for the House to distribute its last House Daily Calendar with Senate bills and Senate joint resolutions.

 

House and Senate calendars are available on the Texas Legislature Online.

 

Bill statistics for the period of November 12, 2024 — May 9, 2025, are below.

 

 

  House Bills (HBs) &
House Joint Resolutions (HJRs)
Senate Bills (SBs) &
Senate Joint Resolutions (SJRs)
Filed 5,852 3,155
Reported out of committee 1,883 1,080
Passed by chamber of origin 729 893
Referred to committee in opposite chamber 524 832
Reported out of committee in opposite chamber 74 401
Passed opposite chamber 37 140
Sent to governor (bills only) 2 104
Signed by the governor (bills only) 0 6

 

Last week's bill statistics:

 

 

Current Articles & Research Resources, May 8, 2025

In this weekly post, we feature helpful research tools and recent articles of interest to the legislative community.

  • Track flood-related road closures in the Austin area. (ATXFloods.com, accessed May 6, 2025)
  • Review an assessment of infrastructure in the U.S. (American Society of Civil Engineers, March 2025)
  • Read about how tariffs may affect interest rates. (Texas A&M Real Estate Research Center, April 29, 2025)
  • Find information about REAL ID compliance for air travel. (Texas.gov, accessed May 7, 2025)

 

Librarians review and select articles from more than 1,000 print and online sources to compile a weekly annotated list of Current Articles of interest to the legislative community. View this week's Current Articles.

 

Members of the Texas legislative community may request articles by using our online form or by calling 512-463-1252.

Bill Statistics & Upcoming Deadlines, May 5, 2025

As the 89th Legislature draws to a close, a series of end-of-session deadlines begin to take effect. Below is a list of deadlines that occur next week:

 

  • Monday, May 12: Last day for House committees to report House bills (HBs) and House joint resolutions (HJRs).
  • Tuesday, May 13: Deadline for the House to distribute the last House Daily Calendar with House bills and House joint resolutions.
  • Wednesday, May 14: Deadline for the House to distribute the last House Local and Consent Calendar with consent House bills.
  • Thursday, May 15: Last day for the House to consider House bills and House joint resolutions on second reading on the House Daily or Supplemental Calendar.
  • Friday, May 16: Last day for the House to consider consent House bills on second and third reading on the Local and Consent Calendar and all third reading House bills or House joint resolutions on the House Supplemental Calendar.

 

House and Senate calendars are available on Texas Legislature Online.

 

Bill statistics for the period of November 12, 2024 — May 2, 2025, are below.

 

 

  House Bills (HBs) &
House Joint Resolutions (HJRs)
Senate Bills (SBs) &
Senate Joint Resolutions (SJRs)
Filed 5,849 3,152
Reported out of committee 1,693 933
Passed by chamber of origin 477 770
Referred to committee in opposite chamber 207 769
Reported out of committee in opposite chamber 7 264
Passed opposite chamber 2 76
Sent to governor (bills only) 0 19
Signed by the governor (bills only) 0 3

 

 

 

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