Texas Contractor Invoice Requirements

What TX contractors must put on every invoice and contract — and how QuickBillMaker handles it automatically.

Written contract
Not required
Threshold
—
Right-to-cancel
72h
Late fee max
1.5%/mo

Written contract rules in Texas

Texas does not impose a blanket statutory requirement that contractors provide a written contract. Many municipalities and trade-specific licensing boards still require one. Best practice — and what most clients expect — is to issue a written agreement for any project over a few thousand dollars.

Right-to-cancel notice

For home-improvement and door-to-door sales, Texas requires the contract to include a written notice of the consumer\u2019s right to cancel within 72 hours. The notice must be conspicuously displayed and accompanied by a separate cancellation form.

Late fees on past-due invoices

The maximum late fee a contractor may charge in Texas is 1.5% per month under Tex. Bus. & Com. Code §2.207; Tex. Fin. Code §302.002. The fee must be disclosed in the contract or on the invoice itself before it can be enforced. Up to 18%/yr commercial when stated in writing. Default 6%/yr otherwise.

Use the Texas late-fee calculator →

Required invoice fields

  • Contractor business name, address, and phone number
  • Contractor license number (where state law or trade requires)
  • Customer name and project address
  • Itemized scope of work, materials, and labor
  • Total price, payment schedule, and due date
  • Late-fee disclosure (max 1.5% per month under Tex. Bus. & Com. Code §2.207; Tex. Fin. Code §302.002)
Written contract
Optional
Threshold
No threshold
Right-to-cancel
72 hours
Late fee cap
1.5%/mo

Top TX metros