Travel Therapy Jobs in Texas
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Texas Licensure — The Practical Reality
Texas is an active member of the Physical Therapy Compact. PTs and PTAs holding active compact privileges from another participating state can practice in Texas under that privilege without applying for a separate Texas license. Texas has also enacted Occupational Therapy Compact legislation, but the OT Compact is not yet operational in Texas — OTs still need traditional Texas licensure for now. Speech-language pathologists should verify ASLP-IC compact status with the Texas board before relying on compact privilege.
What this means practically:
- PT compact privilege: Same-day to a few days for PTs and PTAs in good standing in their home state. Apply through the PT Compact Commission portal, not the Texas board.
- Full Texas licensure (endorsement): Plan for 4-8 weeks. Initial PT licensure is around $250; OT and SLP fees are in similar ranges.
- OT licensure timing note: Until OT compact privilege is operational in Texas, OTs should plan for the full Texas endorsement timeline.
- Compact privilege fee: Roughly $45-$100 per PT compact privilege, paid through the compact commission portal — separate from any Texas board fees.
Official licensing resources:
Where the Assignments Are
Texas is a high-volume travel therapy state with four major metros plus a strong network of mid-size cities. Where the assignments concentrate:
- Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex — largest healthcare market in the state. Major systems include Texas Health Resources, Methodist Health System, Baylor Scott & White, HCA Healthcare, and UT Southwestern Medical Center. SNF, outpatient, and inpatient rehab demand all year.
- Houston metro — anchored by the Texas Medical Center, the largest medical complex in the world. Memorial Hermann, Houston Methodist, MD Anderson, and HCA all run high-volume staffing. Demand is consistent; weather and hurricane season factor into start dates.
- Austin — fastest-growing market in Texas. Ascension Seton, St. David's HealthCare, and Baylor Scott & White cover most placements. Pay is competitive but cost of living has risen significantly.
- San Antonio — Methodist Healthcare, Baptist Health System, and University Health anchor the city. Lower cost of living than Austin or Houston, with steady year-round demand.
- Smaller markets (Lubbock, Amarillo, Corpus Christi, El Paso) — regional hospital systems including Covenant Health and University Medical Center. Lower volume but often higher pay packages because supply is tighter.
Texas Tax Reality
Texas has no state income tax. This is one of the most significant financial advantages of taking a travel therapy assignment in Texas — your state tax burden on assignment income is zero.
A few practical notes for travelers:
- If your tax home is in a state with income tax, that state may still tax your worldwide income — Texas's lack of income tax doesn't override your home state's claim. Confirm with a tax professional.
- Property tax in Texas is high relative to other states. This affects you only if you own real estate in Texas, not for short-term assignments.
- Tax-free housing and M&IE stipends still require legitimate tax home documentation. Taking a Texas assignment doesn't change the federal rules around stipends.
For travelers comparing assignments across states, the absence of Texas state income tax can mean noticeably more take-home pay on the same package.
Texas Housing for Travelers
Housing economics in Texas vary widely by metro. Austin is the most expensive market, with rental rates that have risen sharply over the past several years. Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, and San Antonio remain relatively affordable for travelers, with strong inventories of short-term rentals, extended-stay hotels, and Furnished Finder properties.
Practical guidance: in DFW and Houston, the housing stipend usually covers a comfortable apartment or extended stay with money left over. In Austin, the stipend often runs tight against actual rental costs — verify the math before signing.
Smaller markets like Lubbock, Amarillo, and El Paso often have the best stipend-to-cost ratios in the state, but inventory of furnished short-term rentals is thinner — start the housing search earlier.
What to Look for in a Texas Travel Assignment
Texas is a friendly state for travelers — high volume, no state income tax, PT Compact membership simplifying licensure for many. Things to weigh before signing:
- Compact privilege vs. full license: If you're a PT and your home state participates in the PT Compact, the privilege is fast and inexpensive. Confirm before applying for a full license you may not need.
- Metro-specific cost analysis: The same package buys very different lifestyles in Austin vs. San Antonio. Run the math on housing, taxes, and commuting before signing.
- Hurricane season (June-November): Houston and Gulf Coast assignments may have weather-related contract amendments. Read the cancellation and emergency clauses.
- Climate: Texas summers are demanding, especially for travelers from cooler climates. Factor it into housing choice (covered parking, central AC capacity).
- Interstate freeway distances: Texas is large. A "Texas assignment" can be 600 miles from another. Verify exact location before committing.