HB 5562 seeks to amend Section 351.152 of the Texas Tax Code to broaden the number of municipalities eligible to use hotel occupancy tax revenue for the construction, expansion, maintenance, or operation of hotel and convention center projects. This revenue authority is granted under Subchapter C of Chapter 351, which allows designated cities to retain a portion of state hotel tax revenues, typically earmarked for tourism development projects that promote local economic activity.
The bill enumerates a range of population and geographic criteria under which municipalities may now qualify. These include cities that fall within specific population thresholds (e.g., 95,000 to 135,000 residents) and those located in particular types of counties (e.g., counties bordering major lakes, bisected by certain highways, or housing major tourist destinations like museums or historical centers). In effect, the bill expands eligibility to a number of mid-size and smaller cities across the state that were previously excluded from such authority.
HB 5562 continues a legislative trend of granting hotel tax retention powers to municipalities based on increasingly narrow and customized criteria. The bill does not change how the tax is collected but modifies which municipalities are eligible to divert and use the revenue under state law. The aim is to facilitate targeted development projects intended to attract visitors and generate further economic impact.
The Committee Substitute for HB 5562 retains the core intent of the originally filed bill—to expand the list of municipalities eligible to retain and pledge certain hotel occupancy tax revenues for use in financing hotel and convention center projects. However, the substitute version introduces key refinements and targeted expansions that modify the structure and scope of the bill for greater legislative precision and broader applicability.
One of the primary differences is the addition of new municipality eligibility categories under Section 351.152 of the Tax Code. The original bill enumerated 65 specific types of municipalities based on population thresholds, geographic features, and the presence of tourist or cultural attractions. The Committee Substitute retains this approach but adds at least one more qualifying category (bringing the total to 66), further broadening the set of local governments that can access and leverage state hotel tax revenues for economic development purposes.
Another important change occurs in Section 351.157(b), which governs which municipalities may pledge hotel tax revenue toward project financing obligations. The substitute version updates this section to include the newly added municipality type from Section 351.152(65). This change ensures that newly qualified cities are not just eligible to receive tax revenue but are also permitted to use that revenue as financial backing for bonds or other instruments tied to their hotel or convention center projects.
Finally, the substitute version likely includes minor technical edits to improve clarity, grammar, and consistency with legislative drafting standards. These edits help ensure smoother integration into existing law without changing the bill’s substantive effect. Collectively, the differences between the filed and substituted versions reflect typical legislative refinement: expanding applicability in response to stakeholder input while improving legal precision.