
Texas Senate Bill 506 was passed during the 89th Legislative Session and creates new requirements and procedures related to ballot propositions.
For local governments, this is an important bill to understand because ballot language is not just a legal drafting issue.
It is also an election planning issue.
The Texas Secretary of State issued Election Advisory No. 2026-06 explaining SB 506.
According to that advisory, SB 506 makes four broad changes to the Election Code:
The new proposition standard requires ballot propositions to substantially submit the question with enough definiteness, certainty, and facial neutrality that voters are not misled.
The Secretary of State advisory explains that the review process applies to certain home-rule city propositions.
Specifically, it covers:
The advisory also clarifies that other ballot propositions, such as measures initiated by a city council that do not amend city charters, are not subject to Secretary of State review. Ballot propositions in elections other than those for a home-rule city are also not subject to that review process.
SB 506 took effect September 1, 2025, except for the anti-obstruction provision, which applies to measures initiated by petitions submitted on or after January 1, 2026.
Ballot language affects more than the ballot itself.
It affects:
If ballot language needs review or correction, the timing can affect the rest of the election preparation process.
That is why local jurisdictions may need to build more time into the front end of ballot planning.
The Secretary of State advisory specifically notes that ballot propositions may require legal expertise to draft and recommends that counties and local political subdivisions work closely with their attorneys whenever possible.
That is an important point.
Election offices often carry the operational responsibility for preparing the election, but the ballot language itself may come from the governing body, legal counsel, or a petition process.
Clear roles matter.
Some questions worth considering:
These questions are especially important for cities, school districts, and other local entities that place measures before voters.
SB 506 adds new requirements and procedures around ballot proposition language.
For local jurisdictions, the main takeaway is that ballot language needs to be clear, definite, neutral, and reviewed early enough to avoid operational problems later in the process.
As local elections continue to become more complex, ballot planning and legal review will remain closely connected.
How is your jurisdiction approaching ballot language review before the next election?