Minimum Hives for Bee Tax Exemption in Texas 2026: County-by-County Guide
Texas bee tax exemption minimum hive requirements in 2026 are set by individual county appraisal districts — not the state. General Texas Comptroller guideline: 6–8 hives per 10 acres as a starting reference. Minimum qualifying acreage: 5 acres. Hill Country counties (Gillespie, Blanco) are typically more flexible; metro-adjacent counties (Travis, Bexar, Harris) tend to apply stricter standards. Flow Hive compatible systems count identically to traditional hives toward the minimum. Always call your county appraisal district directly for the 2026 minimum — state guidelines are not binding on counties. Rollback tax risk if hive count falls below minimum after exemption approval.
Texas bee tax exemption in 2026 typically requires 6–8 hives per 10 acres (county-specific) on a minimum of 5 acres. Requirements are set by your county appraisal district — not the Texas Comptroller. Flow Hive systems count as standard hive units. Contact your county appraisal district and Texas A&M AgriLife Extension for your county's exact 2026 minimum. File your application by April 30 of the tax year.
In This Article
- Why Texas Bee Tax Exemption Minimum Hive Requirements Vary by County
- Texas Comptroller Degree-of-Intensity Baseline for Beekeeping in 2026
- Minimum Acreage Requirements for Texas Bee Tax Exemption by Property Size
- County-by-County Minimum Hive Guide for Major Texas Regions
- How Flow Hive Systems Count Toward Texas Bee Tax Exemption Minimums
- How to Verify Your 2026 County Minimum with Texas A&M AgriLife Extension
- Frequently asked questions
Why Texas Bee Tax Exemption Minimum Hive Requirements Vary by County
Why isn't there a single statewide minimum hive count for Texas bee tax exemption?
Texas agricultural tax exemption is administered at the county level — not the state level. This is a fundamental feature of Texas property tax law that surprises many landowners who assume the Texas Comptroller sets a binding statewide minimum hive count.
The Texas Tax Code gives county appraisal districts the authority to set "degree-of-intensity" standards that reflect local agricultural practices. What constitutes a typical commercial beekeeping density in the Texas Hill Country is very different from what makes sense in suburban-adjacent Travis County. This local calibration is by design — and it means your neighbour in the next county may have a different minimum hive requirement than you do.
County appraisal districts review and update their degree-of-intensity standards periodically — sometimes annually. A minimum that applied in 2024 may have changed for 2026. Always verify directly with your county appraisal district for the current 2026 minimum before purchasing additional hives or filing an application. Do not rely on information from other landowners, online forums, or last year's application — call the appraisal district directly.
Texas Comptroller Degree-of-Intensity Baseline for Beekeeping in 2026
What does the Texas Comptroller actually say about minimum hive counts for bee tax exemption?
The Texas Comptroller's Manual for the Appraisal of Agricultural Land provides suggested reference ranges that county appraisal districts use as a starting point when setting their own standards. These are not mandatory minimums — but they give a useful baseline for planning your Texas beekeeping operation in 2026.
| Property Size | Texas Comptroller Reference Range | Typical County Minimum | Verification Required? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 5 acres | Generally does not qualify | Does not qualify | Verify — rare exceptions exist |
| 5–10 acres | 5–8 hives minimum (reference) | 6–8 hives typical | Always verify with county |
| 10–20 acres | 6–10 hives minimum (reference) | 8–12 hives typical | Always verify with county |
| 20–50 acres | Proportional scaling — county sets standard | 12–20 hives typical | Always verify with county |
| 50+ acres | Proportional — larger operations may qualify with lower density | Varies widely | Always verify with county |
Minimum Acreage Requirements for Texas Bee Tax Exemption by Property Size
Does the minimum acreage threshold affect how many hives I need in Texas?
Texas minimum acreage rules for beekeeping ag exemption in 2026:
- Under 5 acres: Generally ineligible for agricultural use valuation under Texas Tax Code §23.51. Very few exceptions — verify with your county if you have a smaller parcel.
- 5–10 acres: The most common qualifying range for beekeeping ag exemption on rural residential and small ranch properties. Typically requires 5–8 hives to meet degree-of-intensity, though county standards vary.
- 10–20 acres: Proportionally more hives required. County appraisal districts typically scale minimum hive counts linearly with acreage in this range.
- 20+ acres: Larger properties may have more flexibility — a well-documented, professionally managed beekeeping operation on 20+ acres can often qualify with lower hive-per-acre density if the overall operation scale demonstrates serious agricultural intent.
- Multi-use properties: If beekeeping is combined with other agricultural uses (cattle grazing, hay production, game management), the beekeeping component may be evaluated proportionally — not as the sole qualifying use. Verify with your county appraisal district.
County-by-County Minimum Hive Guide for Major Texas Regions
How do minimum hive requirements differ across Texas's major beekeeping regions?
The following county guidance is based on general regional patterns — always verify directly with the specific county appraisal district for current 2026 standards before making equipment purchases or filing applications.
Texas Hill Country — Gillespie, Blanco, Kerr, Kendall Counties
Most Beekeeping-FriendlyTravis County (Austin metro)
Verify CarefullyBexar County (San Antonio)
Verify CarefullyEast Texas — Cherokee, Henderson, Smith Counties
Traditional Ag RegionWest Texas — Tom Green, Midland, Ector Counties
Drier ConditionsA properly sized Texas beekeeping operation meeting county appraisal district degree-of-intensity standards — the exact minimum hive count varies by county, making direct verification with your county appraisal district the essential first step in 2026.
How Flow Hive Systems Count Toward Texas Bee Tax Exemption Minimums
Are Flow Hive compatible systems counted the same as traditional hives by Texas county appraisal districts?
Yes — Texas county appraisal districts count all hive types equally toward minimum hive requirements. The Texas Tax Code and Texas Comptroller guidance define qualifying units as managed honeybee colonies — not specific hive designs. A Flow Hive compatible system containing an active Apis mellifera colony is one qualifying hive unit, identically to a traditional Langstroth hive.
Flow Hive compatible systems offer several advantages for Texas ag exemption management specifically:
- Built-in harvest logging. Every Flow Hive harvest is a documentable agricultural production event — date, frame harvested, honey volume. This creates a natural activity log that directly demonstrates agricultural output to county appraisers.
- Texas summer heat management. SkogHive Flow Hive compatible systems include screened bottom boards and ventilation options suited to Texas's extreme summer heat — colonies in well-ventilated hives maintain productivity through Texas summers better than in solid-floor traditional hives.
- Professional presentation. A well-maintained Flow Hive installation makes a strong visual impression during any county appraisal district site visit — demonstrating active, professional management rather than neglected hives.
In our experience advising Texas landowners on beekeeping ag exemption, we recommend maintaining 20–30% more hives than the county minimum as a buffer. Texas summers can cause significant colony losses — if a heat wave or Varroa infestation reduces your hive count below the county minimum before replacement colonies arrive, your exemption is at risk. A buffer of extra hives protects against rollback tax liability from temporary colony loss events.
How to Verify Your 2026 County Minimum with Texas A&M AgriLife Extension
What is the most reliable way to confirm minimum hive requirements for your Texas county in 2026?
The two-step verification process we recommend for all Texas beekeepers pursuing ag exemption in 2026:
- Call your county appraisal district directly. Ask specifically: "What is the current minimum number of beehives required for agricultural use valuation on a [your acreage] property in [your county] for the 2026 tax year?" Get the answer in writing if possible — ask them to email you the current degree-of-intensity guidelines for beekeeping.
- Contact your county Texas A&M AgriLife Extension office. The Texas A&M AgriLife Extension network (agrilifeextension.tamu.edu) has county offices across Texas. Extension agents know local appraisal district standards and can confirm whether your planned operation meets degree-of-intensity requirements. They can also provide a supporting letter — one of the most valuable documents for a Texas beekeeping ag exemption application.
If your Texas bee tax exemption is approved and your hive count later falls below the county minimum — due to colony loss, sale, or abandonment — the exemption can be revoked with rollback taxes for up to 5 years plus 7% annual interest. On a high-value Texas property, this can represent tens of thousands of dollars. Always maintain at least the minimum hive count and keep active management documentation current.
About SkogHive: SkogHive is a Sweden-based beekeeping equipment brand offering Flow Hive compatible hive systems, protective gear, and accessories for beekeepers worldwide. Our systems are used by Texas landowners building qualifying beekeeping operations for agricultural tax exemption — the harvest logging and inspection documentation they enable makes ag exemption record-keeping straightforward. Learn more at skoghive.com →
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SkogHive Flow Hive compatible systems count as qualifying hive units for Texas agricultural tax exemption — quality cedar construction, worldwide shipping to Texas.
Shop SkogHive Texas Ag Kits →Frequently Asked Questions
How many beehives do I need for Texas agricultural tax exemption in 2026?
Typically 6–8 hives per 10 acres — but this varies significantly by county. Contact your county appraisal district directly for the 2026 minimum. State-level Texas Comptroller guidance is a reference, not a binding minimum. Hill Country counties tend to be more flexible; metro-adjacent counties apply stricter standards.
What is the minimum acreage for Texas bee tax exemption?
Typically 5 acres minimum. Properties under 5 acres generally do not qualify. The 5–20 acre range is most common for beekeeping ag exemption. Larger properties may need proportionally more hives. Verify with your county appraisal district — some counties set higher minimums.
Does the number of required hives change by county in Texas?
Yes — significantly. County appraisal districts set their own degree-of-intensity standards. Hill Country counties (Gillespie, Blanco) with strong beekeeping traditions may accept lower hive counts per acre than metro-adjacent counties (Travis, Bexar). Always verify with your specific county appraisal district for current 2026 standards.
Can I use Flow Hive compatible systems to meet the minimum hive count for Texas bee tax exemption?
Yes. Texas county appraisal districts count all hive types equally — a Flow Hive compatible system counts as one qualifying hive unit identically to a traditional Langstroth hive. The exemption is based on active management and honey production, not on hive design.
What happens if I have fewer hives than the Texas minimum after approval?
The exemption can be revoked, triggering rollback taxes equal to the difference between ag-use and market-value taxes for up to 5 preceding years, plus 7% annual interest. Maintain at least the county minimum at all times and keep active management records current. A 20–30% buffer above the minimum protects against temporary colony loss events.
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