Passive panhandling is constitutionally protected speech in Texas after Reed v. Town of Gilbert. Aggressive panhandling that touches, blocks, or threatens a person can be charged as assault under Texas Penal Code 22.01 and 22.06. Dallas County Sheriff enforces in unincorporated areas; cities adopt their own ordinances.
After Reed v. Town of Gilbert (2015) and Fifth Circuit decisions striking content-based panhandling bans, Texas cities in Dallas County rewrote ordinances to focus on conduct rather than speech. Texas Penal Code 22.01 (assault by threat or contact) and 42.01 (disorderly conduct) reach unwanted touching, abusive language, and obstruction. The 2017 amendments to Penal Code 22.06 codify consent and self-defense limits but do not authorize panhandling-specific bans. Dallas County itself has no countywide panhandling ordinance; the Dallas County Sheriff enforces state Penal Code in unincorporated pockets. Cities like Dallas (City Code 31-35), Irving, Garland, and Plano enforce conduct-based aggressive solicitation rules within their boundaries. The Dallas County DA prosecutes assault and disorderly conduct cases.
Aggressive solicitation involving touching, following, blocking, or threats is charged as assault under Penal Code 22.01 (Class A or C misdemeanor) or disorderly conduct under 42.01. Repeat or weapon-involved offenses can rise to aggravated assault under 22.02.
See how Grand Prairie's aggressive panhandling rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.