Texas Inspection Rules in 2026: What Allen Drivers Still Need to Know
Texas safety inspections ended on January 1, 2025 — but Collin County drivers still need an annual emissions test before renewing their registration. Here is what changed, what didn't, and how to stay road-legal in Allen.
If you live in Allen and your vehicle registration is coming up, you might be wondering what kind of inspection you still need. Yes, Texas dropped its annual safety inspection for non-commercial vehicles on January 1, 2025. But if your vehicle is registered in Collin County — which covers Allen, Plano, McKinney, Frisco, and Fairview — you still need an annual emissions test before you can renew your registration.
At EBA Automotive in Allen, drivers walk in every week confused about what they owe. The process is simpler than it sounds. This guide walks through what changed, what didn't, what happens during an emissions test, and what to do if your car fails.
Registration coming up? Get tested today.
Most Texas emissions tests take under 30 minutes. EBA Automotive in Allen handles testing, diagnostics, and any repairs needed to pass — all under one roof.
What Changed With Texas Vehicle Inspections in 2025
For years, Texas drivers brought their vehicle in once a year for a safety inspection. A licensed inspector checked brakes, tires, lights, steering, wipers, and other safety items. Pass and you got a sticker. Fail and you had to fix the problem before registering.
That program ended on January 1, 2025. House Bill 3297, signed into law by Governor Greg Abbott in 2023, eliminated the annual safety inspection for non-commercial vehicles in Texas, per the Texas Department of Public Safety. The change applies whether you own a Toyota Camry, a Ford F-150, or a brand-new EV.
Safety Inspection
Eliminated- No more annual brake, light, tire, or steering check
- No more pass/fail sticker on your windshield
- Replaced by a $7.50 registration fee per HB 3297
- Commercial vehicles still need safety inspections
Emissions Test
Still Required- Annual OBD-II test for gas vehicles 2–24 years old
- Required in 17 Texas counties — including Collin
- Must pass before you can renew your registration
- Electric-only vehicles remain exempt
New vehicles purchased in Texas pay $16.75 upfront to cover the first two years of the inspection program replacement fee. After that, the standard $7.50 annual fee applies at registration renewal.
What Allen Drivers Still Need: The Annual Emissions Test
Collin County is one of 17 Texas counties that still require an annual emissions inspection. The rule is separate from the old safety inspection program and is run by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) together with DPS. The purpose is to meet federal air-quality standards in major metropolitan areas.
For Allen drivers, that means three things:
- Gasoline vehicles between 2 and 24 years old need an annual emissions test.
- The test uses your vehicle's OBD-II port — the same diagnostic port a mechanic uses to read trouble codes.
- Without a passing test on file, your registration cannot be renewed.
The 17 Texas Emissions Counties
If your vehicle is registered in any of these counties, you need an annual emissions test:
Bexar County (San Antonio area) joins the emissions-required list on November 1, 2026, per the Texas Department of Public Safety.
Who's Exempt From the Emissions Test
- Electric-only vehicles — no internal combustion, no emissions to measure.
- Vehicles less than 2 years old at the time of registration.
- Vehicles more than 24 years old.
- Motorcycles.
What Happens During a Texas Emissions Test?
The test itself is quick. Here is how it works in plain terms:
A certified Texas emissions station scans your VIN and odometer to confirm your vehicle's eligibility.
The technician connects to your OBD-II port and reads emissions-related data directly from your engine control unit.
Your vehicle's computer monitors catalytic converter, EVAP, oxygen sensors, EGR and more. The test confirms all monitors are set and no fault codes are present.
Pass or fail, the result is sent electronically to DPS. No paper sticker is needed. The whole process typically takes under 30 minutes.
That is it. No tailpipe sniffer, no rolling dynamometer — just an electronic conversation with your car's computer.
Why Cars Fail the Texas Emissions Test
Most emissions failures trace back to one of six common issues. The good news? Every single one is something a mechanic can address.
Check Engine Light Is On
A lit Check Engine Light almost always triggers an automatic emissions test failure. Texas requires the car's onboard diagnostics to report no emissions-related fault codes before passing.
Faulty Oxygen Sensor
O2 sensors monitor exhaust gases and tell your engine how to mix fuel and air. A bad sensor throws off the fuel mixture and lights up the CEL.
Failing Catalytic Converter
The catalytic converter scrubs harmful gases before they leave the tailpipe. A worn or clogged converter is one of the more expensive repairs to face — and one of the most common fail causes.
EVAP System Leak
The evaporative emissions system traps fuel vapor from your gas tank. The most common cause? A loose, damaged, or missing gas cap — sometimes a fifteen-dollar fix.
Recent Battery Disconnect
If your battery was recently disconnected (jump start, new battery, repair work), your car's readiness monitors may not have completed their self-checks yet. Drive normally for a few cycles before re-testing.
Engine Misfire Codes
A misfiring cylinder pours unburned fuel into the exhaust and damages the catalytic converter over time. Misfires almost always show up as a CEL with one or more P0300-series fault codes.
If any of these sound familiar, the smart move is to fix the issue before your registration deadline — not after. A lit Check Engine Light a week before your registration is due is a problem worth solving now.
What If My Car Fails the Emissions Test?
Failing is not a dead end. Here is how the process works:
The station issues a Vehicle Inspection Report showing which test failed and the underlying reason.
A shop that handles both diagnosis and emissions testing saves you the round trip. EBA Automotive does both.
Most stations offer a free re-test within 15 days of the original. Confirm policy with your shop.
Driving on expired registration can result in a citation from Allen PD or any Texas law enforcement officer — and the fine often costs more than the underlying repair would have. The faster you address the cause, the simpler your renewal becomes.
Check Engine Light on? Recent fail?
Do not wait until your registration is expired. EBA Automotive in Allen diagnoses, repairs, and gets your vehicle emissions-ready — all in one shop. No second trip.
How Much Does a Texas Vehicle Inspection Cost in 2026?
Here is the honest breakdown, without invented numbers:
That is the full picture. No surprise add-ons, no hidden charges. For current emissions test fees in Collin County, see the TCEQ vehicle emissions program page.
Why Drivers in Allen Trust EBA Automotive for Emissions Service
EBA Automotive has served Allen, Plano, McKinney, Frisco, and the wider Collin County corridor for years. Our team is built around one idea: get the work done right the first time, explain everything before you commit, and treat every car like our own.
ASE-Certified Technicians
Every technician on our team is ASE-certified and trained on emissions, diagnostics, and the full range of repairs Texas drivers need to pass inspection.
One-Stop Shop
We diagnose, repair, and emissions-test your vehicle in the same visit. No driving across town. No second appointment. One trip, done right.
Se Habla Español
Our bilingual team serves Allen's Hispanic community in Spanish or English — whichever you're more comfortable with. Same straight answers, either language.
All Makes & Models
From a 2008 Tahoe to a 2024 Tucson Hybrid, we work on domestic, Asian, and select European vehicles. Modern OBD-II equipment, proper tools, no guesswork.
Honest Estimates Upfront
Before any repair work begins, you get a clear estimate. We tell you what's failing, what it costs to fix, and what your options are. No upsell pressure.
Local in Allen
5843 Curtis Dr #500, just off Curtis Road. We are an Allen shop serving Allen drivers — not a national chain reading from a script.
Texas Inspection FAQ for Allen Drivers
Do I still need a state inspection in Texas in 2026?
The annual safety inspection ended January 1, 2025, for non-commercial vehicles. But if you're registered in Collin County or one of the other 16 Texas emissions counties, you still need an annual emissions test before you can renew your registration.
What counties in Texas require emissions tests?
Seventeen counties currently require annual emissions testing: Brazoria, Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis, El Paso, Fort Bend, Galveston, Harris, Johnson, Kaufman, Montgomery, Parker, Rockwall, Tarrant, Travis, and Williamson. Bexar County joins the list on November 1, 2026.
Will my car fail emissions with a check engine light on?
Almost always, yes. A lit Check Engine Light is one of the most common reasons a vehicle fails the Texas emissions test. The good news is the underlying issue is usually fixable — and once repaired, your car can re-test.
How often is a Texas emissions test required?
Once a year, before your vehicle registration renewal. The test result is filed electronically with DPS under the state's "Two Steps, One Sticker" program — no paper sticker needed.
Are electric vehicles required to do emissions tests in Texas?
No. Electric-only vehicles are exempt from emissions inspections in every Texas county, regardless of vehicle age or where you live.
I just moved to Texas — what inspection do I need?
If you're registering a vehicle in Texas for the first time and you live in an emissions county, you'll need a passing emissions test before completing your registration. The state's "Two Steps, One Sticker" process means the test comes first, then registration.
How long does an emissions test take?
For most vehicles, the OBD-II emissions test takes under 30 minutes from check-in to result. Older vehicles or those with unset readiness monitors may take longer.
What is the $7.50 inspection program replacement fee?
It's a flat fee added to annual vehicle registration in Texas. The fee was introduced when the safety inspection program ended in 2025 — it replaced the old inspection revenue rather than adding to it. New vehicle owners pay $16.75 upfront to cover the first two years.
Ready to get your Allen TX vehicle emissions-ready?
Most emissions tests take under 30 minutes. If any repairs are needed, our ASE-certified technicians can handle them in the same visit. Bilingual EN/ES service. Call or book online — whichever works better for you.