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Residence Status
Determining Texas Residency
Under state statutes pursuant to Title 3 Texas Education Code and the
document, “Rules and Regulations for Determining Residence Status”,
(published by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board) interpreting
those statutes, an individual will be classified as a resident or
nonresident.
Your residence status for tuition purposes will be determined by the
Registrar prior to your enrollment. Students may contact the Office of
Admissions and Records for help in determining correct residence status
for tuition purposes or for steps to complete in order to change residence
status.
You must be prepared to pay tuition and other required fees by specified
due dates or become subject to the penalties applied by the Coordinating
Board rules. If you have knowledge of an error in your residency status
for tuition purposes, it is your responsibility to notify the Office of
Admissions and Records immediately. These rules are subject to change. For
a complete copy of the rules and regulations, contact the Office of
Admissions and Records or view them on the Coordinating Board web site:
http://www.thecb.state.tx.us.
Following is a summary of the rules and
regulations:
An individual who has lived in the state under circumstances specified in
these rules will be eligible for classification as a resident. An
individual who does not meet resident criteria will be classified as a
non-resident, and must pay tuition and fees required of non-resident
students. An individual classified as a non-resident may qualify to pay
resident tuition rates and other charges while continuing to be classified
as a non-resident under certain exceptions specified in these rules.
Minors and Dependents
Texas Education Code, Section 54.052 (a) (1) (2) (3). “Residence” means
“domicile.” “Resided in” means “domiciled in.” “Dependent” means an
individual who is claimed as a dependent for federal income tax purposes
by the individual’s parent or guardian at the time of registration and for
the tax year preceding the year in which the individual registers.
Section 54.052 (c). An individual who is under 18 years of age or is a
dependent and who is living away from his family and whose family resides
in another state or has not resided in Texas for the 12-month period
immediately preceding the date of registration shall be classified as a
nonresident student.
Section 54.052 (d). An individual who is 18 years of age or under or is a
dependent and whose family has not resided in Texas for the 12-month
period immediately preceding the date of registration shall be classified
as a nonresident student, regardless of whether he has become the legal
ward of residents of Texas or has been adopted by residents of Texas while
he is attending an educational institution in Texas, or within a 12-month
period before his attendance, or under circumstances indicating that the
guardianship or adoption was for the purpose of obtaining status as a
resident student.
Section 54.0551. An individual who is 18 years of age or under or is a
dependent and who, along with the individual’s parents, was formerly a
resident of this state is entitled to pay tuition at the rate provided for
Texas residents if: (1) the individual and the parent who is the
individual’s managing conservator or who is the individual’s joint
managing conservator with whom the individual primarily resides change
their legal residence from this state to another state; and (2) the other
parent who is the individual’s possessory conservator or who is the
individual’s joint managing conservator with whom the individual does not
primarily reside continues to reside in this state and is not delinquent
on the payment of any child support.
Independent Individuals 18 Years of Age or Older
Statute: Section 54.052 (3). An individual who is 18 years of age or over
who has come from outside Texas and who is gainfully employed in Texas for
a 12-month period immediately preceding registration in an educational
institution shall be classified as a resident student as long as he
continues to maintain a legal residence in Texas.
Section 54.052 (f). An individual who is 18 years of age or over who
resides out of the state or who has come from outside Texas and who
registers in an educational institution before having resided in Texas for
a 12-month period shall be classified as a nonresident student.
Section 54.052 (g). An individual who would have been classified as a
resident for the first five of the six years immediately preceding
registration but who resided in another state for all or part of the year
immediately preceding registration shall be classified as a resident
student.
Coordinating Board Rules, Chapter 21, Subchapter B, Section 21.24(b):
Independent individuals 18 years of age or older who are gainfully
employed in the state for a period of 12 months prior to enrollment are
entitled to classification as residents. Students registering in an
institution of higher education prior to having physically resided in the
state for the 12 months prior to enrollment shall be classified as
nonresidents for tuition purposes during that term. Accumulations of
summer and other vacation periods do not satisfy the employment
requirement. Employment while enrolled in college during a 12-month period
can be a basis of reclassification as a resident at the end of that period
if other evidence indicates the student has established a domicile in
Texas.
Military Personnel
Section 21.23 (c). Members of the U.S. Armed Forces and commissioned
Public Health Service Officers are presumed to maintain the same domicile
that was in effect at the time of entering the service during their entire
period of active service. They are presumed not to establish a domicile in
other states in which they are assigned duty because their presence is not
voluntary but under U.S. military or Public Health Service orders. See
complete rules pertaining to this section in the Rules and Regulations on
the website above.
Federal Employees Other Than Members of the U.S. Armed Forces or Public
Health Service
Section 21.23 (g). The state has no special provisions for determining the
residence of federal employees other than members of the U.S. Armed Forces
or Public Health Service. Therefore, such persons (including civilian
employees of the U.S. Armed Forces) must meet the basic residency
requirements for non-military personnel.
Married Students
Section 54.056. A student who is a resident of Texas and who marries a
nonresident is entitled to pay the resident tuition fee as long as the
student does not adopt the legal residence of the spouse in another state.
Coordinating Board Rules
Marriage of a Texas resident to a nonresident does not jeopardize the
Texas resident's claim to residency. A nonresident who marries a resident
of Texas must establish his or her own residency by meeting the standard
requirements of an independent individual 18 years of age or older.
Foreign Students
Section 54.057 (a). An alien who is living in this country under a visa
permitting permanent residence or who has applied to or has a petition
pending with the U.S. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Service to
attain lawful status under federal immigration law has the same privilege
of qualifying for resident status for tuition and fee purposes under this
subchapter as has a citizen of the United States.
Section 54.057 (b). A nonimmigrant alien who resides in this state in
accordance with the Agreement between the Parties to the North Atlantic
Treaty Regarding the Status of Their Forces (4 U.S.T. 1792) and the spouse
or children of such an alien are residents for tuition and fee purposes
under this code.
Section 54.057 (j). Notwithstanding any other provision of this
subchapter, an individual shall be classified as a Texas resident until
the individual establishes a residence outside this state if the
individual resided with the individual’s parent, guardian, or conservator
while attending a public or private high school in this state and (1)
graduated from a public or private high school or received the equivalent
of a high school diploma in this state; (2) resided in this state for at
least three years as of the date the person graduated from high school or
received the equivalent of a high school diploma; (3) registers as an
entering student in an institution of higher education not earlier than
the 2001 Fall semester; and (4) provides to the institution an affidavit
stating that the individual will file an application to become a permanent
resident at the earliest opportunity the individual is eligible to do so.
Persons Temporarily Absent From the State
Section 54.052(g). An individual who would have been classified as a
resident for the first five of the six years immediately preceding
registration but who resided in another state for all or part of the year
immediately preceding registration shall be classified as a resident
student.
Section 21.23 (h). Residents who move out of state should be classified as
nonresidents upon leaving the state, unless their move is temporary and
residence has not been established elsewhere.
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Persons who were residents of Texas for at lease five years prior to
moving from the state and who return to the state to re-establish their
home, having been gone less than a year, are still Texas residents.
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Students or parents or court-appointed legal guardians (in the case of
dependent students) who are temporarily (generally less than five years)
assigned to work outside the state may continue to claim residency in
Texas if they provide conclusive evidence of their intent at the time they
leave the state, to return. Among other things, a letter from an employer
that the move outside the state is temporary and that a definite future
date has been determined for return to Texas may qualify as proof of the
temporary nature of the time spent out of state. Out-of-state internships
that are part of the academic curriculum and that require the student to
return to the school are temporary relocations and do not jeopardize a
student's claim to residency.
Short-Term Stop-Out Students
Section 21.23(g). If the institution has documentation of residence on
file when a dependent or independent student returns after being out of
school for 12 months or less, it may continue the student's classification
as resident upon confirmation from the student that his or her parents or
court-appointed legal guardians (in the case of a dependent student) or
the student him/herself (in the case of an independent student) have not
changed their state of residence since the student's last enrollment.
Reclassification
Section 54.054. A nonresident student classification is presumed to be
correct as long as the residence of the individual in the state is
primarily for the purpose of attending an educational institution. After
residing in Texas for at least 12 months, a nonresident student may be
reclassified as a resident student as provided in the rules and
regulations adopted by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board,
Texas College and University System. Any individual reclassified as a
resident student is entitled to pay the tuition fee for a resident of
Texas at any future registration as long as he continues to maintain his
legal residence in Texas.
Procedures. Students classified as nonresident students shall be
considered to retain that status until they apply for reclassification in
the form prescribed by the institution and are officially reclassified as
residents for tuition purposes by the proper administrative officers of
the institution. Application for reclassification must be submitted prior
to the official census date of the relevant term. Reclassification as
residents must be made in keeping with the General Rules outlined in the
publication, “Rules and Regulations for Residence Status.”
Student Intent. If a student’s residence in Texas is primarily for the
purpose of education and not to establish a domicile, the student shall be
classified as a nonresident. The following persons are NOT considered to
have come here for the purpose of education: the spouse or dependent child
of an individual transferred here by the U.S. Armed Forces, a person
transferred to Texas through the state’s plan for economic development and
diversification, or as a part of a household moved to the state to accept
employment. Therefore, once such individuals have physically resided in
Texas for 12 consecutive months, even though they may have been enrolled
full-time, they may be considered residents if they have otherwise
established a domicile in the state.
Documenting 12 Months Domicile in Texas
Among the documents that may be used to prove 12 months' presence in Texas
are:
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Texas college or university transcript for the full senior year
immediately preceding the semester enrolled (in conjunction with other
documents from the institution);
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An employer's statement of date of employment in Texas;
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A permanent driver's license (at least one year old). The license
expiration date minus date of enrollment should not exceed three years;
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Texas voter registration;
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Lease agreement that includes student's name and period covered;
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Property tax payments for the year preceding enrollment;
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Cancelled checks;
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Utility bills for the year preceding enrollment
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A signed, dated and notarized comprehensive residence questionnaire;
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An income tax form or (if current year federal tax form has not been
filed) a signed, notarized statement regarding the student's independence
or regarding the individual(s) who claim the student as a dependent;
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A current credit report that documents the student's length and place
of residence;
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Other third party documentation that confirms residency status for the
12-month period preceding enrollment;
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For a homeless individual, documentation may consist of written
statements from the office of one or more legitimate social service
agencies located in Texas, attesting to the provision of services to the
individual over the previous 12-month period.
Materials to determine the establishment of a domicile in Texas are
business or personal facts including, but not limited to:
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The length of residence and employment prior to enrolling in college;
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The nature of employment while a student;
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Physical presence in Texas as a part of a household transferred to the
state by an employer (other than the U.S. Armed Forces or Public Health
Service) or as a part of a household moved to the state to accept
employment; and
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Purchase of a homestead.
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