Texas Β· IOLTA Jurisdiction
Texas IOLTA Trust Account Management
A complete guide for Texas attorneys on IOLTA compliance, Rule 1.14 requirements, and how Ethnum keeps your trust accounts audit-ready β every single month.
Texas at a Glance
Governing Rule
TDRPC Rule 1.14
Participation
Mandatory
Reconciliation
Monthly Min.
Record Retention
5 Years
Interest Beneficiary
TAJF
Annual Registration
Required (SBOT)
Debit Cards / Cash
π« Prohibited
TL;DR β Quick Summary
Texas attorneys who handle client funds must participate in the IOLTA program under Rule 1.14 of the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct, placing qualifying funds in a pooled, interest-bearing trust account. Interest goes to the Texas Access to Justice Foundation, not to the lawyer or client. Firms must reconcile at least monthly, keep records for five years, and must never use debit cards or cash withdrawals on trust accounts.
Overview
Purpose & Function of Texas IOLTA Accounts
Texas’s IOLTA (Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Accounts) program was established in 1984 under the authority of the Texas Supreme Court. It addresses a practical problem in legal practice: client funds that are too small in amount or held too briefly to earn meaningful net interest for any individual client would otherwise sit idle, benefiting no one.
Under the IOLTA framework, those qualifying funds are pooled in an interest-bearing account at an eligible financial institution. The bank remits the interest directly to theΒ Texas Access to Justice Foundation (TAJF), which distributes grants to civil legal aid organizations across the state, funding representation for low-income Texans in family law, housing, consumer, and immigration matters. TAJF has channeled hundreds of millions of dollars to legal services programs since the program’s founding.
For Texas attorneys, IOLTA participation is mandatory. The Texas Supreme Court made participation compulsory in 2005 β if you hold qualifying client funds in Texas, you are required to maintain an IOLTA account. There are no exemptions for solo practitioners, small firms, or specific practice areas.
Communication
Key Requirements of Texas IOLTA Accounts
Mandatory Participation
All licensed Texas attorneys handling qualifying client or third-party funds must maintain an IOLTA account. Mandatory since 2005 β no exemptions for firm size or practice area.
Eligible Institutions
IOLTA funds must be deposited at TAJF-certified financial institutions paying a rate comparable to the highest available on similar accounts. Verify eligibility before opening.
Account Naming
Under Rule 1.14(a), the account must be clearly designated as a "Trust Account" or "IOLTA Account" β identifiably separate from any operating or business account.
Monthly Reconciliation
Texas guidance requires a formal three-way reconciliation at least monthly β comparing the bank statement balance, trust ledger, and the sum of all individual client ledger balances.
Five-Year Records
All trust account records must be maintained for at least five years after the conclusion of each matter for which trust funds were held.
Annual SBOT Registration
Texas attorneys must certify their IOLTA account status as part of the annual registration process with the State Bar of Texas, confirming compliance each year.
Texas-Specific Rules
What Makes Texas's Rules Different from Other States
- Rule 1.14, Not Rule 1.15
Texas governs trust accounting under Rule 1.14 of the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct β not Rule 1.15 as in most other states. The numbering difference reflects Texas’s use of its own independent professional conduct framework rather than a direct adoption of the ABA Model Rules. Attorneys relocating to Texas or admitted pro hac vice must confirm they are consulting the correct Texas rule, as the substantive requirements differ in meaningful ways from the Model Rules counterpart.
- Advance Fee Treatment Has a Safe Harbor
Texas Rule 1.14 provides specific guidance on advance fee deposits. Flat fees paid in advance that are designated as “non-refundable” and meet Rule 1.04’s reasonableness requirements may, under certain conditions, be deposited directly into the operating account rather than held in trust. General retainers and unearned fees, however, must go into trust until earned. This distinction trips up many attorneys who assume all retainers require immediate trust deposit.
- Debit Cards and Cash Withdrawals Are Prohibited
Texas prohibits the use of debit cards, ATM cards, and cash withdrawals from IOLTA trust accounts. Checks payable to “Cash” are also impermissible. Every disbursement must be made by named-payee check or a properly documented wire transfer. This prohibition is consistent with the broader principle that all trust account activity must be individually traceable and documented for the full five-year retention period.
- Overdraft Notification to the Chief Disciplinary Counsel
Under State Bar of Texas rules, eligible financial institutions are required to notify the Chief Disciplinary Counsel automatically any time a trust account is overdrawn or a transaction is dishonored. This automatic reporting mechanism means that even a minor processing error β such as a check clearing before a deposit posts β can surface as a disciplinary matter before the attorney is aware a problem exists.
Legal Framework
Core Legal Framework
Texas’s IOLTA framework is built on overlapping layers of Supreme Court authority, disciplinary rules, and State Bar registration requirements that give trust account obligations both ethical and procedural force.
TDRPC Rule 1.14 β Safekeeping Property
The foundational rule governing how Texas attorneys must handle client and third-party funds. It mandates complete segregation of client funds from firm assets, requires funds to be held only at TAJF-eligible institutions, prohibits commingling under any circumstances, and sets the documentation standards for every trust account transaction. Rule 1.14 violations are among the most common bases for disciplinary action by the State Bar of Texas.
Texas Government Code Β§ 81.027 β IOLTA Authorization
Provides the statutory foundation for the Texas IOLTA program and empowers the Texas Supreme Court to mandate participation. It designates the Texas Access to Justice Foundation as the program's administering body, authorizes TAJF to certify eligible financial institutions, and establishes the legal framework under which IOLTA interest is collected and distributed to civil legal aid programs statewide. Neither the attorney nor the client has any claim to IOLTA interest.
Texas Rules of Disciplinary Procedure
Govern the enforcement process for Rule 1.14 violations and define the Chief Disciplinary Counsel's authority to investigate trust account complaints. The Rules require eligible banks to notify the Chief Disciplinary Counsel of any overdraft or dishonored item on a trust account, and they set out the procedural framework for sanctions ranging from private reprimands to disbarment in cases of misappropriation or deliberate commingling.
Setup Guide
Setting Up a Texas IOLTA Account
Opening a compliant Texas IOLTA account is straightforward, but each step carries compliance significance because the account is a fiduciary vehicle for client property β not a standard business checking account.
Ongoing Compliance
Key Requirements for Attorneys Handling Client Funds
Three-Way Monthly Reconciliation
Texas guidance under Rule 1.14 requires all client trust accounts to be reconciled at least monthly. The reconciliation must cross-check three independently derived numbers: the adjusted bank statement balance, the pooled trust account ledger balance in your accounting system, and the sum of all individual client ledger balances. All three must agree exactly β any discrepancy, however small, must be investigated and resolved before new client funds are accepted into the account.
The supervising attorney remains personally accountable for the reconciliation even when the work is delegated to staff or an outside bookkeeper. Texas disciplinary decisions have consistently found that an attorney cannot avoid responsibility for trust account failures by pointing to inadequate delegation β oversight is a non-delegable professional duty.
Recordkeeping Standards
Texas Rule 1.14 requires attorneys to maintain complete, contemporaneous records of all trust account activity for at least five years after the termination of each representation. Required records include:
- Receipt and disbursement journals showing the date, amount, payer or payee, and client matter for every trust account transaction
- Individual client ledgers showing all funds received, disbursements made, and running balances for each active matter
- Bank records including monthly statements, deposit slips, and canceled checks or electronic check images
- Supporting documents such as retainer agreements, settlement statements, court disbursement orders, invoices, and written client authorizations
Segregation and Commingling
Client funds must never be mixed with the firm’s operating funds. Retainers, settlement proceeds, escrow deposits, and all other funds held on behalf of a client or third party must go into the IOLTA trust account until they are earned or properly disbursed. The only firm funds permissible in a Texas IOLTA account are a small, documented amount to cover bank charges β and only where those charges are not already waived by the eligible institution.
Disbursement Rules
Texas prohibits cash withdrawals, checks payable to “Cash,” and debit or ATM card use on any trust account. Every disbursement must be by named-payee check or properly documented wire transfer. Attorneys must never disburse against deposited funds that have not yet cleared β disbursing against uncleared funds is a Rule 1.14 violation regardless of whether the deposit ultimately clears.
Oversight & Enforcement
Oversight and Enforcement in Texas
Texas Access to Justice Foundation
Administers the IOLTA program, certifies eligible financial institutions, monitors interest rate comparability, and distributes IOLTA funds as grants to civil legal aid programs across Texas. TAJF also maintains the IOLTA Honor Roll of banks that have waived account fees.
Chief Disciplinary Counsel (CDC)
The State Bar of Texas's enforcement arm for professional conduct violations. The CDC receives mandatory overdraft notifications from banks, investigates trust account complaints, and initiates disciplinary proceedings under the Texas Rules of Disciplinary Procedure.
Automatic Bank Reporting
Any overdraft or dishonored item on a Texas attorney trust account triggers automatic notice to the Chief Disciplinary Counsel. This early-warning process means even minor errors can lead to compliance inquiries before the attorney becomes aware of the issue.
Annual SBOT Registration Review
The State Bar of Texas annual registration process requires attorneys to certify their IOLTA account status each year, giving regulators systematic visibility into every practitioner's trust account standing and flagging attorneys who fail to maintain compliant accounts.
How Ethnum Helps
Texas Trust Accounting β Handled by Ethnum
Texas’s IOLTA rules carry real disciplinary teeth. The monthly reconciliation mandate, the advance fee safe harbor analysis, the debit card prohibition, the automatic overdraft reporting to the Chief Disciplinary Counsel, and the annual SBOT registration requirement create a compliance burden that pulls attorney focus away from client work.
Ethnum’s specialists maintain an active knowledge base of Texas’s Rule 1.14 requirements and TAJF guidance, updated continuously. Here’s exactly what we handle for Texas law firms:
- Monthly 3-way trust reconciliation β bank statement vs. trust ledger vs. individual client ledger balances, completed by the 10th of each month
- Client ledger management for every active matter β funds received, disbursements, and running balances tracked throughout the representation
- Advance fee analysis and documentation β clear written records supporting each trust vs. operating account deposit decision under Rule 1.14
- Annual SBOT registration preparation and IOLTA account certification documentation support
- Trust-to-operating transfer documentation β earned fees moved at the right time, with written authorization records for every transfer
- Integration with Clio, QuickBooks, Xero, CosmoLex, and your existing software stack
- Monthly Trust Score report β your Texas IOLTA compliance health at a glance, delivered by the 10th
Table of Contents
Texas Resources
- Texas Access to Justice Foundation (TAJF)
- State Bar of Texas β Official Website
- TAJF β How to Open an IOLTA Account
- TAJF β Eligible Financial Institutions
- TAJF β IOLTA Annual Compliance for Attorneys
- State Bar β Client Trust Accounts Resource Page
- Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct
Texas Trust Accounting, Off Your Plate.
Let Ethnum handle your IOLTA compliance so you can focus on what matters β your clients and your cases. Free consultation, no commitment required.