Texas Open Records Charge Calculator
Estimate what a Texas Public Information Act request may cost based on common charge components such as standard paper copies, labor, overhead, programming time, and physical media. This tool is designed for planning and budgeting. Actual charges can vary by governmental body, record format, exemptions, and whether a special rule applies.
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Estimated charges
Enter your request details and click Calculate Charges to see the breakdown.
Expert Guide to the Texas Open Records Charge Calculator
The Texas Open Records Charge Calculator is a practical planning tool for anyone preparing a request under the Texas Public Information Act, often called the TPIA. Whether you are a journalist, business owner, lawyer, researcher, community advocate, or resident trying to understand a local government decision, cost matters. A well written request can dramatically reduce what you pay, while a broad or highly technical request can trigger labor, programming, and reproduction charges that increase the final estimate.
Texas law strongly favors public access to governmental records, but access is not always free. Agencies may charge for the labor involved in locating and producing records, for paper copies, for special media, and for programming or data manipulation in some situations. That is why a records charge calculator is valuable. It helps you estimate the likely scope of fees before you submit a request, compare delivery options, and refine your wording if the estimate is higher than expected.
Important: This calculator provides an estimate, not legal advice or an official quote. Actual invoices depend on the facts of the request, the type of records sought, the agency’s retention systems, whether exceptions or redactions apply, and current state rules. Always review the written cost estimate from the governmental body.
How Texas public records charges are usually structured
Texas public records charges generally fall into a few recurring categories. Understanding each category will help you use the calculator correctly and read agency estimates with confidence.
1. Standard paper copy charges
For ordinary paper copies, Texas commonly uses a per page charge. The standard reference rate often cited is $0.10 per page for standard paper copies. If your request is simple and only requires basic photocopying, this may be the largest or only charge. A request for 25 pages, for example, may be very inexpensive compared with a broad request for hundreds or thousands of pages.
2. Labor charges
When an agency must spend staff time identifying, locating, compiling, reproducing, or reviewing records for release, labor may be chargeable under certain circumstances. A commonly used statewide benchmark is $15.00 per hour for labor. However, practical outcomes vary. Some requests may not incur labor charges at all, especially if they are small and easy to fulfill. In other cases, requests involving multiple departments, archived materials, or extensive review can make labor a significant cost driver.
3. Overhead
Texas charge schedules often allow an additional 20% overhead on labor related costs in eligible situations. Overhead is intended to reflect indirect expenses associated with staff time and office operations. Many requesters overlook this line item, but it can materially change the total estimate. If labor is $60.00, overhead can add another $12.00. The calculator lets you include or exclude overhead so you can compare both scenarios.
4. Programming and data manipulation
Modern records requests increasingly involve digital systems rather than filing cabinets. If an agency must run database queries, export data, redact electronic records in a specialized way, or otherwise manipulate information in a structured system, it may charge a programming or data manipulation rate. A commonly cited benchmark is $28.50 per hour. Digital requests are often cheaper than paper requests, but not always. A narrowly targeted digital export can be efficient, while a complicated database extraction can become the most expensive part of the request.
5. Physical media and special reproduction costs
If records are supplied on a CD-ROM, DVD, or another physical device, agencies can charge for the medium itself. Commonly cited figures include $1.00 per CD-ROM and $3.00 per DVD. Other media, such as USB storage, may be billed at actual or estimated cost depending on the circumstances. Large format plans, maps, color reproductions, and specialty copies can also have different rates than ordinary paper pages.
Reference table: Common Texas records request charge components
| Charge component | Common benchmark used in estimates | What it typically covers | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard paper copies | $0.10 per page | Letter and legal size black and white copies | Important for routine requests and printed files |
| Labor | $15.00 per hour | Locating, compiling, reproducing, and processing records | Can quickly exceed copy costs in broad requests |
| Overhead | 20% of labor related charges | Indirect administrative and facility costs | Often overlooked in rough estimates |
| Programming or data manipulation | $28.50 per hour | Database extraction, conversion, specialized electronic work | Critical for digital and data driven requests |
| CD-ROM | $1.00 each | Records produced on compact disc | Useful when files are too large for email |
| DVD | $3.00 each | Video files and larger digital productions | Common in audiovisual or body cam requests |
How to use this calculator effectively
The best way to use the calculator is to mirror the language you expect to see in a written cost estimate. Start with your expected page count. If you know your request is digital only, you may set paper copies to zero and focus on labor, programming, and media. If the agency has already told you there are maps, oversized engineering sheets, or special exhibits, enter those separately at an estimated nonstandard rate.
- Enter standard pages. If you are unsure, estimate conservatively based on the type of records requested.
- Add nonstandard pages only if needed. This is useful for plats, oversized drawings, and specialty reproductions.
- Estimate labor hours. Broad date ranges, multiple departments, and archived records usually increase labor.
- Add programming hours for database work. Use this if the request asks for exported data, logs, or customized electronic output.
- Choose media. Select none if delivery will likely be by email or portal download.
- Toggle overhead and the common 50 page labor exception estimate. This helps you compare best case and more conservative scenarios.
Reference table: Small request versus broad request comparison
| Scenario | Pages | Labor hours | Programming hours | Typical cost profile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simple incident report request | 10 to 30 | 0 to 0.5 | 0 | Often low cost, especially if records are easy to identify |
| Personnel or contract request across multiple years | 100 to 500 | 1 to 4 | 0 to 1 | Paper and labor both matter |
| CAD logs, dispatch, or database export | 0 to 100 | 0.5 to 2 | 1 to 4 | Programming can outweigh copy charges |
| Video intensive request | 0 to 50 | 1 to 6 | 0 to 2 | Media and review effort may dominate |
Ways to reduce your Texas open records cost
If your estimate comes back high, that does not always mean you should abandon the request. It often means you should refine it. Narrowing scope is the single most effective way to reduce cost. Public bodies spend time searching broad date ranges, collecting records from multiple offices, and reviewing large volumes for confidentiality issues. If you help the agency target the exact records you need, your estimate often drops substantially.
- Use a tight date range. Asking for one month instead of three years can lower labor dramatically.
- Name the exact department, project, case number, or contract. Specificity reduces search time.
- Request electronic delivery first. This may eliminate or reduce paper copy charges.
- Ask for an itemized cost estimate. It is easier to negotiate scope when charges are broken out by category.
- Prioritize key fields. For data requests, list the columns you actually need instead of asking for every field in a system.
- Split complex requests into stages. Start with indexes, logs, or summary reports to learn what exists before requesting everything.
- Clarify keywords and custodians. If you seek emails, identify senders, recipients, and relevant search terms.
Why digital requests are not always cheap
Many requesters assume electronic records must be nearly free because there is no paper involved. In reality, digital requests can still be expensive when the underlying work is complex. Databases may need custom queries. Video files may require transfer to physical media. Sensitive data may need redaction or segregation. Logs may exist in raw format but not in the exact layout requested, which can trigger data manipulation charges. The cheapest request is usually not the most digital one. It is the most precise one.
Common misunderstandings about Texas records estimates
Misunderstanding 1: If records are public, access must be free
Public access and no cost are not the same thing. Agencies may charge permitted fees for production and processing. The better question is whether the estimate is authorized, itemized, and tied to actual charge categories.
Misunderstanding 2: More pages always means the biggest bill
Not necessarily. A 300 page request for a well organized file can be cheaper than a small but technically complicated request for exported system data. Labor and programming often matter more than pages.
Misunderstanding 3: The first estimate is final
Often it is not. You can ask clarifying questions, narrow the request, accept records in rolling batches, or request electronic production to reduce costs. Productive communication with the agency can materially improve the estimate.
When to use the common 50 page labor exception estimate
Some Texas records discussions reference a common rule of thumb that labor should not be charged for small requests involving 50 or fewer pages of standard paper copies, subject to exceptions and context. This calculator includes a toggle so you can model that scenario. You should use it carefully. It is a planning shortcut, not a guarantee. Agencies may still charge labor in situations involving records stored off site, records in multiple buildings, or other circumstances recognized under applicable rules.
Best practices before you submit your request
- Write one clear sentence that identifies the records.
- Limit the timeframe.
- State that you prefer electronic production when possible.
- Ask for a written itemized estimate before work proceeds if charges may exceed your budget.
- State any budget ceiling you have, such as requesting notice before costs exceed $50 or $100.
- Invite the agency to contact you to narrow the request if needed.
A practical request might read like this: “Please provide electronic copies of final contracts and executed amendments between the city and Vendor X from January 1, 2023 through December 31, 2024. If responsive records are maintained in more than one office, please advise before charges exceed $75.” That wording is focused, time limited, and cost aware.
Authoritative sources for Texas public information charges
For official guidance, fee schedules, and legal text, consult authoritative sources such as the Texas Attorney General Open Government resources, the Texas Register and administrative rules portal, and the Texas Constitution and Statutes website. These sources help confirm current rules and any updates affecting public information charges.
Final takeaway
A Texas open records charge calculator is most useful when it helps you think strategically. The goal is not simply to predict a bill. The real value is in shaping a smarter request before you send it. By understanding the difference between copy costs, labor, overhead, programming, and media charges, you can identify what drives the estimate and adjust your request accordingly. In many cases, a few minutes spent narrowing scope can save hours of agency work and a significant amount of money. Use the calculator as a planning tool, then compare its output with the agency’s formal estimate and refine your request as needed.