Small Business in Texas

Texas Small Business Intel

Saturday, July 11, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on small business developments in Texas. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on texas small business headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Texas Small Business Headlines

1 story

1.1

How to File a DBA in Texas: A Step-by-Step Guide for 2026.

A DBA allows a company to do business under a name that’s not its legal name. Find out how to get a DBA in Texas, legal requirements, and more.

Why It Matters

Relevant to small business professionals operating in TX.

Sources:Source
Sponsored

Advertise Here

Reach professionals in this market

Learn More
2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

The four insurance gaps small businesses share.

Most small-business insurance portfolios share predictable gaps: cyber liability (often excluded from general liability), employment practices (separate from general liability), business interruption (often capped well below actual reliance), and professional liability (excluded if not specifically purchased even when professional services are offered).

Why It Matters

Each gap can become a six-figure claim that the owner assumed was covered. The cost of filling the four gaps is typically a few hundred to a few thousand dollars annually.

2.2

Why quarterly estimated payments fail in year two.

The federal safe harbor for estimated payments is the lesser of 90% of current-year tax or 100% (110% for higher incomes) of prior-year tax. New businesses meet safe harbor easily in year one when prior-year tax was zero. In year two, last-year-based safe harbor disappears and underpayment penalties surface.

Why It Matters

The penalty is not large per dollar but compounds across quarters and surprises owners who thought their bookkeeper was handling it. Cash flow gets squeezed at exactly the growth point where it is tightest.

2.3

A buy-sell agreement without funding is just a wish list.

Buy-sell agreements among co-owners specify what happens at death, disability, or departure — but only matter if there is a funding source to actually execute the buyout. Common defects: insurance policies that lapsed, valuation methods that produce numbers no one can pay, and trigger events that include voluntary departure without a payment plan.

Why It Matters

Without funding, the surviving owner faces a co-owner's heirs as the new business partner. Most buy-sell disputes that reach litigation are not about the agreement's terms but about the absence of a funding mechanism.

Never Miss an Update

Get Texas small business intelligence delivered to your inbox every morning.

Subscribe Free

Subscribe Free

Get Texas small business intelligence delivered daily.

Subscribe Now

Issue Summary

DateJul 11, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
Sponsored

Advertise Here

Reach professionals in this market

Learn More

Browse Archive

View all past issues

National Partner

Reach Professionals Nationwide

Feature your brand across the U.S., Canada, and select international markets and 10 industry verticals.

Become a National Partner