Keep Factually independent
Whether you agree or disagree with our analysis, these conversations matter for democracy. We don't take money from political groups - even a $5 donation helps us keep it that way.
How do I find my Texas State House district using my address?
Executive Summary
To find your Texas State House district by address, the most direct official tools are the Texas House “Who Represents Me?” search and the Texas Legislative Council’s DistrictViewer interactive map; both accept street addresses and return the current state representative and district. Recent reporting on redistricting underscores that maps can change, so verify results against the most recent official map or search tool when boundaries have been updated (for example, after 2025 redistricting actions) [1] [2] [3].
1. How to get a definitive answer in one click — the official search tools that work
The clearest, user-ready route to identify your Texas State House district by address is the Texas House’s dedicated lookup and the Legislative Council’s DistrictViewer interactive map, each of which lets you enter a street address to return your state representative and district number. The Texas House explicitly links to a “Who Represents Me?” page where citizens can input an address, making this an official, authoritative source for current representation data [1]. The Legislative Council’s DistrictViewer provides searchable boundary maps for the 150 state representative districts under PLAN H2316 (effective January 2023) and supports address lookups to assign the correct district based on that plan, which is the legal baseline until any new redistricting plan is adopted and takes effect [2].
2. Why multiple official checks are important — recent redistricting changed the landscape
Texas underwent a redistricting process with new maps and legal disputes reported in 2025; these actions mean a district lookup can return different results depending on which map a tool uses and whether a map change has been legally implemented. Journalistic coverage and legislative documents from 2025 note that both congressional and state legislative maps were the subject of legislative actions and court scrutiny, so a single lookup should be cross-checked against the most recently adopted plan or court orders if boundaries were altered after the 2023 plan [3] [4]. Users should therefore verify that the lookup tool explicitly states which plan or effective date it reflects — the Legislative Council’s DistrictViewer lists PLAN H2316 and its effective date, while the House tool links to the current representative data [2] [1].
3. What different official sources offer — practical distinctions and what to watch for
The Texas House “Who Represents Me?” search is oriented toward identifying current representatives and contact information from a simple address lookup, making it practical for constituents seeking to reach their state representative quickly. The Legislative Council’s DistrictViewer offers deeper mapping functionality, including downloadable boundary files and demographic reports tied to the statutory plan (PLAN H2316), which is useful for more technical verification or for confirming district geometry when redistricting is active [1] [2]. Public lists or static district maps published separately on legislative pages provide overview context (for example, statewide district list pages), but they are less convenient than an address search because they require cross-referencing an address with a map or shapefile [5].
4. Conflicting or incomplete sources — telltale signs and how to resolve them
Some web fragments and non-user-facing pages—even those surfaced during searches—do not provide address lookup functionality or may represent cached or browser-specific content, which can mislead users into thinking a site lacks a search tool. Scripts or compatibility warnings have been encountered in page fragments that are irrelevant to district lookup, so users should prioritize pages that explicitly advertise an address search or an interactive map and ignore pages that are merely technical or partial site fragments [6]. When a tool’s effective date isn’t visible, compare results to the Legislative Council’s published plan name or the Texas House’s representative list to confirm which map underlies the lookup [2] [5].
5. Practical checklist for a reliable lookup — step-by-step verification
First, use the Texas House “Who Represents Me?” search to enter your full street address and confirm the named state representative and district number, then use the Legislative Council’s DistrictViewer to input the same address and confirm the district polygon and plan name (PLAN H2316 or any newer plan displayed). If redistricting activity is reported in recent news (notably in 2025), confirm the tool’s effective date or plan name and cross-check against recent legislative or court announcements about new maps; if discrepancies remain, contact the Texas Legislative Council or the House clerk’s office for authoritative clarification. These steps reconcile the practical convenience of the House lookup with the technical certainty of the DistrictViewer interactive maps [1] [2] [3].
6. Final takeaways — accuracy, recency, and where errors come from
Address-based district lookup is straightforward using official Texas tools, but accuracy depends on map recency: the House site gives the current representative, the Legislative Council map connects addresses to statutory district plans, and redistricting events in 2025 mean users must confirm which plan a tool reflects before acting on results. Non-official lists or static maps require extra cross-referencing, and technical page fragments offer no usable lookup; always prioritize an explicit address-search interface or plan-labeled map and, when in doubt, verify with the source agencies cited above [1] [2] [3].