Looking for a Texas renew id card appointment? Texas does not have a DMV — the agency is the Department of Public Safety (DPS). We monitor every DPS office in Texas and book your renew id card appointment in 1 to 3 days instead of the typical 3 to 6 month wait.
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If you’ve been searching “Texas DMV renew id card” or “renew id card appointment Texas,” you’re in the right place. Texas does not operate a DMV. The agency that handles renew id card appointments is the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS), and all bookings happen through the official scheduler at public.txdpsscheduler.com. Vehicle registration goes through TxDMV via county tax offices — that's a separate agency.
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Quick answer: Most Texans can renew their Texas ID card online at Texas.gov for $16 in 15 minutes — $6 if you're 60 or older. The catch is the 7 eligibility rules: last renewal in person, age 18-78 (60+ pays the reduced $6 rate), not expired more than 2 years, and no name or address changes. Miss any criterion and you need an in-person DPS appointment. We monitor every Texas DPS office, so the wait-time data below is current to the day.
A Texas ID card is the state-issued photo ID for non-drivers — required for banking, voting, domestic flights (when Real ID-compliant), and any other context that needs government photo identification. Texas ID cards are valid for 6 years for most adults and don't expire until the date printed on the card. There's no grace period after expiration; if your card is past the date, you must renew before using it for federal identification.
Online vs. in-person decision tree. Online renewal at Texas.gov is the fastest path when you qualify. The 7 eligibility rules: (1) your last renewal was in person, (2) you're 18-78 years old, (3) your ID has not been expired more than 2 years, (4) your legal name on file is current (no marriage/divorce/court-order changes), (5) your address is current, (6) you're not upgrading to Real ID, and (7) you haven't changed photo more than once in the prior cycle. If any fails, book an in-person DPS appointment.
Costs. Standard Texas ID card renewal is $16 for ages 18-59. Residents 60 and older renew for $6 — Texas sets a reduced statutory rate for seniors per the DPS canonical fee schedule. If your card has been expired more than 2 years, the renewal path closes entirely and you reapply as a new applicant ($16 application fee, plus you may need to bring all original identity documents again).
Documents for in-person renewal. If you don't qualify online, DPS requires originals (no photocopies, no phone screenshots): your current or expired Texas ID card OR another government photo ID if the Texas ID is lost; proof of Social Security number if SSN is not already on file (Social Security card, W-2, 1099, or pay stub); two proofs of Texas residency from different sources if your address has changed since the last visit (utility bill, bank statement, lease, mortgage statement, voter registration card).
What happens if your Texas ID is expired. Within 2 years of expiration, the standard renewal path works (online if eligible, in-person otherwise) with no late surcharge for ID cards. Past 2 years, the renewal path closes and you reapply as a new Texas ID applicant. Driving on an expired DL is a misdemeanor in Texas, but using an expired ID card for non-driving purposes (banking, voting) is not illegal — it just means the ID is not accepted as valid government identification.
Common pitfalls. Most-frequent mistakes in our customer support inbox: (a) bringing a photocopy of the birth certificate instead of original (DPS rejects, you rebook months out); (b) not realizing online renewal is closed past 12 months expired (only 2-year retest window applies to in-person); (c) trying to renew at a county tax office — that's TxDMV for vehicles, ID renewal is DPS only; (d) skipping the senior discount — if you're 60+ and DPS bills you $16, ask the clerk to apply the $6 senior rate.
Combine Real ID upgrade with your renewal. If your current Texas ID doesn't have the gold star in the upper-right corner, you can upgrade to Real ID at the same renewal visit with no surcharge — just bring the Real ID document set (proof of identity + SSN + 2 proofs of Texas residency). Real ID is required for domestic flights and federal-building entry since May 7, 2025. See our Real ID upgrade service page for the full document list, or our complete Texas Real ID guide for the policy background.
Estimated Appointment Duration
15-20 minutes (in-person) or 15 minutes (online) at the DPS office
Make sure you have the following documents ready for your renew id card appointment:
Requirements may vary. Always verify current document requirements on the official Texas DPS website before your visit.
The 7-step renewal process for Texas ID card in 2026 (online if eligible, in-person DPS appointment otherwise).
Check online renewal eligibility (all 7 criteria)
Confirm last renewal was in person, age 18-78, not expired 2+ years, no name/address change, not upgrading to Real ID, and haven't changed photo more than once in the prior cycle. If all 7 check, online at Texas.gov works for $16 ($6 if 60+).
Gather your renewal documents (originals only)
Current or expired Texas ID card + proof of SSN (if not on file) + two proofs of Texas residency (only if address changed). No photocopies, no phone screenshots — originals only.
Decide: Texas.gov online OR DPS appointment
Online: 15 minutes, $16 ($6 senior), 6-year validity. In-person: $16 ($6 senior), same validity, but requires DPS appointment which can run 3-6 months at metro Mega Centers. Suburban offices clear in 2-4 weeks.
For online: complete Texas.gov form and pay $16
Go to the Texas DPS ID renewal portal at txt.texas.gov/dps/driver-license-id-renewal-replacement, sign in or create account using ID number + last 4 SSN + DOB, confirm address, pay by credit/debit. Download the temporary paper ID immediately. Plastic card arrives 2-3 weeks.
For in-person: book at public.txdpsscheduler.com
Schedule under "Renew Texas ID". Free official DPS scheduler — no cost to use. Expand radius to 60+ miles to surface faster suburban offices. Cancellation monitoring books typical confirmed slots in 1-3 days vs the 3-6 month manual wait.
Visit the DPS office (if in-person) with originals
Arrive 15 minutes early. DPS verifies documents, takes a new photo, processes payment, and issues a temporary paper ID. Total in-office time: 15-20 minutes for ID-only renewals (no vision screening required).
Receive temporary paper ID; wait 2-3 weeks for permanent card
Carry the temporary paper ID in your wallet until the plastic card arrives by mail. Both online and in-person renewals deliver the permanent card to the address on file in 2-3 weeks.
Yes, if all 7 criteria are met: (1) your last renewal was in person, (2) you're 18-78 years old, (3) your ID is not expired more than 2 years, (4) your legal name on file is current, (5) your address is current, (6) you're not upgrading to Real ID, and (7) you haven't changed your photo more than once in the prior cycle. Online renewal at Texas.gov costs $16 ($6 if you're 60+). The plastic card arrives by mail in 2-3 weeks.
Visit Texas.gov ID services. Sign in or create an account using your Texas ID number, last 4 of SSN, and DOB. Pay $16 by credit or debit card ($6 if 60+). Confirm your address on file — do NOT click 'confirm' if anything has changed. Download the temporary paper ID immediately after payment. The permanent plastic card arrives by mail in 2-3 weeks. Total elapsed time: 15 minutes to complete the form + mail delivery window.
Three categories of originals (no photocopies): (1) your current or expired Texas ID card, OR another government photo ID if lost; (2) proof of Social Security number if not on file — Social Security card, W-2, 1099, or pay stub with full SSN; (3) two proofs of Texas residency from different sources ONLY if your address has changed since the last visit. Address proofs include utility bill, bank statement, lease, mortgage statement, or voter registration card.
Standard renewal for ages 18-59 is $16. **Texas residents 60 and older renew for the reduced rate of $6** — per the DPS canonical fee schedule. Online renewal at Texas.gov and in-person renewal at a DPS office are the same fee (no online discount on ID cards, unlike driver licenses). If you've also moved out of state and need to surrender your Texas ID, there's no fee for the surrender process.
Texas ID cards are valid for **6 years from the renewal date** for most adults. Seniors 60 and older get the same 6-year validity at the reduced $6 fee. There's no monthly grace period after expiration — the ID becomes non-valid for federal identification on the printed expiration date. If you renew before the expiration date, the new 6-year cycle starts from the new issue date, so you don't lose time by renewing early.
Yes, within 2 years of expiration. Within 12 months expired, online renewal at Texas.gov is still available ($16, $6 if 60+). 12-24 months expired, only the in-person path works ($16 standard, $6 senior). After 24 months past expiration, the renewal path closes — you reapply as a new Texas ID applicant with the same $16 fee ($6 senior) but bringing all original identity documents again. There's no late surcharge for ID card renewals (unlike driver license renewals which add $20 between months 1-24).
No. The vision screening is required only for driver license renewal, not for ID card renewal. Texas ID cards are issued to non-drivers (or drivers who choose to hold both), so the screening is waived. The in-person renewal appointment is therefore shorter than a driver license renewal — typically 15-20 minutes including document verification, photo, and payment.
Yes, and there's no surcharge. If your current Texas ID doesn't have the **gold star** in the upper-right corner, bring the Real ID document set to your renewal visit: proof of identity (passport, birth certificate, green card), proof of SSN, and two proofs of Texas residency. DPS adds the gold star to the new card at no extra cost. This is the recommended combined visit since you're already there. Real ID is required for domestic flights since May 7, 2025.
Getting a DPS appointment for renew id card can take months if you do it yourself. Our service eliminates the wait:
Tell us you need a renew id card appointment and your preferred locations.
Our system checks every DPS office for openings.
The instant a matching slot opens, we book it and email you confirmation.
We monitor DPS offices across Texas. Select your city for local availability:
Detailed guides covering Texas DPS appointments, the official booking site, document checklists, and the full office directory.
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Skip the months-long DPS wait. Get your renew id card appointment booked in days.
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