The General Rule
In Texas, the statute of limitations for most misdemeanor offenses is 2 years from the date of the alleged offense. Most felony offenses have a 3-year limitation period. After the limitation period expires without charges being filed, the state loses the ability to prosecute that offense. The clock generally starts when the alleged offense was committed. However, significant exceptions apply for serious offenses, and the clock can be paused under specific circumstances.
Key Exceptions — Longer or No Limitations Period
- Murder and capital murder: No statute of limitations under CCP Art. 12.01
- Sexual assault: 10 years from the offense; no limit if victim was under 17
- Aggravated sexual assault: No limit if victim was under 18
- Continuous sexual abuse of a child: No limitations period
- Human trafficking: No limitations period
- Injury to a child: 10 years
- Money laundering over $500,000: 10 years
Tolling — When the Clock Pauses
The limitations period can be “tolled” in specific circumstances. If the defendant is absent from Texas, the clock stops for that absence. For certain DNA-based offenses, the limitations period is tolled while DNA evidence is being preserved. If a grand jury is considering the case, the period is also tolled during that process at the Cadena-Reeves District Courts.
Limitations and Active Warrants
If a warrant was issued before the limitations period expired, the state can still execute the warrant and prosecute after the period has passed. The limitations period applies to the charging decision, not to the execution of a warrant that was timely obtained.
What This Means for Bexar County Cases
For most clients facing recent arrests in San Antonio, the statute of limitations is not the central defense issue — the evidence challenges and the charging decisions are. But for people concerned about old incidents or being contacted years after an event, the limitations analysis is essential. Call 210-692-4913 for a case-specific evaluation.
20+ years San Antonio criminal defense experience. Allison Tisdale, former Travis County DWI prosecutor on staff. Over 930 dismissals or rejected cases since 2021 in Bexar County.
210-692-4913 — Free Consultation